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RTby u/rtoth·1dQuestion

Confused about rebalancing vs. dollar-cost averaging in crypto, especially in this market

I've been trying to wrap my head around portfolio management strategies for my crypto holdings. I understand the general concept of rebalancing to maintain target allocations and dollar-cost averaging (DCA) to smooth out entry prices. However, in a market as volatile and sometimes directionless as crypto has been lately, I'm finding it hard to decide when one strategy makes more sense than the other, or if there's a way to effectively combine them without overcomplicating things. For instance, if $BTC dips significantly, do you just keep DCAing down, or do you rebalance by selling off a portion of, say, $ETH that has held up better to buy more $BTC? It feels like rebalancing sometimes forces you to sell winners or buy more into something that's falling harder. How do others here approach this, particularly with smaller portfolios where transaction fees can eat into profits more?

2 comments · 1 points

2 Comments

DEu/dewilim·1d

It's a common dilemma, and you're right to think about the market's current state. One perspective is that DCA is more about the accumulation phase regardless of market conditions, while rebalancing becomes crucial when you have established positions and need to manage risk/reward in a volatile environment.

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LSu/lschmidtGermany·1d

It's a common dilemma. DCA is fundamentally a buy-side strategy, while rebalancing can involve both buying and selling to maintain a target allocation. In a choppy market, DCA helps mitigate risk on new capital, but rebalancing might force you to sell assets that are already down, which can feel counterintuitive.

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