
A balanced portfolio is an investment approach that diversifies funds across multiple asset classes and maintains fixed allocations with periodic adjustments. The main goal is to achieve steady long-term returns while keeping risk at an acceptable level.
Typically, a balanced portfolio consists of both "growth assets" and "stable assets." Growth assets—such as stocks and Bitcoin—offer higher potential returns but come with greater volatility. Stable assets, like high-rated bonds, cash, or stablecoins, are less volatile and help cushion the portfolio during market downturns.
The need for a balanced portfolio arises because relying on a single asset class exposes investors to unpredictable volatility. Diversification helps reduce the risk of “putting all your eggs in one basket.” By allocating funds to assets with low correlation, the overall portfolio experiences smoother ups and downs.
For most non-professional investors with limited time and resources, a balanced portfolio offers a systematic and repeatable framework. This reduces emotional decision-making—such as chasing rallies or panic selling—and encourages sticking to a long-term strategy.
The core of a balanced portfolio lies in two practices: asset allocation and rebalancing. Asset allocation is like dividing your eggs among several baskets, determining the target percentage for each. Rebalancing means periodically adjusting these allocations back to their targets.
“Correlation” refers to how similarly two assets move—if they rise and fall together or independently. Combining assets with low correlation (like carrying both an umbrella and sunscreen) ensures the portfolio remains useful in various market conditions, resulting in more controlled overall volatility.
Rebalancing works by “trimming gains and buying into declines,” keeping risk from drifting out of control and more evenly capturing returns at your target risk level.
There’s no single correct way to allocate assets, but there’s a practical process: set goals, define ratios, then select specific products.
Step 1: Identify your goals and risk tolerance. For example, you may want growth opportunities but limit annual drawdowns within a certain range.
Step 2: Set the ratio between growth and stable assets. The classic 60/40 approach (60% stocks, 40% bonds) is only an example—not a rule. If you have lower risk tolerance, increase the stable asset share.
Step 3: Break down into asset categories and position limits. For growth, you might include domestic and international stocks, Bitcoin, and Ethereum; for stability, high-rated bonds, cash, or high-quality stablecoins.
Step 4: Choose access channels and tools. For stocks and bonds, consider funds or ETFs; for crypto assets, use regulated exchanges, spot trading, and compliant custody solutions.
Within crypto, the balanced portfolio approach can be executed using the “three-bucket method” of growth assets plus stable assets:
Step 1: Growth bucket—allocate part of your funds to Bitcoin and Ethereum. These have larger market caps and higher liquidity, making them suitable as growth core assets.
Step 2: Stability bucket—use cash or high-quality stablecoins as buffers. Stablecoins are tokens pegged to fiat currencies, designed to minimize price fluctuations for parking funds or settling trades.
Step 3: Flexible bucket—reserve a small portion for exploration, such as leading sector tokens or thematic projects, but keep total exposure capped to avoid excessive tail risk.
Operationally, you can use Gate for spot purchases of mainstream assets. Place your stablecoin allocation into low-risk flexible or fixed-term products (always review terms, liquidity, and platform risks on Gate’s financial product offerings). On the portfolio level, set position limits and maximum single-trade loss thresholds.
Risk Note: Crypto assets are significantly more volatile than traditional assets. Stablecoins may face de-pegging and platform risks. Before using any financial products, fully understand the rules, interest sources, and redemption policies. Diversify across platforms and always maintain emergency cash reserves.
Rebalancing is typically done in two ways: by time or by threshold. Time-based rebalancing happens on a fixed schedule; threshold-based rebalancing occurs only when allocations drift beyond set limits.
Step 1 (Time-Based): Set a regular interval (e.g., quarterly). At each interval, review asset allocations—sell portions that exceed targets, buy those below targets—to return allocations to their original ratios.
Step 2 (Threshold-Based): Set upper and lower thresholds (e.g., ±5%). If an asset’s share drifts from its target (say from 30% up to over 35% or below 25%), this triggers rebalancing.
Step 3 (Execution Details): Prioritize using new funds for rebalancing to minimize trading costs and taxes. If selling is necessary, execute gradually and avoid periods of extreme volatility. Document every adjustment to maintain consistency.
Example: If your target is 60% growth assets and 40% stable assets but market movements shift it to 70%/30%, you would sell 10% from growth assets and buy into stable assets to restore the 60%/40% balance.
Both approaches focus on diversification but differ in emphasis. A balanced portfolio usually maintains fixed capital allocations (e.g., by percentage), while an all-weather portfolio often uses “risk parity”—aiming for each asset class to contribute equally to overall risk.
Risk parity means allocations are based on volatility: riskier assets get smaller allocations; less volatile assets get larger ones. Leverage may sometimes be used to boost low-volatility assets to match the risk contribution of more volatile ones. For most investors unfamiliar with leverage and margin risks, starting with a simple balanced portfolio is safer.
Frequent misconceptions include:
Capital Safety Tip: All investments carry loss risk. Practice position control, diversify platforms, maintain emergency funds, and avoid borrowing expensive capital for volatile assets.
Beginners can start with a “simple to stable” path:
Step 1: Write down your objectives and maximum drawdown tolerance—for example, aiming to hold for at least three years with no more than a set annual loss.
Step 2: Set initial allocations—such as a starting point of 50% growth / 50% stable—and adjust gradually based on experience.
Step 3: Choose products and channels—use broad-based funds or mainstream crypto for growth; high-rated bonds, cash, or quality stablecoins for stability. For crypto allocations on Gate, use spot trading and suitable savings products, prioritizing safety and liquidity.
Step 4: Create a rebalancing calendar and threshold triggers; record every rebalance action. Set limits on trading fees and slippage to avoid excessive costs from frequent minor adjustments.
Step 5: Regularly review your plan—reassess risk tolerance, income/outgoings, regulatory environment, and taxes at least every six months. Adjust target allocations as needed.
A balanced portfolio fundamentally relies on straightforward, repeatable rules: combine assets with different risk levels according to fixed ratios and maintain stability through regular rebalancing. This methodology applies across both traditional finance and crypto—growth assets provide upside potential; stable assets offer downside protection; consistent rules prevent emotional deviations from the plan. Start small, document your plan, regularly review and rebalance, ensuring capital safety and compliance as you build your long-term allocation system.
There’s no absolute standard—the stock-bond split should be adjusted according to age and risk tolerance. Common allocations include 60% stocks + 40% bonds or 50% stocks + 50% bonds; older investors may increase bond proportions. Beginners are advised to start with a 50:50 ratio and fine-tune based on real-world returns and personal comfort levels.
Balanced portfolios are generally better for beginners because diversification reduces risk—even if you misjudge one sector, losses are contained. Concentrated investments require strong asset selection skills and emotional resilience; they’re more vulnerable to market swings. Beginners should start with balanced portfolios for more stable returns.
Yes—but limit their proportion. Cryptocurrencies are much more volatile than traditional assets; it’s recommended that beginners allocate only 5–10% of total capital (money you can afford to lose). If you’re not familiar with crypto markets yet, focus on traditional stock-bond portfolios first and introduce crypto gradually as you gain experience.
Rebalancing every six months is reasonable. Too frequent adjustments increase trading costs; too infrequent leads to allocation drift away from targets. It’s best to set clear rules—for example, rebalance only when an asset allocation deviates more than 5% from its target—to balance cost control with effective risk management.
Losses are possible—but typically less severe than single-asset portfolios. For example, an all-stock portfolio could drop 30–50% in a bear market; a 60:40 balanced portfolio might decline only 15–25%. Bonds help cushion losses but won’t fully offset stock declines—that’s the core purpose of balanced portfolios: seeking equilibrium between risk and return.


