
Inventory the portfolio (roles, not names)
List every holding and assign a role (core, satellite, learning, hedge, cash proxy). Roles prevent accidental drift: a position that no longer has a c...
Monthly reviews help execution; quarterly reviews protect strategy. Use this toolkit to run a portfolio reset across the whole portfolio that is about decisions, not predictions: inventory each holding by role, write a short thesis-drift note with invalidation triggers, map concentration and hidden correlations, and leave with one rule upgrade you will carry into the next quarter. Keep the process simple so you repeat it on schedule, and treat taxes, liquidity, and risk budget as real constraints. Educational content only—not investment advice.

Pick the smallest next action now: test your bias pattern, run a scenario, or copy a prompt before making a portfolio move.

List every holding and assign a role (core, satellite, learning, hedge, cash proxy). Roles prevent accidental drift: a position that no longer has a c...

For each meaningful position, write a 3–5 sentence evidence update: what got stronger, what weakened, and what would invalidate the thesis. If you can...

Quarterly is the right cadence to catch structural risk: single-name concentration, sector overlap, factor crowding, and hidden correlations across “d...
List every holding and assign a role (core, satellite, learning, hedge, cash proxy). Roles prevent accidental drift: a position that no longer has a clear job is a candidate for trimming, replacing, or moving to a watchlist bucket.
For each meaningful position, write a 3–5 sentence evidence update: what got stronger, what weakened, and what would invalidate the thesis. If you cannot name an invalidation trigger, you are holding a story. If the trigger already happened, you are holding inertia.
Quarterly is the right cadence to catch structural risk: single-name concentration, sector overlap, factor crowding, and hidden correlations across “different” holdings. Your goal is not perfect diversification—it is knowing where one narrative can hurt multiple positions.
Convert the review into a plan: pick 1–2 key signals per core position, assign a review frequency, and write the “no action needed” condition. The plan reduces noise-driven tinkering and makes your future decisions easier to audit.
Every quarterly reset should produce exactly one process upgrade you can test: a tighter sizing cap, a new sell-checklist item, a limit on correlated exposure, or a rule for adding only when evidence improves. Small rules beat big strategy switches.

Quarterly cadence creates enough distance to see structural drift that monthly check-ins can miss: concentration creep, correlated exposure, and thesis decay that happens slowly. It also matches many businesses’ reporting rhythms without forcing you into constant trading.
Exposure limits, monitoring priorities, and rule quality should change more often than your strategy identity. The goal is to refine how you decide—not to reinvent your approach each quarter. If you change everything, you learn nothing.
Yes. Use the same structure: assign roles to each ETF sleeve, map factor and sector overlap, and define what would make you rebalance. The point is to manage exposure intentionally, not to treat ETFs as “set and forget” by default.
Aim for 45–120 minutes depending on portfolio size. If it takes all day, the process is too complex. Use a fixed template: inventory, thesis drift note, concentration map, then one rule upgrade. Consistency beats perfection.
Avoid turning the reset into a shopping spree or a prediction contest. The goal is exposure control and decision clarity. If new positions appear, they should enter the portfolio through the same thesis/invalidation/sizing gate you use elsewhere.
Schedule one full portfolio review and define the one rule you want to improve before the quarter closes.