Stock Market 101 – Lesson 20
Your 12-Month Wealth Plan & Rebalancing (A Simple Repeatable System)
Hook: If you invest without a plan, the market becomes your plan
Most people don’t fail in investing because they pick the “wrong” fund or miss one rally. They fail because they have no repeatable system.
So, what happens?
In bull markets, they over-invest at high prices.
In corrections, they panic and stop SIPs.
They buy what’s trending, sell what’s boring, and keep restarting.
A 12-month wealth plan fixes this. It turns your knowledge into a simple routine: set goals, run SIPs, track progress, rebalance on schedule, and adjust only when needed—not when emotions hit.
This lesson is designed like a practical playbook you can follow every month.
What Is a 12-Month Wealth Plan?
A 12-month wealth plan is a one-year system to:
define your goals
decide where your money should go (equity/debt/gold/cash)
automate investing with SIPs
track progress with simple metrics
rebalance periodically
create rules for when to stop/shift/adjust
It’s not about predicting the market.
It’s about building wealth habits that survive any market.
Step 1: Define Your Goals (The Real Starting Point)
Before choosing investments, you need clarity on why you’re investing.
Write goals in three buckets:
1) Short-term (0–2 years)
Examples:
emergency fund top-up
gadget, travel, down payment planning
Rule: Avoid high equity exposure for short-term goals.
2) Medium-term (3–5 years)
Examples:
car purchase
higher education down payment
business starting fund
Rule: Balanced approach works better (mix of equity + debt).
3)12-Month Wealth Plan for Long-term (5+ years)
Examples:
retirement
child’s education
wealth creation
Rule: Equity is usually the main engine here (with discipline).
Mini tip: Write goal as:
Goal amount + timeline + monthly SIP you can sustain
Step 2: A 12-month wealth plan to Build Your “Starter Allocation” (Simple Portfolio Mix)
This is not a one-size-fits-all. But here are beginner-friendly templates.
Template A: Conservative (low volatility)
30% Equity
60% Debt
10% Gold
Template B: Balanced (most beginners)
60% Equity
30% Debt
10% Gold
Template C: Growth (long-term focus)
75–80% Equity
15–20% Debt
5% Gold
Emergency fund is separate and should come before aggressive equity.
Step 3: Automate with SIPs (Your Wealth Engine)
SIPs work because they remove decision-making.
SIP Rules for A 12-month wealth plan
Start with a realistic monthly amount
Increase SIP by 5–10% every 3–6 months (if income allows)
Don’t stop SIPs because market fell (that’s when SIP works best)
Simple mindset:
SIP is not about “timing.” It’s about “staying in the game.”
Step 4: Keep It Simple (What to Track Monthly)
You don’t need 20 indicators. Track only what matters.
Monthly check (10 minutes)
Total invested amount
Current portfolio value
Asset allocation % (equity/debt/gold/cash)
SIPs running? yes/no
Any big expense coming up?
That’s enough for most investors.
Step 5: Rebalancing (The Most Ignored Wealth Secret)
Rebalancing means bringing your portfolio back to the target mix.
Why rebalancing matters
When markets rise, equity can become too large a portion of your portfolio.
That increases risk without you noticing.
Rebalancing helps you:
book profits calmly (without predicting tops)
reduce risk automatically
keep your plan consistent
Example
Target equity: 60%
After rally: equity becomes 72%
Rebalancing means shifting some gains from equity to debt/gold to return to 60%.
Rebalancing is “buy low, sell high” done quietly.
Rebalancing Schedule (Pick One)
Choose a schedule and stick to it:
Option 1: Calendar-based (easiest)
rebalance every 6 months or 12 months
Option 2: Threshold-based (smart and simple)
rebalance if allocation shifts by 5–10% from target
Example: 60% equity target
Rebalance if equity falls below 50% or rises above 70%
For beginners, every 6 months works well.
Step 6: When to Stop or Adjust (Clear Rules)
A plan must include “when to change.” Otherwise, every market move becomes a reason to change.
Adjust if:
Your income changes (job change, salary increase, business shift)
Your goal timeline changes (new goal added, earlier deadline)
Risk comfort changes (life events, responsibilities increase)
Do NOT adjust just because:
market fell 5–10%
a sector is trending
someone on social media said “this is the next multibagger”
Rule: Adjust your plan for life changes, not mood changes.
A Simple 12-Month Wealth Plan Timeline
Here’s a realistic timeline you can follow.
Month 1: Setup Month
define goals
build emergency fund plan
pick allocation template
start SIPs
Months 2–3: Stabilize
don’t change funds
track monthly
build discipline
Month 4: First Review
check SIP consistency
small SIP increase if possible
check allocation drift
Month 6: Rebalancing Checkpoint
rebalance if drift is big
update goal progress
revise only if needed
Months 7–9: Grow + Repeat
continue SIP
avoid over-monitoring
keep money moving steadily
Month 12: Annual Review
compare plan vs progress
set next year target
increase SIP if income improved
rebalance again
This is how wealth compounds: not by excitement, but by repetition.
Habit Tracker (What to Commit Weekly)
If you want real consistency, commit to 3 habits:
Weekly: 10 minutes to review spending + SIP readiness
Monthly: portfolio check + allocation check
Quarterly: SIP step-up review
Half-yearly: rebalance if required
Common Beginner Mistakes This Plan Prevents
Starting SIPs and stopping them repeatedly
Buying only when market is green
Panic selling during corrections
Portfolio becoming risky without noticing
Investing without tracking goals
This lesson is your “anti-chaos” system.
5 FAQs
1) Is SIP enough to build wealth?
Yes, if SIP is consistent, aligned to goals, and reviewed yearly with rebalancing.
2) How often should I rebalance?
Every 6–12 months or when allocation drifts 5–10% from target.
3) Should I stop SIP when market falls?
No. Market falls are often the best time for SIP accumulation.
4) How do I know if my plan is working?
Track goal progress, asset allocation, and whether SIPs are consistent—not daily returns.
5) Can I change funds frequently?
Avoid frequent switching. Review annually unless a fund is consistently underperforming its category.
👉Further reading
Stock Market 101 – Lesson 19 Futures & Options Primer
Stock Market 101 – Lesson 18: Risk Management (Position Sizing & Stop-Losses)
Stock Market 101 – Lesson 17: Trading Psychology (Biases, FOMO, and Discipline)
Corporate Actions Made Simple for Beginners Stock Market 101-Lesson 15
Stock Market 101 – Chart Patterns Explained
Disclaimer:
This article is for educational purposes only and not financial advice. Markets involve risk. Please do your own research or consult a SEBI-registered financial advisor before investing.

