This depends on the policy of the index provider. Various indices are most often rebalanced monthly quarterly, twice a year, or once a year. Some indices, such as the FTSE Russell Canada Universe Bond Index, can rebalance daily.
At least three million indices exist, and in theory index providers could decide on any rebalancing period.
There can also be ad hoc rebalances for special events, such as the Nasdaq 100 reducing the weighting of the largest stocks in July 2023.
A customised index could rebalance at any time, on any day, and any periodicity, that the index creator chooses.
The index may do one or more of adds, deletes, and re-weights. It will add new members of an index, which could include new public companies that have recently done an initial public offering. It will delete members that no longer satisfy criteria, which could be because their share price or market value has declined, or could be due to other criteria such as the percentage of their shares classified as “free float”.
One key argument for passively tracking and index, rather than actively trading and investing, is that an index approach reduces transaction costs, such as commissions, stamp duties and other taxes, and bid/offer spreads associated with trading. Rebalancing usually involves trading, which incurs these costs, and too much rebalancing can thus partly defeat the object of index tracking.
In countries such as the US where short term capital gains tax is higher than long term capital gains tax, rebalancing may also increase tax liabilities for some taxable investors, though many others, such as pension funds, endowments and foundations, may not be liable for such taxes.
Index funds should automatically rebalance around the same time as the index they track. They might not choose exactly the same date however, and the process might not be completely automated. The manager, or specialist execution traders, might have some degree of discretion over the timing of trades.
If the index fund manager believes that a large volume of trades from index trackers on the day of the rebalance could move the market price, in any or all stocks, they may decide to rebalance somewhat earlier or later than the official rebalance date, or they may stagger the process over several days.
Whereas other index providers may use calendar quarters, MSCI Indices typically rebalance on the last business day of February, May, August and November. However it does vary between the different MSCI indices - some of them rebalance twice a year.
MSCI also creates custom indices which could rebalance at any frequency specified by the client.
In broad terms, MSCI announces additions, deletions and reweightings of stocks, and sometimes countries, for its various indices.
This then leads ETF managers and market makers, and derivative structurers, to adjust their products accordingly.
The date varies between MSCI indices.
It is most commonly the last business day of February, May, August and November.
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