Guasoni, Paolo; Liu, Ren; Muhle-Karbe, Johannes Who should sell stocks? (English) Zbl 1411.91502 Math. Finance 29, No. 2, 448-482 (2019). Summary: Never selling stocks is optimal for investors with a long horizon and a realistic range of preference and market parameters, if relative risk aversion, investment opportunities, proportional transaction costs, and dividend yields are constant. Such investors should buy stocks when their portfolio weight is too low and otherwise hold them, letting dividends rebalance to cash over time rather than selling. With capital gains taxes, this policy outperforms both static buy-and-hold and dynamic rebalancing strategies that account for transaction costs. Selling stocks becomes optimal if either their target weight is low or intermediate consumption is substantial. Cited in 3 Documents MSC: 91G10 Portfolio theory Keywords:dividends; long-run; portfolio choice; transaction costs PDF BibTeX XML Cite \textit{P. Guasoni} et al., Math. Finance 29, No. 2, 448--482 (2019; Zbl 1411.91502) Full Text: DOI OpenURL