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Getting Started with Portfolio Tracking: A Beginner's Guide

Learn why tracking your investment portfolio matters, what metrics to watch, and how to set up a system that gives you clarity without complexity.

ZuneMoney TeamMarch 22, 20264 min read

Knowing what you own is the first step to growing your wealth. Yet many investors — even experienced ones — don't have a clear picture of their portfolio's performance. They check individual stock prices, glance at their broker's app, and hope for the best.

Portfolio tracking changes that. It gives you a single view of everything: your total value, your gains, your dividends, and how your money is allocated across assets, sectors, and geographies.

Why track your portfolio?

The short answer: what gets measured gets managed.

Without tracking, you might:

  • Hold too much of a single stock without realizing it
  • Miss dividend payments or not know your yield
  • Have no idea whether you're beating — or trailing — a simple index fund
  • Make emotional decisions because you lack data

A good tracker turns scattered broker data into actionable insights.

What metrics matter most?

Not all numbers deserve your attention. Focus on these:

MetricWhat it tells youWhy it matters
Total valueYour portfolio's current worthThe baseline number
Total gain/lossHow much you've made or lostReality check on performance
AllocationHow your money is spreadReveals concentration risk
Dividend yieldIncome as % of portfolio valueShows passive income potential
Performance vs benchmarkHow you compare to the marketHonest assessment of your strategy

How to set up tracking

1. Consolidate your accounts

If you trade on multiple platforms (Degiro, IBKR, Trading 212), bring everything into one view. Manually checking three apps doesn't scale.

2. Import your transactions

The fastest way to get started is importing your transaction history. Most brokers let you export a CSV file. Upload it to your tracker, and you'll instantly see:

  • Every buy and sell
  • Your cost basis per position
  • Realized and unrealized gains

3. Check your allocation

Once your transactions are in, look at your allocation breakdown:

  • By sector: Are you overweight tech? Underweight healthcare?
  • By country: Is your portfolio too concentrated in one market?
  • By asset class: What's your split between stocks, ETFs, bonds, and cash?

4. Set up dividend tracking

If you own dividend-paying stocks, knowing your expected income is valuable. A good tracker shows you:

  • Upcoming dividend dates
  • Monthly and annual projected income
  • Yield per stock and for the whole portfolio

Common mistakes to avoid

Checking too often. Daily price movements are noise. Review your portfolio weekly or monthly, not hourly.

Ignoring fees. Transaction costs, currency conversion fees, and platform charges eat into returns. Track them.

Not rebalancing. If one position grows to 30% of your portfolio, that's concentration risk — even if it's a great company.

Forgetting dividends. Reinvested dividends are a major driver of long-term returns. Track them separately.

What to look for in a tracker

The best portfolio trackers are:

  • Simple — show you what matters without clutter
  • Accurate — handle splits, dividends, and currency conversions correctly
  • Visual — charts and breakdowns that make data intuitive
  • Private — your financial data stays secure

The goal isn't to have the most sophisticated tool. It's to have enough visibility to make better decisions.

Start tracking today

You don't need to be a finance expert to track your portfolio. You need a system that turns raw data into clarity. Import your transactions, review your allocation, and check your performance against a benchmark.

That's it. Simple, clear, and actionable — the way investing should be.

Ready to track your portfolio?

Put these insights into action with Folia.