Monthly Archives: April, 2011

Q: Can you run through a few scenarios with different annuity rates? [The Thrift Savings Plan annuity interest rate of] 3.625 percent is a fairly low rate to lock in for the long term, especially with inflation. How does the monthly annuity distribution look as interest rates change? For example, what would the distribution be for $100,000 at 5 percent, 10 percent or higher? The TSP annuity calculator doesn’t give me the ability to run these scenarios. A: I won’t run rates for you, but you can estimate the payments with a calculator and the knowledge that the payment will…

Q: I realize that you can leave your funds in the Thrift Savings Plan until age 70 1/2. But can you continue to contribute to the plan in retirement? If so, how? Can you have a certain amount taken out of your retirement check? If not, what is the advantage of keeping the money in the plan? Wouldn’t it be better to take it out when you retire, reinvest it and continue to contribute to the new fund until you need the money? A: You can’t continue to contribute to the TSP after you separate from service. You can transfer…

Q: If I retire May 1 at age 55 under the Civil Service Retirement System with 34 years of service, can I leave my $60,000 in the Thrift Savings Plan for a year or two and then, after seeing how life as a retiree goes, start up periodic payments? Or do I have to decide what to do with my TSP account right away? A: You can delay the decision for as long as you like. You won’t have to start taking withdrawals until you reach age 70 1/2.

Q: I saw the following comment in response to the question regarding the Thrift Savings Plan annuity rate being 3.625 percent: “The annuity rate is used to determine, at the time of purchase, the size of the payment you’ll receive in exchange for the annuity purchase price.” My question is surrounding the phrase “annuity purchase price.” Are you telling us that after all the years of contributing our own, hard-earned money into the TSP to secure a better retirement life for ourselves and our families, that we have to buy back that money from the TSP in order to use…

Q: I was reading a question submitted to you about the Thrift Savings Plan annuity rate being 3.625 percent. What does this rate have to with withdrawing from our accounts in retirement in the form of an annuity? If I have $200,000 in my account and buy an annuity with it, once it is purchased I get the monthly amount for the rest of my life, Right? I don’t understand what this annuity rate is for. A: The annuity rate is used to determine, at the time of purchase, the size of the payment you’ll receive in exchange for the…

Q: Are federal employees allowed to contribute directly to the Thrift Savings Plan, or does the money have to come out of their paychecks? A: Contributions can be made only through payroll deferral or by transferring money from another tax-deferred retirement account.

Q: I have all of my money in stocks and I have never tried moving it into anything else. What if I was pretty certain that the stock market was going to have a negative adjustment? Should I move my money into something else temporarily until it starts to rebound? A: You’re talking about market timing; the answer depends upon the probability of being right in your prediction, the benefit to you of being right and cost of being wrong. For most investors, particularly those relying on their investments to fund retirement income someday, market timing is a poor bet.

Q: I am under the Federal Employees Retirement System and was looking at the Thrift Savings Plan annuity rate for April 2011, which is 3.625 percent. Using their calculator, at age 62 if I used $100,000 of my TSP to buy an annuity, it would pay $581 a month as long as I live. In order to get that out of the TSP, I’d have to earn 7 percent every year to be able to earn $583 a month! How is that so? Did I calculate something wrong? A: You’re forgetting to account for the fact that once you buy…