Funds investment considerations

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Q. I’m a current CSRS employee considering retirement after 34 years of service. With a $300,000 balance in my TSP account. I’m currently risk adverse and for the past two years have been in the L Income Fund. I have read many of the questions about investing and found a familiar reply below:

“I suggest that you invest your TSP balance in the L Fund that most closely corresponds to your life expectancy”.

I am 61 years of age and hopefully will be alive until my early 80s. Isn’t the L2030 fund too risky for someone of my age?

What are your thoughts on moving my $300,000 from the L Income Fund to the L2030? Should I do it now, or wait until we experience a 15-20 percent correction?

A. Your investment decisions should be based upon all of the relevant factors involved, not just your age. I might argue that if you’d like to obtain the maximum safe standard of living from your TSP account over your lifetime, the L Income Fund is too conservative for someone with a 20-plus year life expectancy. Have you compared the maximum safe, inflation-adjusted distribution rate for the various investment strategies you are considering? Have you compared this rate for the L Income Fund to what you can get from an insurance company through an immediate fixed life annuity? If not, you have some work to do.

If the L Income Fund is the wrong fund for your purposes and the L2030 is the right one, then waiting to make the move probably subjects you to more risk than it will avoid. Your question is like telling me that you’re at a fork in the road and asking me which way you should turn. I don’t know where you’re going or what resources you have to get you there. You’ll need a good map (an investment strategy) to answer this question properly.

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Mike Miles is a Certified Financial Planner licensee and principal adviser for Variplan LLC, an independent fiduciary in Vienna, Virginia. Email your financial questions to fedexperts@federaltimes.com and view his blog at money.federaltimes.com.

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