Browsing: allocation

Q. I turn 70½ this year and want to start Required Minimum Distribution withdrawals from the Thrift Savings Plan based on life expectancy. 1. Starting withdrawals now will not equal the total RMD amount required for the year (since withdrawals are paid monthly). Will TSP issue a “catch-up” payment before Dec. 31 to fulfill the total RMD? 2. My TSP account is allocated among all five TSP funds (based on percentages advised by financial adviser). Will TSP apportion the RMD from all of those funds and keep my designated allocation percentages? 3. TSP told me it will not withhold taxes on my RMD…

Q. I am 35 years old and am using L2040 for my fund allocation through the Thrift Savings Plan. I have been reading that I should be diversifying between C, S and I funds for a larger return, but I am not sure how to split the percentages between the three funds. How can I do that since I have 30 years or so until retirement? A. About 77 percent of your L 2040 investment is already in the C, S and I funds. You could switch to the L 2050 fund and increase that allocation to about 87 percent. If you…

Q. I have unfortunately neglected my Thrift Savings Plan since joining federal service in 2007. I started with the G Fund, stayed with it during the crash, and am still 100 percent in it today. I realize that was a huge mistake; the stock funds have done extremely well especially this past year. Would you recommend I dollar cost average in over the next six months or year? My instinct is to stop these low returns and get into the bond and stock funds and out of the G, but if the market takes a dive this summer, I will…

Q. I have between 10 and 15 years to work until retirement (I am 52 yrs old). Right now, my contribution allocation is: S: 25 percent C: 25 percent L: 20 percent G: 30 percent The distribution is more diversified. What do you think? I don’t know what I am doing; therefore, I am just guessing. A. Your allocation is basically: 50 percent stocks, 20 percent bonds and 30 percent cash. This would generally be considered a moderately conservative allocation. Whether, or not, it’s right for you is impossible to say without more information and analysis, but it doesn’t appear to…

Q. I am coming up on 10 years in the federal government and have not done a good job with my Thrift Savings Plan. I have left it at 100 percent in the G Fund, contributing 5 percent of my salary to TSP. I am now looking to maximize my TSP contribution (although perhaps not right away; I am considering increasing it to 8 percent this year and the upping it again next year until I’ve maxed it out). I was planning to put the additional contribution this year into the L Fund. I am almost 35, will soon have…

Q. I’ve participated in the Thrift Savings Plan since its inception as a CSRS employee and plan to retire next year. My current contribution allocation is 100 percent to the L2020 Fund and has been since that fund was created in 2005. Prior to the creation of the L funds, I had allocated my contributions equally to the C and G funds, which I have left untouched in the account. The account’s present holdings are approximately 50 percent L2020, with the remainder being 25 percent C and 25 percent G Fund. What should I now be doing, if anything, with those…

Q. As precaution for what I thought was going to be a market decline, in December, I moved $350,000 out of my Thrift Savings Plan accounts from the C, S, and I fund (60 percent, 20 percent, 20 percent) to the G Fund. The end of the year came and went with no crash. The government had several “doomsday” dates that kept me guessing on market reactions. All have come and gone and the market is still going strong. I didn’t change my paycheck allocations, so I’ve continued to put money into the above funds in the percentages shown, so at…

Q. I’m 25 years old, series 1811 and have been contributing 5 percent into the Thrift Savings Plan (FERS) for three years. Until last week, I was contributing 100 percent into the L2040 fund, but now I’m doing 65 percent into the S Fund and 35 percent into the I Fund. Since I still have about 32 years until mandatory retirement, do you think I am making the right TSP choices now, and do you have any recommendations? A. Your allocation is risk-inefficient. You could reconfigure it to deliver similar expected growth with much less volatility. If you don’t know…

Q. I am a 48-year-old GS-14/7 with about $240,000 in my Thrift Savings Plan (I have a little more in a prior 401(k), and my wife makes more than I do but does not have a 401(k) plan…I am willing to take reasonable risks). I have contributed the maximum at 43 percent C, 22 percent S, 25 percent I and 10 percent F for several years and rebalanced each year. Indeed, I stubbornly left it like that during the crash but have recovered nicely. I recently borrowed $30,000 (yes, I know, that is not the best course), at the G…

Q. I will have approximately $550,000 in my Thrift Savings Plan when I retire this year at age 60. In addition, I have other investments and will be receiving a federal pension. Using a 4 percent investment withdrawal rate and anticipating future Social Security benefits, my income will exceed expenses by 20 percent, so I may dial back the 4 percent to something less. Considering this and with a willingness to accept a moderate amount of risk, what would be an appropriate TSP fund allocation for a younger retired person? A. I can’t tell you what is right for you…

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