Q. I’ve worked for the Postal Service since 2001. There is $29,000 in my Thrift Savings Plan. I was on the 3 fund for all of those years. I would like to make some changes hoping to bring in more. I am 37 years old. I just changed it to 30 percent S and 70 percent G, but I am sure that is not good. Could you assist me? A. Why did you choose this inefficient allocation? If you’re not sure which allocation best suits your needs, try the L Fund with the maturity that most closely matches your life…
Browsing: S Fund
Q. I’m 27 and contribute 5 percent of my income to the Thrift Savings Plan, which I have in the C and I funds. I’m considering opening a Roth IRA, as well as investing in an aggressive growth mutual fund. Would I be better off just increasing my TSP contributions? A. If you insist on long-shot betting — making bets that are more likely to lose than to win — you’ll have to go outside TSP. If you want an aggressive investment that maximizes your risk-adjusted expected returns, try the TSP’s S Fund.
Q. Can you recommend some funds where a retiree could put his money if he is not a federal worker? A. Except for the G Fund, which is a cash equivalent that can’t be matched outside the Thrift Savings Plan (use a money market fund or equivalent interest bearing security with no risk of loss), the other four TSP funds are based on widely available indices. The C Fund is based on the S&P 500 Index, the S Fund on the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index, The I Fund on the Morgan Stanley Capital Europe, Australasia, Far…
Q. TSP explains in its brochure that dividends are already incorporated into the share price. This seems illogical to me, as I believe the definition of a dividend is a cash payout of a certain stock share price at a certain time of the year. Does the Thrift Savings Plan definition mean that the share price of the S, C or I Fund is artificially inflated? A. No, it means the dividends that are paid by the stocks owned by the funds are retained by the fund and increase the net asset value of the fund. The share price reflects…
Q: I truly do not know what I’m doing with my Thrift Savings Plan funds. I’ve been told to divesify them; what exactly does that mean? If you were to look at this breakdown (figures rounded slightly) and know that I won’t retire for 21 years, what recommendation(s) would you make? L 2040 Lifecycle Fund: 74.72 percent of total funds, $21,423; F Fund: 5.33 percent, $1,529; G Fund: 5.28 percent, $1,515; C Fund: 4.91 percent, $1,408; I Fund: 4,88 percent, $1,400; S Fund: 4.88 percent, $1,398. A: Consider the following growth allocation: 55 percent C Fund, 26 percent S Fund,…
Q: I am retiring next month and am not interested in assuming risk in my retirement funds at this time. Would be best to roll over Thrift Savings Plan funds into an Individual Retirement Account, or should I leave the money in the TSP? I currently have 50 percent of my money in the G Fund and 25 percent in the C and S Funds. A: Your interests will be best served by leaving your money in the TSP as long as possible.
Q: I know the C Fund tracks the S&P 500, but what do the S Fund and I Fund fall under? A: The S Fund tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Completion Total Stock Market Index, which covers all actively traded U.S. common stocks not included in the S&P 500 index. The I Fund tracks the Morgan Stanley Capital International EAFE Stock Index, which covers certain large company stocks from certain developed nations outside of the U.S. Simply, you can consider the S Fund to represent medium and small U.S. company stocks, and the I Fund to represent the stock of…