How long will the current bull market last and what should you do to prepare for the inevitable correction? Find out when certified financial planner Arthur Stein joins host Mike Causey on this week's Your Turn radio show. March 14, 2018
A huge number of federal workers are eligible to retire right now. That doesn’t mean they are going to leave. But they could.
The problem is, the Postal Service is limited by law where it can invest employees' retirement funds.
The White House wants to freeze federal pay, raise employee contributions to the pension fund and cut benefits when they retire.
GAO report found SSA in violation of Federal Vacancies Reform Act after agency goes 5 years without appointed commissioner, or even a nominee.
Federal employees must consider the tradeoffs before making the decision to retire. Tammy Flanagan joins Federal Drive with Tom Temin with some advice.
What are the top reasons federal workers are retiring in droves? Is it fear and loathing of the Trump administration, changes in the stock market or something else?
Are federal workers retiring in larger numbers? Are we on the verge of the so-called retirement tsunami that experts have been predicting for years? Find out when Federal News Radio reporter Nicole Ogrysko joins host Mike Causey on this week's Your Turn. March 7, 2018
Last month, 13,290 federal employees filed retirement claims with OPM, the highest number in a February since 2013.
2017's retirement numbers paled in comparison to those of the mid-years of the Obama administration.
For the first time, total assets in the Thrift Savings Plan's C fund matched total assets in the G fund.
Many financial planners urge clients investing for retirement to take the long-view. For many investors that is easier said than done.
It's a scientific fact that 62 percent of all federal workers in the Washington area born before 1994 suffer from advanced déjà vu syndrome.
Returns from the Thrift Savings Plan took a sharp downturn in February, reflecting corrections in the stock market that made for a volatile month.
If somebody said your federal pension plan needs $152 billion in nip and tuck surgery, would you be alarmed? Maybe you should be, says Senior Correspondent Mike Causey.