Thousands of feds who bailed out of the TSP stock funds during the depths of the recession are now wondering whether they should come back and if so how. For a ...
Thousands of TSP investors bailed out of the stock market (C, S and I) Funds during the first years (2007 through 2009) of the current recession. The super-safe Treasury securities G Fund became the safe harbor of choice. Now that the markets have roared back, many are wondering when, and if, to reinvest in the American and international stock markets via the federal 401(k) plan. And if so, should they just take the plunge or slowly edge back into the rising market?
The G Fund rate of return is 1.47 percent compared to 18.62 percent for the international stock I Fund; 18.57 percent for the U.S. stock market small cap (S Fund); and 16.07 percent for the C Fund which tracks the S&P 500 index.
Since the market bottomed out in early March 2009, the G Fund is up 9.58 percent, the C fund is up 135 percent, the S Fund is up 177 percent and the I Fund is up 105 percent. So people who held tight and continued to buy have done very well. But if you didn’t, what do you do? Getting out of the stock market is much easier (psychologically) when it’s going down than it is to buy your way back in when prices are up. Financial planner Arthur Stein says one way to start is to consider allocating future contributions to the C, S and I Fund. You can keep what you’ ve got in the super-safe G Fund but start buying into the higher risk, higher reward stock funds.
For some been-there-done-that stories from real TSP investors, like you, check out these emails:
“I just checked my TSP balance this morning, and it is sitting at $221,632 and this is after I took out a general loan two years ago to help buy a house. I am investing 80 percent of my funds into the C, S & I funds, and I invest at least 10 percent of my pay into the TSP. I am about six years out from retirement and may begin to move some of my funds into the G Fund.” — Somewhere In South Dakota
“I figure my current balance is about one-quarter of what it would be worth if I had stayed the course and done nothing. I especially regret not at least having the sense to keep buying the C, S and I Funds when they were on sale. The gut-wrencher now is when to go back into stocks? ” — Smart Too Late
Finally, the last word in investing goes to Stan the Man, who specializes in having the last word. This time it is in the form of a simple Q & A:
Question: Do you know how to make a small fortune in the stock market?
Answer: Invest a large fortune!”
(Insert collective groan here…)
NEARLY USELESS FACTOID
By Jack Moore
The sun is actually white, not yellow. The Earth’s atmosphere scatters the sun’s light, distorting the color.
(Source: Today I Found Out)
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Mike Causey is senior correspondent for Federal News Network and writes his daily Federal Report column on federal employees’ pay, benefits and retirement.
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