Are you losing money investing in the Rodney Dangerfield option of the federal Thrift Savings Plan? Senior Correspondent Mike Causey has an alternative.
The late, great comedian Rodney Dangerfield always complained that he didn’t get any respect. The line was nearly always part of his routine. And it worked every time. You knew it was coming and laughed when it did.
But if Dangerfield had been an expert on the federal Thrift Savings Plan, or a TSP investor, he might have slapped the no-respect label on the TSP’s bond fund, the F fund. It’s one of the two least popular traditional funds in the federal 401(k) plan, where most people put most of their retirement nest egg in the super-safe (also super-dull) Treasury securities G-fund.
Arthur Stein, a D.C.-area financial planner who has many TSP clients, said it’s a fact, “The F fund gets no respect, but it should.”
Stein’s client base includes a couple of feds who have more than $1 million in their TSP accounts. And they did it the hard way, not by transferring money into the TSP, but by regular, steady, long-term investing.
In addition to the C, S and I stock funds, he says that the TSP has two bond funds. One may get too much attention, the other not enough:
The F fund was usually the top performer (as of Dec. 31, 2016).
So where do feds put most of their money? The G fund, not the F fund, Stein said.
Investment Allocations Compared to Investment Returns | ||
Fund | Percent of Dollars Invested | 10-year Average Annual Rates of Return |
G-fund | 36 percent | 3 percent |
F-fund | 5 percent | 5 percent |
Stein says that federal TSP participants “invested seven times as much in the G fund as the F fund despite the F fund’s historical record of outperforming three out of every four years.” Question: Why? And what should people be doing? We’ll talk about the pros and cons of investing in the various funds, and the fact that too many people may have too much of their nest egg in the G fund. and other TSP topics today at 10 a.m. EST our Your Turn radio show. You can listen at Federal News Radio or in the D.C. metro area on 1500 AM
If you have questions for him, or want to explain why you do or don’t invest in the G and F funds, send them to me (before showtime) at mcausey@federalnewsradio.com.
The show will be archived on our homepage, so if you miss it, want to listen again or pass it on to a friend, you can.
By Michael O’Connell
Rodney Dangerfield was born Jacob Cohen on Nov. 21, 1921, in Deer Park, Long Island, New York.
Source: IMDB
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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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