Anonymous wrote:If they have a TSP, then they get a very nice annuity (CSRS) or a nice annuity and social security (FERS). I wouldn't convert my TSP to an annuity when you already have a nice income stream in retirement. As someone else said, its a gamble, so I'd rather keep a little diversification and keep the TSP.
Anonymous wrote:You do not need a financial advisor. You have the information already.
Annuities especially from a tsp are designed to be actuarially neutral, meaning that the annuity provider less their fee expects them in average to pay out exactly what the account balance would have otherwise produced.
Accordingly you are making a bet. Do you think your mother will outlive the average life expectancy of other 80 year olds. If yes and you are right it is financially advantageous to do the annuity.
But in the end of the day you just don’t know. You just have to decide.
Remember though it doesn’t have to be all or nothing. You can hedge your bets an annuities half.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks for the replies, PPs.
As a PP noted, the annuity would come through the TSP system, not through an outside advisor. It's one of the distribution options. See here: https://www.tsp.gov/publications/tspfs24.pdf
This came up because my parent's latest TSP statement showed this potential option and an estimate of what the monthly payout would be.
We would consult the financial advisor to help do the math on whether my parent would be better off financially. And to help think through the many things that we haven't thought through about this decision.
Parent has a small pension plus Social Security that, combined, amounts to about $26,000 a year. Parent also has about $200,000 in retirement accounts and other savings, and draws upon that each year to help make ends meet.
Within that $200,000 is a balance of $118,000 in the TSP account. Parent would convert all or part of that into an annuity through the TSP system.
I will check out the advisor that a PP linked to.
I have posted on Bogleheads about this situation, asking if it would make sense to convert to an annuity, and am monitoring repllies there. I thought DCUM might be a better place to get recs for a local fee-only financial counselor/advisor.
Anonymous wrote:My 80-year-old parent is weighing whether to convert part of their TSP balance to a lifetime annuity. The annuity option has become more favorable as interest rates have risen.
As I do the math, I think there is a lot of upside to doing this, including a boost in guaranteed income and a solid hedge against the parent outliving their money. Some downsides, too -- like inflation eroding the value of the monthly payments over time.
I know there are some things I haven't thought through, like how, if it all, this would affect parent's eventual (potential) eligiblity for Medicaid should their health decline and their savings run out.
I'd like to suggest that they run the numbers with a reputable financial advisor, as a one-time thing, not for ongoing money management. Can anyone recommend an appropriate fee-only advisor, ideally in Maryland, who might take on a small matter like this?