Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Why does that matter? You could just take your distribution and then immediately rebalance. So if $10,000 came from the C fund and $10,000 came from the G fund, but you wanted $20,000 from the G fund, you would just move $10,000 from the G fund to the C fund the same day, right?
Because the process you described doesn't work for TSP withdrawals. If you want $20k out of the TSP, you cannot choose to take it out of the G fund. You would have to move ALL of your money to one fund, request the withdrawal, then move it all back to the allocation you want. Otherwise, if you want $20k, they are taking it out of ALL of your funds such that the total is $20k withdrawn. I would have to do this maneuver every time I want to take a withdrawal.
Ideally, I would keep my short-term money in the G fund, and have all of my equities in Vanguard 401k. Then when the market was low, I'd pull RMDs from the G fund, and when the market is high, I'd pull from the Vanguard equities. But, under current law this is not possible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Why does that matter? You could just take your distribution and then immediately rebalance. So if $10,000 came from the C fund and $10,000 came from the G fund, but you wanted $20,000 from the G fund, you would just move $10,000 from the G fund to the C fund the same day, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Why does that matter? You could just take your distribution and then immediately rebalance. So if $10,000 came from the C fund and $10,000 came from the G fund, but you wanted $20,000 from the G fund, you would just move $10,000 from the G fund to the C fund the same day, right?
The point is not to be forced to sell the C fund when it's down. If you leave cash in G and move your S&P index funds to Fidelity or whatever, you don't have to sell when you're down, but take G fund cash when you need it instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Why does that matter? You could just take your distribution and then immediately rebalance. So if $10,000 came from the C fund and $10,000 came from the G fund, but you wanted $20,000 from the G fund, you would just move $10,000 from the G fund to the C fund the same day, right?
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Not being able to choose which fund to withdraw from for RMDs is a major negative.