Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been a fed for 12 years and always put the max in my TSP. I now have close to $400,000. All of my. Money is in lifecycle LFund 2040. I realize I need a better mix of funds since the LFunds are not doing well. Any suggestions? I'm 39, married with two kids. Thank you.
Ummm, L2040 is up almost 6% YTD and 10% over the past year. You're doing fine as-is. As any boglehead would say, "Don't do something, just stand there!"
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But I do agree with the other posters mentioning that the L funds are WAY too conservative. L2040 already has over a quarter of its holdings in bonds, which is a little high for my tastes when retirement is still 20+ years away:
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Personally, I let it all ride on 70%C / 20%S / 10%G and then rebalance when the G-Fund goes <9% or >11%, or after a RBD (really bad day). A mix of C:S between a 3:1 to 4:1 ratio replicates the entire US stock market. I don't see any need for international since Coca-Cola, Ford, and Levi's (along with every other major US corporation) does plenty of business overseas. Likewise, the G-Fund is a better bond since it never loses value (free lunch!), whereas the F-Fund can and does.
Hey why do I need to rebalance my fund allocations? I chose my fund allocations, but why do they automatically steer one way and go out of wack? Basic question I know...it's just strange that the allocations change. Is it based on how well one is doing? The allocations automatically change?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've been a fed for 12 years and always put the max in my TSP. I now have close to $400,000. All of my. Money is in lifecycle LFund 2040. I realize I need a better mix of funds since the LFunds are not doing well. Any suggestions? I'm 39, married with two kids. Thank you.
Ummm, L2040 is up almost 6% YTD and 10% over the past year. You're doing fine as-is. As any boglehead would say, "Don't do something, just stand there!"
![]()
But I do agree with the other posters mentioning that the L funds are WAY too conservative. L2040 already has over a quarter of its holdings in bonds, which is a little high for my tastes when retirement is still 20+ years away:
![]()
Personally, I let it all ride on 70%C / 20%S / 10%G and then rebalance when the G-Fund goes <9% or >11%, or after a RBD (really bad day). A mix of C:S between a 3:1 to 4:1 ratio replicates the entire US stock market. I don't see any need for international since Coca-Cola, Ford, and Levi's (along with every other major US corporation) does plenty of business overseas. Likewise, the G-Fund is a better bond since it never loses value (free lunch!), whereas the F-Fund can and does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yep, I've always maxed out. Mainly in C fund. Have close to $1M in there.
How long have you been a fed?
Anonymous wrote:I've been a fed for 12 years and always put the max in my TSP. I now have close to $400,000. All of my. Money is in lifecycle LFund 2040. I realize I need a better mix of funds since the LFunds are not doing well. Any suggestions? I'm 39, married with two kids. Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Yep, I've always maxed out. Mainly in C fund. Have close to $1M in there.
Anonymous wrote:C. Why not tie your money to the S&P rather than having it go into things like international or small cap (which is where a lot of the L funds are allocated) as those don't consistently do well or at least they don't consistently outperform the S&P.
If putting it all in C is too much for you -- you could make a shift to 50% C and 50% L.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The L is too conservative. I have 45% in C and 40% in S, 10% in I. The remainder is in G and F. I started with L2040 since that is the year when I turn 57 and moved once I realized how conservative it was.
You're still ahead of many. I have a colleague who has maxed every year but has remained in the G fund!
Wow -- why bother?! Does he or she not understand investing or are they THAT risk averse?
Anonymous wrote:The L is too conservative. I have 45% in C and 40% in S, 10% in I. The remainder is in G and F. I started with L2040 since that is the year when I turn 57 and moved once I realized how conservative it was.
You're still ahead of many. I have a colleague who has maxed every year but has remained in the G fund!