Hubbard Radio Washington DC, LLC. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
For many long-term investors — like folks in the Thrift Savings Plan — the question is simple. What, if anything, should I be doing with my portfolio?
When it comes to the smartest investors in the nation, which group of people or professions would you pick?
What’s a TSP investor do? Plan ahead and don’t panic is what most of the pros say. But knowing what you should do during the next stock market crash and doing it are two very different things.
Is it safe to put your retirement nest egg in the never-has-a-bad-day (or many good days) G fund? Or go for the stock index or L funds which go up and down but mostly up in recent years?
Millions of active and retired feds — anyone with money in the treasury securities G fund or F (bond) fund — are not investors in the true sense.
Unless the stock market tanks, big time, during the next 51 days the number of federal Thrift Savings Plan millionaires is expected to skyrocket.
A higher January COLA could mean the nation is in for an extended period of higher inflation.
Retirement with debt is a bad idea, especially if you are under the FERS program with its diet-COLA formula.
A handful of strategies exist for TSP investors when the stock market expects to see a sharp decline.
When it comes to being a savvy, successful investor, your typical federal bureaucrat may leave other professions in the dust.
Financial planner Arthur Stein says that many feds don’t understand that their TSP retirement nest egg is not really an investment.
Because the Thrift Savings Plan's G fund never goes down, in other words it is “safe." But that also depends upon what you mean by “safe.” When is playing it "safe" actually risky?
Most of the 75,420 (as of Dec. 30, 2020) feds with $1 million-plus Thrift Savings Plan accounts have three things in common. And you can join them.
Lots of lessons can be learned from last year that can help you make better decisions for your financial outlook in 2021 and beyond.