Readers' Comments
Total Comments: 52
Page 2 of 5
Page 2 of 5
TSP Drops Fast; 2009 COLA Rate Also Drops
Total Comments: 52
Page 2 of 5
Page 2 of 5
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| Close | Change | YTD | |
| G | $13.2114 | +0.0012 | +0.70% |
| F | $13.6201 | -0.0062 | +2.14% |
| C | $13.8116 | -0.0706 | +4.49% |
| S | $17.9282 | -0.1903 | +8.91% |
| I | $18.5079 | -0.0782 | -0.16% |
| Close | Change | YTD | |
| L 2040 | $16.1968 | -0.0789 | +3.59% |
| L 2030 | $15.9593 | -0.0673 | +3.23% |
| L 2020 | $15.7365 | -0.0532 | +2.72% |
| L 2010 | $15.4595 | -0.0197 | +1.57% |
| L Income | $14.0856 | -0.0155 | +1.48% |
TSP Drops Fast; 2009 COLA Rate Also Drops
Unregulated Investment Banks
INS (now DHS)
Thu Sep 18, 2008 10:24 AM
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Several things piqued my curiosity about this, one of them being a report here that a majority of us federal workers favor McCain's economic promises over the un-tested Obama's. That struck me as unlikely because we've always done better under Democrat presidents.
Besides, it's hard to sort out campaign promises from fiscal plausibility -- what a candidate promises and what he says that is actually do-able. Here's what I discovered about McCain.
(1) the earmarks he insists he will veto have been much less than 1% of the total federal expenditures. This came as a surprise. It's still a lot of money that should be saved.
(2) the perpetrators McCain says he will publically humiliate include the Department of the Army, which often inserts requests for additional funds for unexpected expenses. (It's a quick way of getting the money without having to go through the usual protocols.)
I've run out of my alloted characters. I'll try to follow up in another comment.
Commercial v. Investment banks
INS (now DHS)
Thu Sep 18, 2008 10:49 AM
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Commercial banks (where individuals hold accounts and morgages, etc.) are regulated, and by-and-large they are in slightly better shape than the investment banks, some of which are now collapsing or threatening to. Investment banks are NOT regulated in any way because we have legislation in place that prohibits the government from regulating them. (Read that again. Think Lehman Brothers.) That legislation was the product of a bill sponsored by -- I wasn't ready for this -- John McCain (!) and Phil Graham (when he was a Senator) in 1999. That legislation also prohibited the regulation of any firm having to do with the production of energy. (Think ENRON.) This is perfectly in line with the basic Republican belief in the separation of business and government.
Obama's approach does't offer many specifics, but it DOES propose that the government regulate both kinds of banks much more tightly. (He doesn't say specifically how.) But . . .
I'm runninng out of space again
Re: Commercial v. Investment banks
dod
Thu Sep 18, 2008 3:46 PM
Lost Fortune
SSA
Thu Sep 18, 2008 12:07 PM
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Since October 2007, my TSP balance has dropped $100,000. It took 8 years to get these gains and like water it has all been washed away. I should have got out of the I, S, and C Fund a long time ago, but I kept letting financial advisors tell me that I should always buy low and sell high and hang in there they told me. Now, here I am with only a few years away from retirement as broke and busted as I have never been in my life. Is there a bailout for me, Mr. Fed? Or do I have to be AGI or Bear Stearns? I've never felt so poor in all of my life...By the end of McCain's first year in office, I'll be out of work and on welfare...
Re: Lost Fortune
dod
Thu Sep 18, 2008 4:23 PM
Re: Lost Fortune
U.S. Navy
Sat Sep 20, 2008 3:57 AM
Re: Lost Fortune
FS
Tue Oct 7, 2008 4:50 PM
Good Times
DOD
Thu Sep 18, 2008 12:13 PM
Post Reply
I posted on Sept 10 that I thought the Dow was marching down to 10,000 or lower. This is not based on tarot cards or a mystic, if you look at all funds over the last 12 months the I, C, S are all trending downward, the G and F are trending up. The actual growth of the market from 1929 until the mid-1950's was rather dull. I am an advocate for keeping the bulk of money in a safe place and only investing a portion of new contributions in the Market. This way there is some reward for risk, and a hedge against loss. This has worked for me, and my Mother (rip). Of course you could listen to those whom have money in the market and they are trying to get you to stay in so they don't lose more. It is just that the fundamentals are not very sound these days.
TSP Drops Fast
Department of Justice
Thu Sep 18, 2008 1:37 PM
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After yesterday I finally moved what I have left into the G Fund. I'm down in excess of $58,000, $49,000 since May, so it was time. All the financial wizards who continue to say ride out the storm can do so on their own. One analyst today actually predicted this "storm" will last through at least mid-2009.
Re: TSP Drops Fast
DOE
Thu Sep 18, 2008 3:58 PM
Re: TSP Drops Fast
VA
Fri Sep 19, 2008 2:51 PM
FERS v CSRS AND THE FINANCIAL MARKETS
DOJ
Thu Sep 18, 2008 1:46 PM
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Did we make a mistake when we moved Feds from the certainty of 2% increase in a fixed annuity under the CSRS - where a retiree could count on a guaranteed 70% of high three average salary for life after 35 years of service PLUS full COLAs every year to ensure buying power? FERS could lead us to a very old work force never able to retire or a poverty class of once dedicated federal workers. Did we go wrong?
Re: FERS v CSRS AND THE FINANCIAL MARKETS
DOL
Thu Sep 18, 2008 4:01 PM
CPI/annuity for retirees/TSP
Us Postal Service/Now Retired
Thu Sep 18, 2008 2:03 PM
Post Reply
In response to the civil engineer from FAA. The COLA increase is the average of CPI-W for the 3rd quarter of this ear to the 3rd quarter of last year when it was 203.6. The July number was 216.3 or 6.2% above 203.6. The August index dropped 0.5% from July or down to 215.247. The average is 215.77 which 6% above the 203.6 3rd quarter 2007 base. I hope this explains it. If the September index rises by 0.2% then the January cola will be 6%. If oil prices do not drop much during September, then we should see an increase. The huge drop in transportation is what caused inflation to drop.
On the annuity for retiree. It is only as secure as the company that you have it with.
On the current state of the financial world, you can try timing the market, but you never know when it wil turn. Current employees should rebalance their portfolios and take advantage of buying stocks at reduced prices. Retirees who need the money should have allocations a balance btween risk versus reward.