I know retirement is usually a hot topic on these boards with lots of good advice, so I figured I'd ask here first. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />
I currently contribute 10% of my pay with 5% employer match into a TSP (government 401K basically). I have those funds invested in an life cycle 2050 fund which is around the year I should retire (I'm currently 24). The L fund invests more aggressively the further I am from retirement, and then invests safer as a I near retirement age. L funds usually have much better earnings than the other funds. I am not sure how much the fund is making currently because I have not received my quarterly statement.
In addition to that I have an IRA certificate from a 401K when I worked at a credit union for a few years. The IRA certificate has $4,300 in it roughly, not much at all. The certificate is set to renew Nov 2016 and the current rate is horrible .76%. If I withdraw it now to roll over to my TSP I would take a penalty, but I need to figure out what the penalty would be. I am guessing around $200-300, but I can't be certain.
So WWMMD? How much of a penalty would you be willing to take in order to get this money into a higher earning account? Or would you just wait it out for 2 years and then transfer it over to avoid losing any money? At this point I've only made $84.00 on my IRA certificate in the last 2 years, and I know my TSP is substantially more.
Not that it is relevant to this question, but I'm also planning to up my TSP contribution to 15% in January when I get a raise. I know MM highly suggests 15% so I'm working my way there.
TIA for any help you can provide! ![]()
Re: WWMMD IRA Certificate
@hoffse That is my thinking to. According to the website the L2050 fund where I currently have my entire TSP invested earned 26.20% as of Dec 13. So I think I could easily recover my money lost if it is $200-300 penalty.
I am not investment savvy so I would definitely roll these funds over to my TSP directly and let the L fund do the investing for me.
Another question on top of this: Will rolling this into my TSP count towards my annual contribution limit? I've heard mixed responses on this one.