How Will You spend Down Your “401k” Federal Savings Plan Account

By May 21, 2018Benefits, Retirement, TSP
Thrift Savings Plan

Have you started to think about how you’re going to use your “401k” Federal Savings Plan investments once you retire from federal service? Are you already retired? If you’re among the many people who have accumulated a small fortune, what are you going to do with it?

Many federal employees have used some of their retirement savings during their career by borrowing from their accounts using the “401k” Federal Savings Plan loan program. According to recent statistics, more than 250,000 “401k” Federal Savings Plan loan transactions are processed every year. In addition, more than 120,000 in-service withdrawals are processed for financial hardship as well as age-based withdrawals for employees age 59 ½ and older. Over the past few years, only about 35,000 separated participants per year have initiated monthly payments from their “401k” Federal Savings Plan accounts. Meanwhile, the Office of Personnel Management processes about 100,000 federal retirement claims every year.

Over the years, you’ve had to decide how much of your salary to save in the “401k” Federal Savings Plan and in which funds to invest those savings. Considering the “401k” Federal Savings Plan had a balance at the end of January of $559 billion, the 5.2 million “401k” Federal Savings Plan participants have done an amazing job of accumulating retirement assets. More than 90 percent of all FERS employees are actively participating in the “401k” Federal Savings Plan . The Life Cycle funds represent more than 20 percent of total “401k” Federal Savings Plan assets, and allow simple diversification across the C, G, F, S, and I funds by allocating assets according to a time horizon based on when you intend to start using the funds. The size of the C Fund now matches the G Fund, with each fund holding a balance as of the end of January of approximately $205 billion.

If you’re nearing retirement, you face some decisions about how to use this important piece of your retirement benefit. Will you choose a monthly payment to supplement your federal retirement benefit and Social Security? Are you going to purchase a life annuity from MetLife, will you take payments directly from your account balance, or will you do a qualified rollover to another IRA Annuity that will offer more income, more features than the typical MetLife Annuity?  Will you continue to allow the account to grow and decide later on how to draw on your funds? Are you planning to “peck” at it as needed for major expenses that come up along the way? Have you considered how you will continue to manage your wealth of savings once you begin to spend this valuable asset? Are you worried about running out of money at some point? These are important questions to consider as you plan your transition to full retirement. That’s one area we believe we can help guide you in making the right decision.  Request your Retirement Review and “401k” Federal Savings Plan Analysis (see link below) to see what’s best for you.  For example, we have Joe, retired with about $223,000  and since the rollover, seven years ago, H-E-B has taken out over $98,000 but still has an account balance today of $199,840.  How’s that’s for a return and still at no risk at all of ever losing principal.

Here are three questions you need to ask yourself.

1.  Do you like the idea of never losing your principal due to a down market?

2.  Do you like the idea of having a Guaranteed income you can never outlive, or that will pay for the rest of your life or your spouse life?

3.  Would you like to have the option to leave more of your principal for your children or grand-children, or the flexibility to pull more of your account balance as the years go by as you choose too without ANY penalty?

if you answered yes to any or all of these questions, we have a solution for you.

A few weeks ago I provided an update on the “401k” Federal Savings Plan Modernization Act changes that are slated to go into effect by November 2019. They will provide more withdrawal flexibilities for “401k” Federal Savings Plan participants, allowing them to take partial withdrawals, change the amount of monthly payments, and choose whether withdrawals should come from a traditional “401k” Federal Savings Plan account or a Roth account.

The Employee Benefits Research Institute released an issue brief on how people spend their retirement savings. The study was limited to retirees from private companies with 10 or more employees. Among its findings:

  • Within the first 18 years of retirement, those with $500,000 or more saved spent down 11.8 percent of their accumulated assets. Those with less than $500,000 saved spent about a quarter of their savings.
  • While some retirees do spend down most of their assets in the first 18 years following retirement, about one-third of all sampled retirees had increased their assets over that period.
  • Individuals with a pension were much less likely to have spent down their assets than those without pensions. In the first 18 years of retirement, the assets of retirees with pensions only went down 4 percent. For those without pensions, the figure was 34 percent.

According to the report, retirees face several factors—including uncertainties about life span, medical expenses, and market returns—that cause many of them to spend their retirement assets slowly.

Those covered by the Federal Employees Retirement System have the traditional “three-legged stool” of a retirement benefit (a form of pension), Social Security and retirement savings in the “401k” Federal Savings Plan . Some FERS retirees are currently living on only one or two of those legs, while others have left federal employment, but are not fully retired. In the Civil Service Retirement System, by contrast, many people retired and lived on their federal retirement benefit alone long before the “401k” Federal Savings Plan was available.

The “401k” Federal Savings Plan has been around for more than 30 years. Until recently, the focus of its participants has been on accumulating retirement assets. Now many of them are thinking about how and when to spend them. They’ll soon have more options for doing that, but that will mean they may need additional education and resources to be confident that their life after retirement will be financially comfortable for as long as they live.

Here are some tools from the “401k” Federal Savings Plan to help you as you assess your withdrawal options:

You can also  Request your free personalized review a “401k” Federal Savings Plan Analysis,

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