First and most importantly thank you for your service to our country.
The plan you have outlined is workable - but you may be looking at an unseen opportunity. I am bullish looking forward so my suggestions will be slanted. If you plan to be without taxable income for the majority of 2006 then the opportunity I'm referring to is the conversion of your regular IRAs into the Roth IRA. If the funds are located at three different companies then a consolidation plan is efficient. All your mutual funds are doing well so I would recommend a slow process for the conversion. Think about the ability of adding individual stocks to your Roth - the Fidelity Company would probably be the most cost effective unless Vanguard will allow you to purchase stocks. The benefit of owning stocks that pay good income with dividends is that the money comes in every 4 months like clock work and is set for dollar cost averaging. Mutual funds only pay once/year.
If you are not required to liquidate your funds prior to transfer to a Roth IRA then you can move them sooner, otherwise you will gain more value by waiting. Whenever you make a change inside any account in the private sector there will be fees - but you are presently with a couple of the best available. If you transfer and decide to remain intact, then new money could go toward individual stocks - they will provide more flexibility in your later years. With a reduced AGI your tax penalty to transfer funds to the Roth IRA will be reduced.
Your plan to keep your TSP account is practical - you might end up working for the government when you finish school. I'm presently sitting at 100% C fund waiting for the growth value play to be recognized. But if you consolidate your TSP funds you will gain faster growth. Hope this little bit helps - oh you can borrow from your Roth without any fees or complications or paper work. Good luck



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