Gallo1,
In my opinion, the first thing you have to do is recognize that the funds in TSP are not very volatile. This is an intentional strategy by regulators that are acting in a fiduciary manner - on your behalf.
Your objective while you are young should be to accumulate shares, not worry about trying to make money. Therefore, the easiest approach would be to dollar cost average into your fund choices. Just leave everything up to the odds that life will present - who knows what the future will bring 10 or 15 years down the road. I do know TSP will still be evident and active. Once you have a good accumulation of multi-thousand share positions then you will be ready to lock and load. That's why all the folks get excited over a copper - because they have years of growth in their accounts and they may receive $200 to $300 a hit. That is still not any money to speak of when you may have the ability to make thousands.
While you are in the process of accumulatio on auto-pilot start studying the markets so you will have knowledge and enough experience to be comfortable in pushing around $400,000 to finally be able to make serious money. The older you get the more money you can put into TSP especially with catch up provisions. Don't shrink from this advantage that cash will provide you. I realize this is not your average mundane conservative approach - but it is your money and your opportunity, just be prepared when the time arrives.
Another strategy you could use to gain trading experience would be to open a Roth IRA. Use a discount broker on line to reduce fees and make your own decisions and learn from your own mistakes- you won't sacrifice that much while in the learning process. Hope this gives you a different perspective.



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