Results 1 to 8 of 8

Thread: Paycheck Contribution Question

  1. #1
    shak23 is offline Newbie
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    NYC, New York, USA
    Posts
    4

    Post imported post

    Greetings All.

    Question- My current paycheck contributions are divided 40%C, 40%S, and 20% I. (Allocations are the same too- just starting out as a Buy & Holder for now). Anyway, today is payday... so is my paycheck contribution buying in atTODAY's prices of C,S, & I or the fund price when I first when to 40%/40%/20%.

    Thanks for the info.:^


  2.  
  3. #2
    Dogdaddy's Avatar
    Dogdaddy is offline TSP Starter
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    Golden, Colorado, USA
    Posts
    95

    Post imported post

    Your paycheck contributions buy shares at COB price the day the contribution is credited to your TSP Account..If the contribution goes in today, you get the shares at COB 4/22 share prices.

  4.  
  5. #3
    Rod's Avatar
    Rod
    Rod is offline Moderator
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    In Your Imagination...
    Posts
    3,477

    Post imported post

    A suggestion: have your payday go 100 G Fund. Then you can allocate out from there with the market fluctuations.

    This way you will not allocate into equitieson a bad day and lose what you were just paid.

    God Bless:^
    "You rise. You fall. You're down then you rise again. What don't kill ya make ya more strong."
    - Metallica

  6.  
  7. #4
    RonSturgill is offline Newbie
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    , Florida, USA
    Posts
    4

    Post imported post

    I use the same strategy as well. Now that we can make changes on a day by day basis you don't want to take a chance at a high cost purchase. I use my G fund as a money market account.

  8.  
  9. #5
    pyriel's Avatar
    pyriel is offline Club TSP
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    1,218

    Post imported post

    Rod wrote:
    This way you will not allocate into equitieson a bad day and lose what you were just paid.

    God Bless:^
    Rod, Did you mean to say "you will not allocate into equities on a good day and lose them on a bad day." The reason for this is when you buy in a good day, you buy less shares? Buying on a bad day, will allow you to buy more shares and a possibility of an uptrend later?

    Pyriel

  10.  
  11. #6
    Rod's Avatar
    Rod
    Rod is offline Moderator
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    In Your Imagination...
    Posts
    3,477

    Post imported post

    pyriel wrote:
    Rod wrote:
    This way you will not allocate into equitieson a bad day and lose what you were just paid.

    God Bless:^
    Rod, Did you mean to say "you will not allocate into equities on a good day and lose them on a bad day." The reason for this is when you buy in a good day, you buy less shares? Buying on a bad day, will allow you to buy more shares and a possibility of an uptrend later?

    Pyriel
    What I meant was don't take the chance of allowing your payday$$$ going into equities the same day the market is down.

    If I have my payday going 100S and S is down 1.00% that same day, I'm going to lose a big chuck of my contribution.

    Whereas if I went 100G with my payday, I could possiblyallocate out and buy-in low the day after the S was down 1.00%.




    "You rise. You fall. You're down then you rise again. What don't kill ya make ya more strong."
    - Metallica

  12.  
  13. #7
    pyriel's Avatar
    pyriel is offline Club TSP
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    1,218

    Post imported post

    Rod,

    Thanks for the clarification. Did you say that you are deploying? I thought you just came back from Japan?

    Pyriel

  14.  
  15. #8
    Rod's Avatar
    Rod
    Rod is offline Moderator
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    In Your Imagination...
    Posts
    3,477

    Post imported post

    pyriel wrote:
    Rod,

    Thanks for the clarification. Did you say that you are deploying? I thought you just came back from Japan?

    Pyriel
    Yeah... My Wife & I returned in Jan from the UK.


    "You rise. You fall. You're down then you rise again. What don't kill ya make ya more strong."
    - Metallica

  16.  

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
S&P 500 (C fund)
[Chart]
1d  5d  3m  6m  1y  2y
Dow Completion (S fund)
[Chart]
1d  5d  3m  6m 
EFA (I fund)
[Chart]
1d  5d  3m  6m  1y  2y
Bonds (F fund)
[Chart]
1d  5d  3m  6m  1y  2y