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But, then again, I was involved in a very aggressive futures and options trading system for three years in the 90’s. Kinda got a good feel for tops and bottoms – I hope. Not everyone lived that dream. And, in actuality – even though I made some green – I don’t recommend it. The taxes were ugly and paid via my income, the tax preparation uglier, there were no dividends, the trading fees absolutely monstrous, and – contrary to public opinion – day trading in a choppy market is a sure path to an Alpo diet. But since the mid to late 90’s were so consistent I made mulla.
Might rebalance your accounts in months that you have an unused IFT when you get to the end of the month i.e. last day or two. Just a thought.i.e. Save your ammunition for more active months.
Burrocrat,
It is actually the interface for Quicken that pointed me to TSPTalk. I have never run into 1212Computer anywhere on this site, but he/she keeps an up to date file that can be imported into Quicken for G/F/C/S/I/L Funds. Here is the link. I followed his/her instructions to the T and have had no problems.
I also see he/she has some charts that might be interesting.
You are, of course, familiar with the AutoTracker. Look at the very bottom for some matricies. I especially like the 'Return Analysis'. Gives me a good place to look at the allocations of folks I follow - and see how they are doing.
Finally, the links to the Yahoo EFT charts for our fund proxies allows you to play with the charting tools the brainiacs around here understand. Fun, sometimes useful, but watch out. Not for ignits like me
You have to use Quicken Premier. That is the one with investment tracking. The juiciest thing I have found lately is actually a report - namely, the 'Investment Performance' report. Make certain you use the Buy/Sell transaction actions rather than the Add/Remove actions. Then you can get Internal Rates of Return by whatever duration you want. Other than the Retirement Planner, that is the best tool I have run across. Keeps you honest. Also, make certain you place the TSP fund 'securities' you create (as instructed by 1212Computer) into a single 'account'. That way, you can group all the TSP Funds ('Securities') together and see stats as a whole - or separately. I can't say its easy to use, or that it always rings true - but it is a good tool.
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I haven't checked out the investing features or the links you suggested yet but i plan on it this weekend and will get it set up. I want to enter all TSP transactions (3.5 yrs) to get an accurate historical perspective of how i think i've been doing. I assume i create the account then work backwards and fill in data? Would the TSP quarterly reports have the information i need if i didn't exactly keep track of all that until just lately?
Done. I put it on the utilities page.(Tom: Can this be put in the TSP Utilities section of the first page?). That spreadsheet is absolutely invaluable when making a change to your TSP allocation holdings.
BurroCrat,
Looks like Santa knew exactly what you wanted. My hope is that Santa will magically upgrade my copy of Quicken as well...
Anyway, some tips:
The first thing I would do use some of the tools TSPTalp provides. The initial one would be TSP Share Prices & Financial Software Data Files to enter all the TSP share prices since a real long time ago.
Then, grab a copy of the IFT Decoder Wheel to help manage the allocation adjustments you have made over time. (Tom: Can this be put in the TSP Utilities section of the first page?). That spreadsheet is absolutely invaluable when making a change to your TSP allocation holdings.
Then, you can start the ugly process of entering your contributions. You really don't need the original paperwork - paystubs show it (MyPay) and contribution amounts and allocations are normally stable. Then, I would enter the first contribution (using the 'securities' created in step one. Make certain you use the 'Buy Shares' option - that is needed to get an Internal Rate of Return. Then use the 'Copy Transaction' and 'Paste Transaction' menu options. Be careful. You will have to change dates, share count, and share prices for each contribution for each security. (Helpful hint: On the 'Enter Transaction' form place a '0' in 'Number of Shares', place the total amount of money contributed to the fund in the 'Total Cost' field, and then place the share price in 'Price Paid'. Quicken will then prompt you with some possible math actions - select 'Number of Shares'. That is the best way to get the 'Share Count').
After all that stuff, you can use the Decoder Wheel to enter your IFT transactions.
Then, regretfully, you can use a 'Report | Investment Reports | Performance' report to attain the golden ring - the IRR. If like the rest of us you will be a bit disappointed - but, last year was once in a lifetime. Hopefully:toung:
By the way, your comments are not clutter in any way at any time.
Merry Christmas
I did find the TSP Share Prices and Decoder Wheel utilities, but haven't downloaded or started there yet until i get everything tuned up and running.
I notice on the investment accounts the software also wants to download the basic indexes history, i assume i can eventually look at graphs that compare my actual returns to the indexes and the TSP funds performance?
Do you have to download new prices everyday? or can you skip a few and just plug in the missing ones (automatically) later?
Thanks for the info, i'll keep working on it.
Boghie and burrocrat,
I use an Excel spreedsheet (office 2007) to follow my real time TSP. If your interested I can E-mail you a copy.
Merry Christmas.