Ozarkharleyguy
New Contributor
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Hello,
I am a retired CSRS employee, 60 years old. I have been dealing with a Midland Life specialist for 20 years that I trust. They are offering a 7% bonus to rollover TSP to their company. I will not be touching the money for several years and possibly not till RMD at 70 years old. I'm required to leave the money for 1 year before I start drawing on it which is not a problem. I've talked to others which indicate they have not had a problem getting their money. I've also talked to others who indicated they are getting over 3% on their money which is better than G Fund which is where I had planned to leave my money. Their Fund is guaranteed to not lose money. The salesman does not draw a commission from my fund, he gets his money from the company. They used to offer a slightly higher rollover percent but drew commission from fund but have changed in order to take the salesman commission from company, I suspect.
I've read the fine print. I've done a search for complaints against the company. Seems the complaints I can find, people bought who shouldn't have bought when they might need their money to get by on and should have never bought in the first place because they had limited funds. They did not realize the amount they would surrender should they try to access the entire amount before the penalty period.
So couple questions:
1. What am I missing and what is the downside to this?
2. My original plan was to leave my TSP in the G Fund and at about 65 start taking a check for about $500 a month and every year to increase that by about $100 to offset the lack of COLA. But I've hear you cannot change the amount of TSP that often. Is that true?
Thanks in advance.
I am a retired CSRS employee, 60 years old. I have been dealing with a Midland Life specialist for 20 years that I trust. They are offering a 7% bonus to rollover TSP to their company. I will not be touching the money for several years and possibly not till RMD at 70 years old. I'm required to leave the money for 1 year before I start drawing on it which is not a problem. I've talked to others which indicate they have not had a problem getting their money. I've also talked to others who indicated they are getting over 3% on their money which is better than G Fund which is where I had planned to leave my money. Their Fund is guaranteed to not lose money. The salesman does not draw a commission from my fund, he gets his money from the company. They used to offer a slightly higher rollover percent but drew commission from fund but have changed in order to take the salesman commission from company, I suspect.
I've read the fine print. I've done a search for complaints against the company. Seems the complaints I can find, people bought who shouldn't have bought when they might need their money to get by on and should have never bought in the first place because they had limited funds. They did not realize the amount they would surrender should they try to access the entire amount before the penalty period.
So couple questions:
1. What am I missing and what is the downside to this?
2. My original plan was to leave my TSP in the G Fund and at about 65 start taking a check for about $500 a month and every year to increase that by about $100 to offset the lack of COLA. But I've hear you cannot change the amount of TSP that often. Is that true?
Thanks in advance.