Updated Beneficiary Designation Form

The U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) recently published an updated SF 3102, Designation of Beneficiary, with a revision date of October 2022. The updated SF 3102 is to be used by employees and retirees covered under both the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) and Federal Employees Retirement System (FERS). All employees, retiring employees, and retirees should use this form to name and/or update their beneficiaries under CSRS and FERS.  Follow link to get updated form https://bit.ly/413LxWF.

 

Understanding the FDIC

It’s natural to wonder exactly how a bank safeguards your money. Fortunately, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance exists for this very reason: to help protect your funds once deposited. Read on to explore the purpose of FDIC insurance, how it works, and what it covers.

WHAT IS FDIC INSURANCE?

The FDIC is an independent government agency that helps protect bank depositors from the loss of uninsured deposits at an FDIC-insured bank. This organization oversees FDIC deposit insurance, which provides some protection to bank customers if an FDIC-insured institution fails. In other words, FDIC insures your money at the bank up to certain limits.

A bank failure is an unlikely situation, but it does happen. When this occurs, the FDIC provides depositors with an insurance payout. That can be up to $250,000 per depositor per institution for each account ownership category. When two banks failed in Q1 2023, regulators took steps above and beyond the $250,000 limit to protect deposits.1,2

Remember that if your bank is an FDIC-insured institution, you don’t need to apply for FDIC insurance because coverage is automatic.

THE PURPOSE OF FDIC INSURANCE

FDIC insurance covers traditional deposit accounts of up to $250,000 per depositor. These traditional deposit accounts include the following:

  • Checking accounts
  • Savings accounts
  • Certificates of deposit (CDs)
  • Money market bank deposit accounts
  • Prepaid cards (assuming they meet all FDIC requirements)

Certificates of deposit (CD) are time deposits offered by banks, thrift institutions, and credit unions. They may offer a slightly higher return than a traditional bank savings or checking account, but they may also require a higher deposit amount. If you sell before the CD reaches maturity, you may be subject to penalties.

Bank savings accounts and CDs generally provide a fixed return, whereas the value of money market funds can fluctuate. Money market funds are investment funds that seek to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 a share. However, it’s possible to lose money by investing in a money market fund.

In addition, the FDIC also insures retirement accounts in which plan participants have the right to direct how they invest the money, including:

  • Traditional or Roth Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA) savings accounts
  • 401(k)s or other self-directed defined contribution plans
  • Section 457 deferred compensation plan accounts, whether self-directed or not

The FDIC may also insure an employee benefit plan that is not self-directed, such as a pension plan.

Once you reach age 73, you must take the required minimum distributions from a Traditional IRA in most circumstances. Withdrawals from Traditional IRAs are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken before age 59½, may be subject to a 10% federal income tax penalty.

Roth IRA distributions must meet a five-year holding requirement and occur after age 59½ to qualify for the tax-free and penalty-free withdrawal of earnings. One can make these withdrawals under certain other circumstances, such as the owner’s death. The original Roth IRA owner is not required to take minimum annual withdrawals.

Once you reach age 73, you must take the required minimum distributions from your 401(k), 403(b), 457 plan, or other defined-contribution plans in most circumstances. Withdrawals from defined-contribution plans are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken before age 59½, may be subject to a 10% federal income tax penalty.

FDIC INSURANCE LIMITATIONS

Now that we understand what FDIC insurance covers let’s also look at what it doesn’t cover. The FDIC states that it does not cover the following:3

  • Stocks
  • Bonds
  • Mutual funds
  • Life insurance policies
  • Annuities
  • Municipal Securities
  • Safety deposit boxes or their contents
  • US Treasury bills, bonds, or notes

Stock prices’ return and principal value will fluctuate as market conditions change. And shares, when sold, may be worth more or less than their original cost.

The market value of a bond will fluctuate with changes in interest rates. As rates rise, the value of existing bonds typically falls. If an investor sells a bond before maturity, it may be worth more or less than the initial purchase price. By holding a bond to maturity, an investor will receive the interest payments due plus your original principal, barring default by the issuer.

Mutual funds are sold only by prospectus. Please carefully consider the charges, risks, expenses, and investment objectives before investing. Your financial professional can obtain a prospectus containing this and other information about the investment company. Please read it carefully before you invest or send money.

Several factors will affect the cost and availability of life insurance, including age, health, and the type and amount of insurance purchased. Life insurance policies have expenses, including mortality and other charges. If one surrenders a policy prematurely, the policyholder also may pay surrender charges and have income tax implications. Consider whether you are insurable before implementing a life insurance strategy. Any guarantees associated with a policy are dependent on the ability of the issuing insurance company to continue making claim payments.

Annuities have contract limitations, fees, and charges, including account and administrative fees, underlying investment management fees, mortality and expense fees, and charges for optional benefits. Most annuities have surrender fees that are usually highest if you take out the money in the initial years of the annuity contract. Withdrawals and income payments are taxed as ordinary income. If, before age 59½, one makes a withdrawal, a 10% federal income tax penalty may apply (unless an exception applies). The guarantees of an annuity contract depend on the issuing company’s claims-paying ability.

Municipal bonds are subject to various risks, including adjustments in interest rates, call risk, market conditions, and default risk. Certain municipal bonds may be difficult to sell. A municipal bond issuer may be unable to make interest or principal payments, leading to the issuer defaulting on the bond. If this occurs, the municipal bond may have little or no value. If one purchases a bond at a premium, it may result in realized losses. As a result, the interest on a municipal bond may be taxable after purchase.

Municipal bonds are free of federal income tax. Municipal bonds also may be free of state and local income taxes for investors who live in the area where the bond was issued. If a bondholder purchases a share of a municipal bond fund that invests in bonds issued by other states, the bondholder may have to pay income taxes.

The federal government guarantees U.S. Treasury bonds, bills, and notes on timely principal and interest payments. However, if you sell a Treasury before maturity, it may be worth more or less than the original price paid.

FDIC INSURANCE AND YOU

As mentioned above, the FDIC insures up to $250,000 for a single or joint account per depositor; This means that you can have either one account or multiple accounts at the same bank, but only $250,000 may be insured.

But some strategies may enhance your coverage. Hypothetically, you could set up a revocable trust and identify one or more beneficiaries to possibly increase your coverage. Each beneficiary may receive $250,000 of coverage. For example, a revocable trust account with one owner that names three unique beneficiaries can insure themselves up to $750,000.4

Remember, using a trust involves complex tax rules and regulations. Before moving forward with a trust, consider working with a professional familiar with the rules and regulations.

1. FDIC.gov, March 1, 2023
2. FoxBusiness.com, March 12, 2023
3. FDIC.gov, March 1, 2023
4. FDIC.gov, March 1, 2023

Weak, Repetitive Passwords a Common Problem in Government, Says Report

Use of weak and/or repetitive passwords is a common problem in government, according to a report by a cybersecurity firm that is the latest caution about vulnerabilities in that line of defense against hacking.

The report by the Ivanti firm, based on survey data, shows that U.S. federal employees are generally more alert to cyber risks than government employees of other countries. For example, only 19 percent agreed their own actions do not impact their organization’s safety, compared with 34 percent worldwide, and only 22 percent said their organization does not provide mandatory cybersecurity training, compared with 39 percent.

The report cautioned, though, that “When employees find a security measure inefficient or burdensome, they’ll find a way around it that is decidedly not secure.” Passwords “are ground zero” for such workarounds, it says, as employees continue to use “pet names, birthdays and the universally favorite unbreakable code: 12345.” Click HERE to read more.

 

Don’t Miss These Three Federal Retirement Lessons from… Football?

These are three important lessons federal employees should learn about saving in the TSP to help plan for a successful retirement.

In my life, I have been blessed to be a part of three great, meaningful endeavors. They are, in order: my family, my career serving Feds, and playing college football. In my work every day with career Feds, I am struck by parallels between planning for a great federal retirement and what I learned from my college coaches.

With that in mind, and since we are at the end of college and pro football seasons, I thought it might be fun to share them. So here is the list and then I will expand upon each.

  1. A great gameplan does not need perfect players.
  2. Discipline in the face of adversity pays off.
  3. Additional investment makes a big difference.

A great gameplan does not need perfect players.

One of the big mistakes I see in retirement planning for Feds is when someone is obsessing about products versus having a plan.

What do I mean?

Well, I really do wish I had a nickel for every time I’ve heard a Fed say, “I have all my money in ___________ fund because it’s the best.” That is the equivalent of a head coach deciding that only one player will touch the ball in the game. No single fund (or outside financial product) can be “the answer.”

You need to take some time with this. You must learn and understand your tolerance for risk, then you will want to set up the correct mix of funds (a percentage in each of the 5 core funds) in your TSP and stay with that mix. You will only make adjustments to that mix to bring it back into balance.

There is no academic data to support that jumping from fund to fund leads to long-term success. Know your tolerance. Set up your allocation. Stick with it and rebalance even if the market seems scary. Click HERE to read more.

 

It’s Not 2008, But People Worry About Savings and Investments

To answer a couple of readers’ questions: No, your Thrift Savings Plan accounts are not insured. Neither by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation nor anyone else. Maybe the G Fund. It consists of U.S. Treasury bonds, so they’re backed by the faith and credit of the government.

TSP plan holders surely know the importance of that faith-and-credit fact given that at this moment, Treasury is vacuuming those G-Funds balances into the extraordinary measures, by which the government is paying its bills. Borrowing from debt until it gets authority from Congress is issue new debt.

Therefore, the questions about TSP insurance suggest a certain level of anxiety about savings and investments. There’s also the ongoing question of future Social Security Old Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance funds’ solvency. The latest bank fiasco only compounds the anxiety. In the back of many minds lies the question, can the government stay on this course forever? I only quote the Government Accountability Office, which regularly states that the fiscal course is unsustainable.

The Silicon Valley Bank deal is nowhere near the size of the 2008-2009 financial crisis and its oceanic flood of toxic assets. Yet it’s also wrapped up in politics, moving rules, and bets on gyrating fiscal and monetary policy. At the least, maybe regular people in and out of government will stop citing “silicon valley” as some sort of lofty ideal. Between Theranos and the Silicon Valley Bank story, the Valley seems as much about hucksterism, inbreeding, self-dealing and working the political connections as about innovation. Why, just yesterday, one former Theranos executive reported for duty — to the Terminal Island Federal Correctional Institution at San Pedro, California. How did that lyric go? He “caught the last train for the Coast…” Click HERE to read more.