Retirement plan funds continue downward spiral

Majority of TSP options remain in the red for September and for the year to date.

All but two of the investment options in the federal employee retirement savings plan posted losses in September for the fifth month in a row, bringing returns so far this year further into the negative.

The Thrift Savings Plan's S Fund, which invests in small and midsize companies and tracks the Dow Jones Wilshire 4500 Index, saw the largest decline for the month, falling 10.73 percent. The I Fund, which invests in international stocks, was close behind with a 10.55 percent drop, while the C Fund -- invested in common stocks of large companies on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index -- declined 7.03 percent.

The I Fund has lost 15.70 percent this year to date, followed closely by the S Fund, down 14.85 percent in 2011. The C Fund has lost 8.70 percent for 2011.

The F Fund, which invests in fixed-income bonds, was in the black for the third month in a row, posting gains of 0.73 percent. The stable government securities in the G Fund also had small monthly growth of 0.16 percent. The F Fund has increased 6.68 percent so far this year, while the G Fund rose 2.01 percent in 2011.

All the life-cycle funds, designed to move investors to less risky portfolios as they get closer to retirement, saw losses for the fifth straight month. The L 2040 dropped 6.85 percent in September; L 2030 declined 5.92 percent; L 2020 lost 4.73 percent; and L Income, for federal employees who have reached their target retirement date and have started withdrawing money, fell 1.51 percent. The new L 2050 Fund, which opened on Jan. 31, declined 7.80 percent.

After September's performance, all of the L funds have dropped into the negative for the year. L 2040 is down 8.49 percent so far this year, with L 2030 close behind at 7.05 percent and L 2020 down 5.21 percent. L Income lost 0.29 percent in that time.