Title 5 › Part III— EMPLOYEES › Subpart G— Insurance and Annuities › Chapter 84— FEDERAL EMPLOYEES’ RETIREMENT SYSTEM › Subchapter III— THRIFT SAVINGS PLAN › § 8438
Sets up how the Thrift Savings Fund can be invested and who can manage those investments. The Board must create Government Securities, Fixed Income, Common Stock Index, Small Capitalization Stock Index, and International Stock Index funds, and it can add a mutual fund option if that helps participants (participants who use it must pay the costs). The stock funds must copy commonly used indexes so their performance matches those markets as closely as possible. The Fixed Income Fund can hold insurance contracts, certificates of deposit, and other debt instruments chosen by qualified managers. The Executive Director must follow each participant’s investment choices. If someone makes no choice, their money goes into an age‑appropriate target date fund built from the funds above. Participants (or former participants) can change their choices at least twice a year under rules the Executive Director sets. The Board and other officials may not vote any shares owned by the Fund. The Treasury can sell special U.S. government notes to the Government Securities Fund at interest rates based on recent market yields (rounded to the nearest one‑eighth of 1 percent) and with maturities that fit the Fund’s needs. If issuing those notes would make the public debt exceed the legal limit, Treasury may pause issuance, must keep daily records of what would have been bought, must issue the missed notes later and pay any lost interest from the Treasury general fund, and must notify Congress and report to Congress within 30 days after the pause ends. Defined terms in one line each: Common Stock Index Investment Fund — a fund that tracks a broad U.S. stock index. Fixed Income Investment Fund — a fund holding insurance contracts, CDs, and similar debt instruments. Government Securities Investment Fund — a fund holding special Treasury obligations for the Plan. International Stock Index Investment Fund — a fund that tracks a broad international (non‑U.S.) stock index. Small Capitalization Stock Index Investment Fund — a fund that tracks a U.S. small‑cap stock index. Equity capital — common and preferred stock and other capital accounts. Net worth — capital and surplus accounts. Plan — an employee benefit plan under ERISA. Qualified professional asset manager — a bank, an FDIC‑insured savings and loan with trust powers, a multi‑state insurance company, or a registered investment adviser that meets asset or equity tests: banks/S&Ls/insurers must have more than $1,000,000 in equity or net worth; an investment adviser must have over $50,000,000 in client assets and either over $750,000 in equity or an unconditional guarantee by an affiliated person, a qualified manager, or a broker‑dealer with over $750,000 net worth. Shareholder’s or partner’s equity — the equity shown on the most recent balance sheet prepared within 2 years.
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Government Organization and Employees — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
5 U.S.C. § 8438
Title 5 — Government Organization and Employees
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60