Investment options of SEE’S RETIREMENT PLAN
Total Available Funds: 12
| Investment Option List |
|---|
| SEI Trust Company Galliard Stable Return Fund PN |
| SEI Trust Company Principal/BlackRock S&P 500 Index CIT N |
| SEI Trust Company Principal/MFS Value CIT N Fund |
| SEI Trust Company Principal/BlackRock Russell 2000 Index CIT N |
| SEI Trust Company Principal/BlackRock S&P MidCap Index CIT N |
| SEI Trust Company Principal/BlackRock International Equity Index CIT N |
| Federated Federated Hermes Treasury Obligations Institutional Fund (TISXX) |
| Vanguard Short-Term Federal Fund Admiral Shares (VSGDX) |
| JPMorgan Government Bond Fund-I |
| Oakmark Oakmark Equity and Income Fund Class Institutional |
| New York Life Investment Management LLC NYLI Winslow Large Cap Growth Fund Class R1 (NVLIX) |
| interest from 6.25% to 11.50% |
Investment model portfolios
We provide two types of investment model portfolios for SEE’S RETIREMENT PLAN participants. You can customize and follow a model portfolio in your plan account.
Types of portfolio strategies
- Strategic asset allocation portfolio: It invests in a diversified portfolio of multiple assets, buy-and-hold without frequently changing the asset allocation weights.
- Suitable: For long-term (more than 15 years, preferably more than 20 years), want to be tax efficient and can withstand interim drawdown or loss as high as 50% or more.
- Pros:
- Less error-prone
- Infrequent rebalancing or transactions
- Tax efficient for taxable brokerage investments
- Cons:
- Interim loss or drawdown can be substantial
- Possible low returns for an extended period, such as 10 years or longer
- Tactical asset allocation portfolio: it invests in a diversified portfolio of multiple assets, dynamically adjust stock and bond allocations to minimize losses during market stress.
- Suitable: For long-term (more than 10 years or preferably longer) capital. Investors are willing to rebalance as frequent as monthly.
- Pros:
- Reduce large interim loss or drawdown
- Less sensitive to investment entry point
- Likely to improve returns
- Cons
- Demand more frequent rebalancing or transactions
- Less tax efficient — more suitable in a tax-deferred account such as 401(k) or IRA
- Can experience a period of lower returns compared to a broad-based strategic allocation or a buy-and-hold benchmark, especially in some bull markets
These portfolios are proactively monitored and rebalanced on a monthly basis when needed, ensuring it remains in line with its target allocation.
Let us know (Email us) if you need help to create a custom model portfolio for your plan.
Retirement Plan (401(k)) Info for SEE'S RETIREMENT PLAN
