U.S. K-Shaped Economy Lifts C Fund as Higher Rates Pressure S and I Funds
Updated
Updated · FedSmith.com · Jun 18
U.S. K-Shaped Economy Lifts C Fund as Higher Rates Pressure S and I Funds
1 articles · Updated · FedSmith.com · Jun 18
Summary
Large U.S. tech stocks have driven much of the market’s gains, helping the TSP’s C Fund outperform while the economy delivers sharply uneven results across households and industries.
Higher-for-longer interest rates are a key divider: smaller companies in the S Fund face steeper borrowing costs, and the I Fund has been weighed by slower overseas growth, geopolitics and divergent central-bank policies.
Elevated mortgage, auto-loan and credit-card rates still strain many Americans even as unemployment remains relatively low and stock indexes hit highs, reinforcing the split between strong market signals and weak household finances.
The same rate backdrop has made the G Fund more attractive again, offering yields many federal employees and retirees had not seen in years after the near-zero-rate era.
For federal workers, the report’s broader takeaway is that a K-shaped economy can make headlines look contradictory, making diversification and steady long-term TSP contributions more important than trying to time the next market turn.