General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: 401(k)s are a sham: Duped by a DIY retirement dream, elderly face staggeringly low living standards [View all]still_one
(98,883 posts)the government has now changed the amount you can invest per year in
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/indiv/research/indepth/ibonds/res_ibonds.htm
You may also consider a Ginnie Mae fund. However, the problem with Ginnie Mae and bonds in general is that if interest rates start to go up, the value of your bonds will decrease. That should be no problem if you are holding to maturity though, and you bought the bond at or below face value. A bond or ginnie mae fund builds in some protection because as old bonds mature new ones are incorporated into the fund.
Either way you should not put all your resources in one instrument, but if you do you should stagger over several months or ideally years to adjust for changing conditions
At least that would be my thinking. I am definitely NOT recommending what someone should or should not do