I'm not sure you're hearing most of what I'm saying.
I can't just pick funds for you. If that's what you use this for, you're missing most of the point. You need to learn how this works, not just make a decision right now and move on. If you stay at the "just pick something for me" level, you're going to lose big time at some point, either by getting taken advantage of or by making easily avoidable mistakes. Take some hours and learn this stuff.
Please understand that a well-considered investment decision takes into account your age, employment situation, tolerance for risk (ability to be comfortable when your investments drop in value), current expense and savings rate, and your expected time of any future expense changes (things like whether you will marry, buy a house, have kids, otherwise spend money). Which investment you should get could be different depending on how these things stack up. I know almost none of that, so I can't guess reliably what is right for you. What you should really do is take all those into account yourself after learning to invest. Again: read the Stock Series linked above!
When I make comments here about specific funds, I am guessing about all the unknowns in your case, and applying core principles that I am also explaining as I go. It's just a starting point. You need to learn what I'm explaining. Can you read the documents you posted and find the funds with the lowest fees?
Are you in fact willing to accept that your investment values will fall during the next stock market downturn? If not, the two funds you're invested in, the same ones I suggested from your list, will just fall down and then you'll sell them without getting the big uplift that probably occur later - so buy something safer, something with bonds in it, like more of the Target Date 2040 or even a Target Date 2025. If you are willing to accept falling investment values, keep the two funds from the post above. Which is it? (If you're not sure...Read the Stock Series. Main lesson: When stocks go down, don't sell.)
Upthread, someone suggested staying in Target Date funds. Vanguard has excellent ones. The LifePath funds you list at Merrill Lynch are also target date funds, also fairly low fee, probably also decent. Being Target Date funds, they will have bonds as well as stocks, be managed for you, will be mostly stock now and more bonds later (when the target date approaches). For the time being, they will go up and down almost as much as the stock market. Therefore they will be almost as risky but almost as profitable as the all-stock low-cost funds that you detailed in your last post. If you pick one, it doesn't matter a whole lot which date you pick, but the best date to pick is the date closest to when you think you'll actually retire.
The Vanguard funds you specified and the Target Date funds have much lower fees than the other options in your documents. As I said before, it's more reliable to find low fees than most other ways of picking a fund. On that principle, whichever 401k you use, I suggest using either the Vanguard funds or the Target Date funds.
Please note that IF you're realistically going to hate it when your investment values drop, and you'll be tempted to sell them, the Target Date funds are better. But don't sell any of these things if they drop a lot - that's the worst mistake most people make.