PLANADVISER Practice Progress Webinar Series: Financial Wellness

Achieving a sense of short-term financial wellness is hard enough during times of market growth and economic stability, but the challenge only deepens when inflation and interest rates jump.

This has been a tough year for U.S. retirement plan participants—and for workers in general. Heading into the year, core inflation was already running above 5%, and it has only spiked since. At the same time, geopolitical events have injected fresh uncertainty into what was already a frothy market, and most retirement investors have experienced substantial reductions in portfolio values. Investment managers say the markets will continue to grapple with the trade-offs between inflation and growth for the foreseeable future.

Expert advisers know such an environment demands a different point of view about the relationship between retirement planning and financial wellness. Achieving a sense of short-term financial wellness is hard enough during times of market growth and economic stability, but the challenge only deepens when inflation and interest rates jump.

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This hour-long editorial webinar will help retirement-focused advisers understand what financial wellness means for retirement plan participants in the current moment. Speakers will also explore how the financial wellness solution set has evolved and where the industry is heading, with the goal of helping you achieve practice progress.

Sign up for the live June 21st event here

Senators Introduce Bill to Make Auto-Portability Standard

Backers of the new bill say the legislation would cut red tape and help Americans who change jobs frequently keep control of their retirement savings and investments.



New legislation introduced in the Senate this week would allow workers’ 401(k) savings accounts to be automatically rolled over from a previous employer to a new employer.

The legislation, known as the Advancing Auto-Portability Act of 2022, was introduced by Senators Tim Scott, R-South Carolina, and Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio. According to a statement from the senators, the legislation would cut red tape to help Americans who change jobs frequently increase their retirement savings.

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“For too many Americans, the security of retirement savings after a lifetime of hard work is too far out of reach,” Scott said in a press release. “Making it easier for workers to build savings will alleviate stress for families and ensure every person has the opportunity to retire with dignity, regardless of their income or economic status.”

Retirement industry research shows nearly four out of every 10 people who left a job cashed out their balances after termination within a 10-year period; those with accounts of less than $1,000 were most likely to cash out. Withdrawals of 401(k) balances are usually treated as income and can incur substantial federal and state taxes, a study from Alight Solutions says. In most cases, people who take money out pre-retirement are also charged a 10% penalty tax.

“The sooner we can make auto-portability the standard for all small, terminated accounts, the better it will be for workers, plan sponsors, service providers and, collectively, the country,” Alison Borland, Alight Solutions wealth and well-being solutions executive vice president, said in the press release.

Severe leakage often occurs when workers move to a new employer, particularly when they have only small accounts. They then must completely start over when it comes to saving for retirement, said Spencer Williams, Retirement Clearinghouse founder, president and CEO, in a statement. He noted that, by using technology to save both time and resources, auto-portability could be a powerful way to stem plan leakage.

“401(k) savings portability will institute a new default in plan designs, which will enable participants to opt out of having their small balances automatically moved to their new employers’ plans when they change jobs, instead of having to opt in,” Williams said. “Senators Scott and Brown have crafted legislation which would make this default available to all plans across the U.S. retirement system—a huge win for America’s hardworking retirement-savers.”

The introduction of this bill follows a series of actions taken on Capitol Hill aimed at increasing retirement security by creating additional protections for workers and businesses.

Just this week, the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee voted to advance the Retirement Improvement and Savings Enhancement to Supplement Healthy Investments for the Nest Egg Act, known as the RISE & SHINE Act. Last month, two senators introduced the Increasing Small Business Retirement Choices Act that would reduce retirement plan costs for small businesses by allowing expenses to be reimbursed from plan assets.

In April, the Information Needed for Financial Options Risk Mitigation Act, aka the INFORM Act, was reintroduced in the Senate. That bill would require pension plan sponsors to provide retirees and participants with “critical information” about the trade-offs involved when employers offer a lump-sum payment option from a traditional defined benefit pension plan that can be drawn in place of a lifetime annuity option.

Separately, the House of Representatives easily passed the Securing a Strong Retirement Act earlier this year.

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