Gov. Christie signs bill to create retirement plan marketplace for small businesses

Gov. Christie signs bill to create retirement plan marketplace for small businesses
Gov. Chris Christie signed a bill to create a retirement plan marketplace for New Jersey businesses with fewer than 100 employees.
JAN 28, 2016
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie signed a bill on Tuesday to create a retirement plan marketplace for New Jersey businesses with fewer than 100 employees. The voluntary program will match small businesses to various existing private-sector retirement plans. At minimum, the marketplace must include a payroll-deferred individual retirement account and SIMPLE IRA. The marketplace must include these options for employers. Employers can choose whether or not to offer these options to employees. The marketplace will also include the federal MyRA program. (More: Presidential candidates can't ignore Social Security) Participating providers must include at minimum a target-date option and a balanced fund option, and participants cannot be charged more than 100 basis points of their total assets in annual fees. STEP FORWARD Tuesday's bill was a compromise that differed from the original version passed by the state Legislature earlier this month. The original bill, which Mr. Christie vetoed, called for a state-run, auto-enrollment, payroll-deferred retirement savings account for private-sector employees who lacked workplace retirement plans. Participation would have been mandatory for businesses with 25 or more employees that did not already offer a retirement plan, unless their employees opted out. In his recommendations to the Legislature following his veto, Mr. Christie called mandatory participation under the threat of fines “unnecessarily burdensome” and recommended a voluntary program to connect employers with existing retirement plans. Vincent Prieto, speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly and one the bill's sponsors, said the modified bill was “not what I intended, but it's a step forward.” He said he plans to “revisit the issue next session.”

Latest News

Fintech bytes: Orion and Flourish bring client cash into advisor workflows
Fintech bytes: Orion and Flourish bring client cash into advisor workflows

Plus, Asset-Map partners with Contio to elevate the advisor meeting experience, and MyVest claims an innovation in portfolio management with separately managed models.

Advisor moves: LPL lands $1B group from Ameriprise
Advisor moves: LPL lands $1B group from Ameriprise

Meanwhile, Cetera has drawn advisors managing around $390 million from LPL and Commonwealth, while Raymond James' financial institutions division announces its own LPL hire in Indiana.

Bluespring Wealth snaps up $1.1B New Jersey RIA in fifth deal of 2026
Bluespring Wealth snaps up $1.1B New Jersey RIA in fifth deal of 2026

Synthesis Wealth Planning brings a fivefold asset growth story and a recently merged practice to the Bluespring fold.

Clients expect to know if you use AI, but don’t realize that their portfolios are likely exposed
Clients expect to know if you use AI, but don’t realize that their portfolios are likely exposed

Janus Henderson Investors research reveals demand for transparency, but lack of awareness of AI’s prevalence in the corporate world.

Retirement dream looking more like a luxury as cost-of-living squeezes savings
Retirement dream looking more like a luxury as cost-of-living squeezes savings

New research reveals rising expenses, forced early exits, and a widening gap between how long people live and how long their money lasts.

SPONSORED Beyond wealth management: Why the future of advice is becoming more human

As technical expertise becomes increasingly commoditized, advisors who can integrate strategy, relationships, and specialized expertise into a cohesive client experience will define the next era of wealth management

SPONSORED Durability over scale: What actually defines a great advisory firm

Growth may get the headlines, but in my experience, longevity is earned through structure, culture, and discipline