Momentum continues for SECURE 2.0 legislation

Momentum continues for SECURE 2.0 legislation
Measures that would build on the SECURE Act's efforts to improve retirement security could run into trouble if consumer advocates zero in on annuity reform.
MAY 03, 2022

This story has been updated to correctly reflect the attribution of the panelists’ quotes.

Reinforcing the retirement savings infrastructure is a rare area of political common ground. This year is likely to see an expansion of the 2019 SECURE Act signed into law, according to panelists who commented at the InvestmentNews Retirement Income Summit.

“People are anxious about retirement security. We’re seeing this as a bipartisan effort,” said Paul Richman, chief government and political affairs officer with the Insured Retirement Institute. Some especially popular elements of the proposed law, such as automatic enrollment of workers in their employers’ plans, “are on a trajectory to become law and I don’t see anything to interrupt that.”

The Securing a Strong Retirement Act, known as SECURE 2.0, passed the House in March. A corresponding version is now being reviewed and “marked up” by Senate subcommittees. It’s likely, the panelists agreed, that a working version of the law will be hammered out by midsummer and introduced for final adoption in the fall legislative session, possibly as part of the omnibus budget bill, as was the first SECURE Act.  If it falls by the wayside, the entire process must start from scratch.

“There are so few bills that members feel good about, and this is one of them. There will be a real resistance to gum things up,” said Michael Canning, principal and founder of The LXR Group.

Still, it’s possible that high-profile consumer advocates might zero in on annuity reform as a point of contention, the panelists agreed.

In February, two representatives introduced the Lifetime Income for Employees Act of 2022, which would allow some types of annuities to be included in employer-sponsored plans as qualified default investment alternatives. While that provision would address Americans’ deep concerns that they won’t have assured lifelong income, it also could be a lightening rod for consumer advocates.

“I don’t know that full scrutiny has been applied to that provision from some of the most ardent progressives,” said Canning, citing AARP as one highly influential group whose opinion will weigh heavily.

IRI is trying to address doubts about annuities on Capitol Hill.

“There is a perception among some members of Congress that the products can come at great cost to consumers,” Richman said.

Senators seem inclined to carefully parse the bill and its implications, the panelists agreed.

Latest News

Fintech industry crosses $500bn revenue mark, led by trading and investments
Fintech industry crosses $500bn revenue mark, led by trading and investments

Global revenues hit record high in 2025 with sector growing at four times the rate of traditional financial institutions.

SEC sues Texas man over alleged $12.3 million AI crypto scheme
SEC sues Texas man over alleged $12.3 million AI crypto scheme

He swore the bots were real, the FDIC had it covered - the SEC says neither was true

Citadel loses SEC fight as appeals court upholds IEX options trading speedbump
Citadel loses SEC fight as appeals court upholds IEX options trading speedbump

One firm controls 30% of options volume – and just lost this one

Industry groups want tweaks to DOL's 401(k) fiduciary proposal
Industry groups want tweaks to DOL's 401(k) fiduciary proposal

IRI, SIFMA, and MFA are requesting targeted clarifications on how annuities and alternative assets fit under the Labor Department's proposed fiduciary safe harbor.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.