Senate Takes Up Plan Startup Retirement Tax Credit Legislation

The legislation mirrors another bill in the House, which increases credits for offering retirement plans for the smallest businesses.

A bill to increase start-up tax credits for small businesses with nine of fewer employees offering retirement plans was introduced to update provisions found in the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act of 2019 and the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022.

The Retirement Investment in Small Employers Act, was introduced in the Senate by Senators Maggie Hasan, D-New Hampshire, and Ted Budd, R-North Carolina, on May 24. If passed, it would increase to $2,500 from $500 the minimum tax credit available to employers with between one and nine employees that offer a retirement plan. A bill with the same name and effect was introduced in the House in October but has not yet been brought for a vote.

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Section 102 of the SECURE 2.0 Act expanded plan startup tax credits for smaller businesses. It expanded the share of administrative costs that can be counted towards a credit to 100% from 50% for employers with 50 or fewer employees for the first three years of the plan, up to an annual maximum of $5,000.

However, SECURE 2.0 did not amend the tax credit structure found in SECURE 1.0, which limited the startup credit to $250 per employee, with a minimum of $500. By keeping the $250 per employee provision in place, but upping the minimum benefit to $2,500 regardless of the number of employees, those employers with between one and nine employees receive an added incentive to offer a retirement plan.

Section 102 of SECURE 2.0 also offers a tax credit to incentivize employer contributions to defined contribution plans. The credit, which was effective after December 31, 2022, provides a credit of 100% of employer contributions for the first two years of the plan, 75% in the third, 50% in the fourth, 25% in the fifth, and none from year six onward. The value of the credit cannot exceed $1,000 per employee and is available to employers with 100 or fewer employees, but is phased out gradually for those with 51 to 100 workers. This part of Section 102 is not modified by the RISE Act.

Entergy to Transfer $1.2B in Pension Liabilities

Transaction with MetLife is one of several billion-dollar buyouts completed so far in 2024.

In a busy year for pension risk transfer transactions, energy provider Entergy will transfer $1.157 billion in pension liabilities to Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, Entergy announced in an 8-K SEC filing on May 24.

Entergy, which provides electricity to roughly three million customers in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, entered the agreement with MetLife on May 23, which will cover 3,447 retirees and other beneficiates who received benefit payments on or before March 1, 2024.

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Entergy’s retirees and beneficiaries will continue to receive their benefits until September 1, 2024, after which MetLife will assume responsibilities for the liabilities associated with this group. 

Many large pension risk transfer transactions were announced this year. In March, Verizon announced a $5.9 billion PRT with Prudential and RGA Reinsurance, for 56,000 beneficiaries. In February, Shell closed a $4.9 billion PRT with Prudential. 

The pension’s portfolio has a 32% allocation to domestic equities, 17% to international equities, 8% to intermediate fixed income and 43% to long-duration fixed income, as of the end of 2023. According to the company’s 10-K, Entergy’s four pension plans had $5.5 billion in assets, and $5.6 billion in liabilities.

According to investment consultant Aon, 2024 could be another year where annuity buyouts exceed $40 billion. In 2023, there were 773 PRT transactions totaling more than $45 billion in premiums. In Q1, $15 billion in PRT transactions occurred, according to Legal & General Retirement America. 

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