Indiana Law Sets Stage for Broader Crypto Use in Retirement Investing

Danielle WalkerThe views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

A recently passed law in Indiana now requires some state retirement plans to allow participants to invest in cryptocurrency, setting the stage for broader crypto adoption by public funds.

Gov. Mike Braun signed House Bill 1042 into law on March 3, mandating certain public employee retirement funds, teachers retirement plans, defined contribution and deferred compensation plans to offer self-directed brokerage accounts with at least one crypto investment option by July 1, 2027.

Brian Spinelli, co-CIO of Halbert Hargrove, shared that while the law expands access to crypto for some individuals, it also provides new protections for plan administrators.

“My take on it is, the law is just making it accessible to have a digital or crypto asset option in 401(k) investment options. Whereas right now, no one would probably put that in their options because they are worried about getting sued,” Spinelli said.

He added that the average plan participant may not even be aware that crypto is an investment choice.

“Most people are using target date funds,” Spinelli said. “The law was probably trying to make it available so that the people who were responsible for managing the plan had a little more protection,” he said.