New Bill Poised to Unlock Pension Surpluses for Retirement Savers

Key Takeaways

  • Congress is considering a bill allowing DB plans to use surplus assets to fund DC plans
  • This law may incentivize plan sponsors to maintain well-funded DB plans instead of terminating them
  • While meaningful safeguards exist in the proposal, we believe three additional measures—funding thresholds, reliable discount rates and long-term investment strategies—should also be implemented

Overfunded pension plans don't have to die—they can live on in a 401(k) plan.

A new bill under consideration by Congress aims to unlock pension surpluses, giving more flexibility to sponsors of DB (defined benefit) plans.

Pension surpluses arise when pension assets, which are intended to secure participants’ earned benefits, grow faster than the liabilities they are meant to cover. Once benefits are fully funded and protected through a liability-driven investing strategy, a surplus can build up.

While pension surplus can be used in a variety of ways to help participants and/or plan sponsors, some sponsors are not convinced it has meaningful value beyond what’s needed to terminate the plan.

With average corporate pension funded status at its highest level since before the Global Financial Crisis, and many sponsors debating what to do next with their overfunded plans, now is an opportune time to explore more possible uses for pension surplus. One of the most promising proposals—under consideration from lawmakers—is to allow pension surplus to fund defined contribution (DC) benefits, such as 401(k) plans.