
The litigation risk around Pension Risk Transfer annuities is increasing, not decreasing. Recent developments expose the central contradiction in the industry’s defense: sponsors, insurers, and regulators describe PRTs as a harmless substitution of one payor for another, while the transaction actually strips retirees of ERISA fiduciary protections, PBGC insurance, federal disclosure rights, and diversified plan assets, replacing them with a single insurer credit.
The new PBGC opinion letter is especially important. https://www.plansponsor.com/pbgcs-first-opinion-letter-in-24-years-reaffirms-limits-of-pension-insurance/
PBGC concludes that an annuity buyout does not itself create a reportable active participant reduction event because, once liabilities are transferred to an insurer, PBGC is no longer obligated to pay benefits if the insurer fails. Industry will cite this as validation. Plaintiffs should cite it differently: it is an admission that the PRT removes participants from the PBGC safety net. The very reason PBGC says it no longer needs early warning is the same reason retirees suffer a present legal and economic injury.
That is the core standing argument courts have been missing. The injury is not limited to whether the insurer has already failed. The injury occurs at transfer: retirees lose federal insurance, ERISA fiduciary oversight, federal remedies, and the protection of a diversified pension trust. A court that treats this as “no harm unless default is certain” effectively converts ERISA into a wait-for-collapse statute.
The Phoenix/LPL litigation makes this risk harder for courts to ignore. The alleged harm was not merely that investment assets disappeared; it was that policyholders lost practical access to their retirement assets after insurer distress and rehabilitation. That is directly relevant to PRTs. A retiree transferred to an insurer is exposed not only to ultimate nonpayment risk, but also to freeze risk, rehabilitation risk, downgrade risk, liquidity risk, and the risk that state insurance processes will replace ERISA remedies.
Athene and Apollo-related PRTs present an even sharper risk profile. Private credit, commercial real estate loans, affiliated transactions, FHLB borrowing, opaque valuation practices, and rising market concern over insurer balance sheets all undermine the industry’s claim that a PRT annuity is equivalent to a federally protected pension benefit. It is not equivalent. It is a concentrated insurance-company credit exposure.
The litigation theory should therefore be reframed around present injury and fiduciary process:
- Loss of PBGC insurance is a current economic injury.
- Loss of ERISA fiduciary protections is a current legal injury.
- Replacement of a diversified pension trust with a single insurer credit is a current risk-concentration injury.
- Failure to evaluate downgrade, rehabilitation, liquidity, affiliate-transaction, and private-credit risk is a fiduciary breach.
- Sponsor self-interest is central because PRTs primarily remove balance-sheet volatility, PBGC premiums, and pension obligations from the corporation.
- IB 95-1 should not be treated as a check-the-box safe harbor, especially where the fiduciary process ignores modern insurer balance-sheet risks.
The PBGC opinion does not reduce litigation risk. It increases it by making the transfer’s legal effect unmistakable: the participant has been moved out of the federal pension-protection system. That is precisely why PRT fiduciary litigation should survive standing challenges and why adverse district court rulings need appellate review.
Addendum: State Guaranty Associations Are Not a Replacement for PBGC Insurance
Defendants often argue that Pension Risk Transfer participants lose nothing because state guaranty associations stand behind annuity insurers just as PBGC stands behind pension plans. That comparison is fundamentally false.
PBGC is an actual insurance system.
State guaranty associations are not.
PBGC maintains an insurance program established by Congress, collects ongoing premiums from pension plans, maintains significant financial resources, and has an independent federal statutory obligation to protect participants when covered pension plans fail.
State guaranty associations generally operate under an entirely different model. They do not function as pre-funded insurance companies with investment portfolios available to satisfy future claims. Instead, they generally rely on post-insolvency assessments of surviving insurers after a member company fails. In effect, they operate largely as an assessment mechanism that looks to the remaining insurance industry to finance claims after the fact, subject to state law and statutory limits.
From a credit perspective, this distinction is significant.
A pension participant transferred through a PRT no longer enjoys protection backed by a federal insurance program. Instead, that participant becomes dependent upon the future willingness and legal obligation of competing insurance companies to finance the failure of another insurer.
No sophisticated institutional investor would treat those two forms of protection as economically equivalent.
History demonstrates why.
The Executive Life insolvency exposed significant weaknesses in the guaranty association system. Resolution depended upon years of litigation, restructuring, and state-by-state action rather than the immediate operation of a fully funded insurance program. Critics have argued that guaranty associations proved uneven in practice and that many obligations ultimately depended on complex settlements, court intervention, and assessments against the broader insurance industry rather than payment from pre-existing reserves.
That history stands in sharp contrast to the PBGC model, which was specifically designed by Congress to provide a national pension insurance framework.
The differences extend well beyond funding.
PBGC provides participants with:
- federal statutory insurance;
- uniform nationwide administration;
- ERISA fiduciary protections;
- federal disclosure requirements;
- federal judicial remedies.
Following a Pension Risk Transfer, participants instead receive:
- limited state insolvency protection;
- differing protections depending upon state law;
- statutory coverage limits;
- no ERISA fiduciary duties;
- no PBGC guarantee;
- no federally insured pension.
The recent PBGC opinion letter makes this distinction unmistakable. PBGC concluded that once pension liabilities are transferred to an insurer, PBGC’s obligations effectively disappear because the insurance company—not PBGC—becomes responsible for future payments.
That observation destroys defendants’ “no injury” argument.
The injury is the transfer itself.
Participants are removed from a federally insured pension system and placed into a fundamentally different regulatory framework whose protections depend upon state insurance law and the financial capacity of the insurance industry.
Courts should reject any suggestion that these two systems provide equivalent protection.
A fiduciary cannot satisfy ERISA’s duty of prudence simply by asserting that some other safety net exists after federal pension protections have been surrendered. The relevant question is whether retirees received protection equivalent to what they lost. They plainly did not.
https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/01/11/dols-prt-annuity-amicus-brief-dismantling-erisa/ https://commonsense401kproject.com/2026/03/26/apollos-garbage-dump-athene-loading-up-on-risk-endangers-retirees-in-prts-and-other-annuity-investors/








