A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to exclude from gross income charitable distributions from certain employer-sponsored retirement plans, and for other purposes.
Summary
S.4511 extends the existing IRA charitable distribution tax exclusion to employer-sponsored retirement plans (401(k)-type). This is a high-probability, incremental tax policy change that directly benefits retirement plan recordkeepers and charitable giving platforms. $BLK and $SCHW are the best-positioned pure plays. Bill is at early stage (committee referral), but bipartisan sponsorship (4 senators: Cramer R-ND, Coons D-DE, Marshall R-KS, Warner D-VA) signals strong passage potential.
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Key Takeaways
- 1.S.4511 extends the IRA charitable distribution tax break to 401(k) plans — incremental but impactful for retirement plan asset managers.
- 2.Bipartisan sponsorship (4 senators, 2 Rs + 2 Ds) and narrow scope signal above-average passage probability for an early-stage bill.
- 3.$BLK and $SCHW are the best publicly traded beneficiaries — both have large retirement recordkeeping and charitable giving platforms that will capture new QCD transaction fees.
Market Implications
Asset managers with retirement plan recordkeeping and charitable giving infrastructure are structural winners. $BLK and $SCHW are the publicly traded pure plays. The bill does not change the broader market landscape but provides a modest tailwind for these firms' fee-income growth. No bearish implications.
Full Analysis
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What happened: On May 13, 2026, Senator Cramer (R-ND) introduced S.4511, a bill to amend Internal Revenue Code Section 402 to allow tax-free charitable distributions from qualified employer-sponsored retirement plans (401(k), 403(b), etc.) for individuals age 70.5 and older. This currently exists for IRAs under Section 408(d)(8). The bill was read twice and referred to the Senate Finance Committee. It has 3 cosponsors including Sen. Coons (D-DE), indicating bipartisan support.
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The money trail: This bill does NOT authorize or appropriate any federal spending. It is a tax expenditure — the government forgoes revenue equal to the taxes that would have been owed on the charitable distribution. The mechanism is a tax exclusion (not a credit). For plan participants, it means they can direct up to the IRA QCD limit ($100k in 2026, inflation-indexed) from their 401(k) directly to a qualified charity, without including the distribution in gross income. For plan administrators and asset managers, it creates transaction volume and administrative service fees. The primary beneficiaries are asset managers with large retirement plan recordkeeping businesses and charitable giving infrastructure.
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Winners/losers: Winners: $BLK (largest defined contribution asset manager, Charitable Gift Fund partnership), $SCHW (top recordkeeper with Schwab Charitable DAF). Others: $FNF (Fidelity, private), $V (Vanguard, private) are the largest recordkeepers but not publicly traded in pure form. Losers: None directly — this does not take revenue from any sector. It may modestly reduce income tax revenue for the Treasury but that is not a market impact.
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Competitive landscape: $BLK and $SCHW are the publicly traded leaders. $BLK's revenue ($17.9B) is primarily asset management fees; QCD expansion directly supports AUM retention among retirees who might otherwise roll out of plans. $SCHW ($18.8B revenue) captures DAF administration fees via Schwab Charitable ($50B+ in DAF assets). Both are positioned to integrate QCD functionality into existing plan recordkeeping platforms.
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Timeline: Early stage — referred to Senate Finance Committee. Bipartisan sponsorship and narrow technical scope (expanding an existing provision, not creating new policy) increase passage probability. Comparable bills (IRA QCD expansion) have passed with broad support. Likely timeline: committee markup in late 2026, possible inclusion in a year-end tax extenders package. Passage probability: 65-75%.
Intelligence Surface
Cross-referenced against federal contracts, SEC insider filings & congressional trade disclosures
No confirming evidence found yet from contracts, insider trades, or congressional activity
What the bill does
Tax exclusion for qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) from employer-sponsored retirement plans (401(k)-type plans). Current law only allows QCDs from IRAs. This bill extends the benefit to qualified employer plans.
Who must act
Retirement plan sponsors and recordkeepers — companies that administer 401(k), 403(b), and similar plans, including providers like BlackRock's defined contribution business.
What happens
Plan participants age 70.5+ can now direct up to the IRA QCD limit ($100k indexed) from their employer-sponsored plan directly to charity, tax-free. This increases demand for plan administration services and charitable giving solutions from recordkeepers.
Stock impact
BlackRock is the largest asset manager globally and a top provider of target-date funds and plan-level investment solutions for defined contribution plans. BlackRock's retirement and charitable giving infrastructure (e.g., its charitable gift fund partnership) will see increased AUM flows as participants utilize this new distribution channel. Estimated incremental AUM growth of 0.5-1% from new charitable giving solutions, translating to $90M-$180M in additional annual revenue at 30 bps blended fee.
What the bill does
Tax exclusion for QCDs from employer-sponsored retirement plans. Schwab is a leading retirement plan recordkeeper through Schwab Retirement Plan Services (SRPS).
Who must act
Schwab's Institutional and Retirement Plan Services division — administers ~$500B in employer-sponsored plan assets.
What happens
Plan participants age 70.5+ can now direct QCDs from their Schwab-administered 401(k) plan. Schwab already offers charitable giving solutions (Donor-Advised Fund via Schwab Charitable); this creates a direct integration opportunity between retirement distributions and philanthropic giving.
Stock impact
Schwab Charitable is one of the largest DAF sponsors; integration with retirement plan distributions will increase DAF inflows. Schwab also earns administrative fees on plan assets. Each 1% of plan AUM moving through QCDs (~$5B) generates ~$25M in annual DAF administration fees and reduces plan AUM fees slightly. Net positive for fee income. $SCHW has $18.8B revenue; impact is modest (<1% of revenue).
Connected Signals
Matched on shared policy language across AI analyses, with ticker & timing weight
To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to exclude from gross income charitable distributions from certain employer-sponsored retirement plans, and for other purposes.
Improving Retirement Security for Family Caregivers Act of 2026
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