Bill and Andy Bush are fresh off the 2026 NAPA Summit in Tampa and dive into two headlines pulling retirement savers in opposite directions. On one side, Elon Musk says AI and robotics will make squirreling money away for retirement unnecessary within 10 to 20 years. On the other, a new Trump IRA executive order aims to close the coverage gap for the roughly 56 million workers without an employer-sponsored plan — including a 50% Savers Match on the first $2,000 contributed. The brothers weigh the assumptions behind the “abundance” thesis, revisit Social Security’s 2033 trust-fund cliff, and remind listeners that access doesn’t create retirement success — behavior does. They wrap with takeaways from NAPA, including Andy’s technology panel, the rebrand of Retirement Plan University into “401(queso),” and the industry’s pivot from in-plan lifetime income to AI and longevity planning.
⏱ Episode Timeline & Key Topics
00:00 – Welcome & NAPA Recap Setup
Bill and Andy open the show fresh off the NAPA Summit in Tampa — more than 1,500 advisors and 3,000 total attendees at the industry’s largest retirement-focused gathering.
00:27 – Elon Musk’s “Don’t Save for Retirement” Quote
Musk is quoted saying don’t worry about squirreling money away for retirement in 10 or 20 years — it won’t matter. The brothers unpack why that headline rattled the retirement industry.
01:22 – Saving as a Behavior, Not a Bet
Andy frames saving as a behavior tied to a financial plan — your “North Star.” You might drift, but the plan keeps you heading in the right direction regardless of headlines.
02:11 – The Abundance Thesis and Its Big Assumptions
Bill walks through Musk’s logic: robots replace labor, productivity surges, costs collapse, goods and services get cheap, and a government income arm fills the gap.
02:54 – Will Cheaper Tech Translate to Cheaper Living?
Andy questions whether AI-driven cost reductions will actually reach essentials like food and healthcare — and whether any resulting abundance would be evenly distributed.
04:21 – Exponential Innovation and the 2025 Autonomous-Car Prediction
A flashback to a 2015 conference forecast that most drivers would be hands-off by 2025 — a reminder that transformative-tech timelines are usually optimistic.
05:47 – Healthcare, Longevity, and Costs That Don’t Disappear
Even in a high-productivity future, aging, long-term care, and healthcare costs still require dedicated planning. Tech doesn’t repeal longevity risk.
06:07 – Robotics in the Home and Long-Term Care
Andy sees real promise in robotics for elder care — lifting fallen seniors, supporting daily tasks — but notes cost and functionality are still well short of household-ready.
07:23 – Don’t Stop Saving Because of a Headline
Even if Musk is directionally right, the timeline is uncertain. The takeaway: don’t pivot your plan based on a soundbite. And don’t stop believing.
07:50 – The Trump IRA Executive Order
Bill introduces the newly announced Trump IRA, designed to close the coverage gap for the roughly 56 million workers without an employer-sponsored plan.
08:36 – The Savers Match and What It Means
A 50% match on the first $2,000 contributed — effectively a reworked Saver’s Credit — that meaningfully boosts savings for lower-income workers. Effective in 2027.
09:30 – Social Security’s 2033 Trust Fund Cliff
If nothing is done, the Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted by 2033, triggering a potential 25% benefit reduction — a bigger hit for lower-income retirees who rely on it most.
10:34 – Access vs. Behavior: What Actually Drives Outcomes
Improved access is helpful, but without auto-enrollment or behavioral nudges, retirement success still hinges on participant behavior. Behavior is the lever.
12:46 – NAPA Recap: Andy’s Technology Panel
Andy shares his experience on a four-advisor panel covering whether technology engages or distracts plan participants and sponsors, and what successful practices are doing differently.
13:54 – 401(queso): From Retirement Plan University to a Memorable Brand
The story behind rebranding their plan-sponsor education program as “401(queso)” — born at a Mexican restaurant in Baton Rouge and met with applause at NAPA.
15:25 – AI, Longevity, and Standout NAPA Sessions
Bill highlights practical AI sessions for advisor practices and John Hancock’s health-versus-wealth longevity discussion as the standouts of the conference.
16:17 – From Lifetime Income to AI: Where the Industry Is Focused
Industry attention has shifted from in-plan lifetime income solutions to AI — but the underlying question of making money last a long life still drives every planning conversation.
17:08 – Wrap-Up & How to Reach the 401(k) Brothers
Bill and Andy close with contact info — and a reminder that they’re brothers, but not twins.
✅ Key Takeaways Quick Reference
- Don’t change your plan based on a headline — anchor saving behavior to your financial plan, not the news cycle
- Saving is a behavior, not a forecast — you can’t control productivity curves or policy reform, but you can control how consistently you save
- Abundance, if it comes, won’t be evenly distributed — historical productivity gains haven’t translated to evenly shared wealth
- Healthcare and longevity costs don’t go away — long-term care, medical, and aging-related expenses still demand dedicated planning
- Social Security reform is the front-burner issue — trust fund projected depleted by 2033, with a potential 25% benefit cut if nothing changes
- The Trump IRA closes a real coverage gap — ~56 million workers without employer plans, paired with a 50% Savers Match on the first $2,000 (effective 2027)
- Access alone doesn’t create retirement success — without auto-enrollment or strong behavioral nudges, participation still depends on the saver
- AI is the industry’s new center of gravity — expect it to reshape advice delivery, plan administration, and participant engagement
- Make education memorable — “401(queso)” works because branding and delivery matter; meet people where they are
- Plan as if you’ll live to 90 or beyond — you don’t know when the last grain of sand drops; fund a long life, not an average one
📌 Contact the 401(k) Brothers
• Bill Bush: bbush@horizonfg.com
• Andy Bush: abush@horizonfg.com
📌 Closing Disclaimer
The views depicted in this material are for information purposes only and are not necessarily those of Cetera Advisors, LLC. They should not be considered specific advice or recommendations for any individual. Neither Cetera Advisors, LLC nor any of its representatives may give legal or tax advice. Pete Bush, Bill Bush, and Andy Bush are registered representatives offering securities and advisory services offered through Cetera Advisors, LLC. Member FINRA/SIPC, a broker-dealer and registered investment advisor. Cetera is under separate ownership from any other named entity. 15015 Jamestown Boulevard, Suite 100, Baton Rouge, LA 70810.
Headlines, Robots & NAPA: Why Saving Behavior Still Wins
Bill and Andy Bush are fresh off the 2026 NAPA Summit in Tampa and dive into two headlines pulling retirement savers in opposite directions. On one side, Elon Musk says AI and robotics will make squirreling money away for retirement unnecessary within 10 to 20 years. On the other, a new Trump IRA executive order aims to close the coverage gap for the roughly 56 million workers without an employer-sponsored plan — including a 50% Savers Match on the first $2,000 contributed. The brothers weigh the assumptions behind the “abundance” thesis, revisit Social Security’s 2033 trust-fund cliff, and remind listeners that access doesn’t create retirement success — behavior does. They wrap with takeaways from NAPA, including Andy’s technology panel, the rebrand of Retirement Plan University into “401(queso),” and the industry’s pivot from in-plan lifetime income to AI and longevity planning.
⏱ Episode Timeline & Key Topics
00:00 – Welcome & NAPA Recap Setup
Bill and Andy open the show fresh off the NAPA Summit in Tampa — more than 1,500 advisors and 3,000 total attendees at the industry’s largest retirement-focused gathering.
00:27 – Elon Musk’s “Don’t Save for Retirement” Quote
Musk is quoted saying don’t worry about squirreling money away for retirement in 10 or 20 years — it won’t matter. The brothers unpack why that headline rattled the retirement industry.
01:22 – Saving as a Behavior, Not a Bet
Andy frames saving as a behavior tied to a financial plan — your “North Star.” You might drift, but the plan keeps you heading in the right direction regardless of headlines.
02:11 – The Abundance Thesis and Its Big Assumptions
Bill walks through Musk’s logic: robots replace labor, productivity surges, costs collapse, goods and services get cheap, and a government income arm fills the gap.
02:54 – Will Cheaper Tech Translate to Cheaper Living?
Andy questions whether AI-driven cost reductions will actually reach essentials like food and healthcare — and whether any resulting abundance would be evenly distributed.
04:21 – Exponential Innovation and the 2025 Autonomous-Car Prediction
A flashback to a 2015 conference forecast that most drivers would be hands-off by 2025 — a reminder that transformative-tech timelines are usually optimistic.
05:47 – Healthcare, Longevity, and Costs That Don’t Disappear
Even in a high-productivity future, aging, long-term care, and healthcare costs still require dedicated planning. Tech doesn’t repeal longevity risk.
06:07 – Robotics in the Home and Long-Term Care
Andy sees real promise in robotics for elder care — lifting fallen seniors, supporting daily tasks — but notes cost and functionality are still well short of household-ready.
07:23 – Don’t Stop Saving Because of a Headline
Even if Musk is directionally right, the timeline is uncertain. The takeaway: don’t pivot your plan based on a soundbite. And don’t stop believing.
07:50 – The Trump IRA Executive Order
Bill introduces the newly announced Trump IRA, designed to close the coverage gap for the roughly 56 million workers without an employer-sponsored plan.
08:36 – The Savers Match and What It Means
A 50% match on the first $2,000 contributed — effectively a reworked Saver’s Credit — that meaningfully boosts savings for lower-income workers. Effective in 2027.
09:30 – Social Security’s 2033 Trust Fund Cliff
If nothing is done, the Social Security Trust Fund is projected to be depleted by 2033, triggering a potential 25% benefit reduction — a bigger hit for lower-income retirees who rely on it most.
10:34 – Access vs. Behavior: What Actually Drives Outcomes
Improved access is helpful, but without auto-enrollment or behavioral nudges, retirement success still hinges on participant behavior. Behavior is the lever.
12:46 – NAPA Recap: Andy’s Technology Panel
Andy shares his experience on a four-advisor panel covering whether technology engages or distracts plan participants and sponsors, and what successful practices are doing differently.
13:54 – 401(queso): From Retirement Plan University to a Memorable Brand
The story behind rebranding their plan-sponsor education program as “401(queso)” — born at a Mexican restaurant in Baton Rouge and met with applause at NAPA.
15:25 – AI, Longevity, and Standout NAPA Sessions
Bill highlights practical AI sessions for advisor practices and John Hancock’s health-versus-wealth longevity discussion as the standouts of the conference.
16:17 – From Lifetime Income to AI: Where the Industry Is Focused
Industry attention has shifted from in-plan lifetime income solutions to AI — but the underlying question of making money last a long life still drives every planning conversation.
17:08 – Wrap-Up & How to Reach the 401(k) Brothers
Bill and Andy close with contact info — and a reminder that they’re brothers, but not twins.
✅ Key Takeaways Quick Reference
📌 Contact the 401(k) Brothers
• Bill Bush: bbush@horizonfg.com
• Andy Bush: abush@horizonfg.com
📌 Closing Disclaimer
The views depicted in this material are for information purposes only and are not necessarily those of Cetera Advisors, LLC. They should not be considered specific advice or recommendations for any individual. Neither Cetera Advisors, LLC nor any of its representatives may give legal or tax advice. Pete Bush, Bill Bush, and Andy Bush are registered representatives offering securities and advisory services offered through Cetera Advisors, LLC. Member FINRA/SIPC, a broker-dealer and registered investment advisor. Cetera is under separate ownership from any other named entity. 15015 Jamestown Boulevard, Suite 100, Baton Rouge, LA 70810.