A twist to this discussion that I am grappling with, and am wondering what others would do.
Sole proprietor John Doe with no employees establishes a one-participant plan on 1/1/2020 and makes contributions to a self-directed brokerage account (SDBA) with Brokerage Company. He later hires a couple of employees that become eligible for the plan on 1/1/2022. The employees aren't keen on the $250 fee for maintaining a SDBA and choose to invest their contributions into mutual funds with Mutual Fund Company. Mutual Fund Company includes the lifetime income illustrations on their quarterly participant statements, but Brokerage Company does not. We serve as the TPA for the plan, and John Doe is asking for our opinion as to whether he is required to generate a lifetime income illustration for his own account. John would rather not be bothered with it, and if it were up to him he wouldn't spend the $X in additional fees that he'll be charged for generating LII statements.
Based on my understanding of the LII requirements, John is required to get a LII. That seems crazy under the circumstances, and I'm wondering if I'm missing something that would obviate the need for that to happen. Any thoughts/comments are appreciated.