My latest article for JDSupra.com can be found here.
My latest article for JDSupra.com can be found here.
While most 401(k) plans don’t have account balances, the shuttering of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank is a pause for concern. While there might be some pension plans that could have been affected by the failures of these banks, it just hits the point home that plan sponsors always need to be aware and vigilant.
Plan sponsors need to know where they have accounts and the protections these accounts have.
As more and more employees are deferring on a Roth after-tax basis, there will be more errors on whether the contributions are made after-tax or pro-tax and vice versa. Changing Roth to pre-tax and ore-tax to Roth is a giant accounting headache. It’s correcting an incorrect payroll issue, that will also require a corrected W2 if the change is made after the issue of one.
Plan providers and plan sponsors need to focus on whether deferrals are made pre-tax or post-tax and administer it that way. Otherwise, more mistakes will be made and the fix isn’t fun and is labor intensive.
T. Rowe Price published the latest findings of its annual Retirement Savings and Spending study, which found women lag far behind men in terms of retirement contributions, savings, and confidence.
The median 401(k) account balance for women was 65% lower compared to men. While women are saving less, there were no significant gaps in access to retirement plans between men and women.
Some contributing factors to the savings gap likely includes:
Transamerica announced that it’s partnering with Cetera Financial Group to launch a new pooled employer plan (PEP), the Cetera Advantage(k) GPS. The PEP is designed for small and midsize businesses and will be available only through Cetera-affiliated advisors.
Transamerica will serve as the record keeper for the plan, while Cetera Retirement Plan Specialists, a third-party administrator owned by Cetera, will serve as the pooled employer plan.
CAPTRUST announced its purchase of Monroe Vos Consulting, a Houston-based registered investment advisor (RIA) with $5.8 billion in assets.
Monroe Vos provides advisory services for retirement plan sponsors, endowments, and foundations and provides wealth management services to high-net-worth individuals and family offices. The firm was founded in 1994 with a second office in Birmingham, Alabama. The firm will bring its entire team of 17 members to CAPTRUST, according to a release on the deal.
401(k) participants may be able to invest part of their 401(k) account balance directly into the CoinDesk Market Select Index (CMIS) under an arrangement by ForUsAll and CoinDesk Inc.
By expanding the investment options to include the CMIS, 401(k) participants will now be able to invest in its 28 underlying index coins. The CMIS includes better-known cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, Ethereum, and litecoin as well as many lesser-known coins. While Crypto, including Bitcoin, have rebounded, they are well off their highs and the Department of Labor still is against their use in 401(k) plans.
The first time I heard the word Schnorrer, I was 7 years old and my parents took me on a trip to Mystic, Connecticut. During those days, the Connecticut Turnpike had eight toll booths from Greenwich to Mystic. It felt that every 10 miles, some toll collector was looking for a quarter. So my mother said, Connecticut is a bunch of schnorrers.
Schnorrer is a Yiddish term meaning “beggar” or “sponger”. The English usage of the word denotes a sly chiseler who will get money out of another any way he can, often through an air of entitlement. For me, a Schnorrer is essentially a cheapskate.
When it comes to retirement plans, a retirement plan sponsor or a retirement plan provider shouldn’t be a schnorrer.
A retirement plan sponsor who is a schnorrer is one who selects the lowest cost third party administration (TPA) like a payroll provider and doesn’t care that the administration of their plan is done properly or not. Plan costs should always be a consideration, but so should proper administration is a greater consideration.
For retirement plan providers who are schnorrers, I can remember my old TPA. As a producing TPA with its own RIA practice, we had clients around the country. We did charge a hefty RIA fee and then the managing director of the Firm who ran the day-to-day operation (the biggest schnorrer I ever met) started charging for travel expenses for our client relationship managers to visit clients in assisting them with the fiduciary process. That went over like a led zeppelin. I worked for a law firm partner who had clients around the country and he was insistent that he would never charge his clients for his travel time because he felt that the client would simply want to hire counsel than was more local than to pay him for traveling.
When I left the TPA in 2007, I was replaced by 2 attorneys and a paralegal. Like Lou in Caddyshack who had to raise the price of Coke, because he was losing at the track, my old TPA had to raise plan document fees because they were losing money by hiring this larger staff to replace me. Plan document fees went up by 25% and they started charging $150 for annual safe harbor notices. $150 to simply search and replace the year in a Word document for $150, this chiseling offended many clients.
Clients don’t want to be chiseled. They would rather play a higher flat fee than get inundated by petty charges.
One of the things I hated most about law firms was their chiseling of clients. It was enough that clients were charged by the hour, which only led to possible abuses of overbilling because law firms stress billable hours more than quality of service. So it’s not enough to overcharge clients for legal services, but the law firms that I was associated with also charged clients for typical office charges like FedEx or copies. When I buy a bagel with olive cream cheese at my favorite bagel store, do they charge me for napkins or a plastic knife? There is a cost for any business to do business, but does a law firm have to pass every nickel in costs to their client?
That is why my practice uses a flat fee; clients should have a fee that they have cost certainty over and with the knowledge that I am not chiseling them. When I drafted a plan document for a client for $2,000, I didn’t charge them the $8 to mail the plans or the $18 to bind the plans at Staples (before I went PDF only). Every retirement plan provider needs to be fully compensated for the work they do. There are costs involved in doing business, but clients don’t need to see every charge added and itemized because you don’t want to be labeled a schnorrer.
If you read my writings, you know that fiduciary liability is one of the plan sponsor’s more important concerns as a plan fiduciary. Since participant-directed plans under ERISA §404(c) are supposed to limit a plan sponsor’s liability, I have consistently reiterated the need for plan sponsors to develop an investment policy statement (IPS) with their financial advisors, consistently review the funds against said IPS, and provide participant education. Otherwise, plan sponsors can be subject to liability from participant lawsuits.
A plan sponsor’s adherence or disregard for ERISA §404(c) is no guarantee that the plan sponsor will not get sued or will get sued. While fiduciary liability is a great topic these days because plan sponsors have been named defendants in lawsuits by participants more frequently today than in the past, fiduciary liability isn’t usually what gets plan sponsors into trouble
Retirement plans are highly technical, tax-deferred, and qualified entities. Retirement plans have so many different moving parts with so many discrimination tests, buffeted by a plan document that can be difficult to understand for most people. So my rule of thumb is that if an Internal Revenue Service agent or Department of Labor agent wants to look for something wrong, they will find it. It may not be a huge plan error like a plan document that hasn’t been updated in 10 years, it can be as simple as not allowing participants to change their 401(k) salary deferrals according to the terms of the plan
Plan errors can come in all different shapes and sizes and a plan sponsor can detect these errors through the use of an ERISA attorney or their third-party administration firm. By finding these errors on their own, a plan sponsor could self-correct if the error doesn’t require an IRS submission. Larger errors or errors discovered on a plan audit by the IRS and/or DOL may require submission to their respective voluntary compliance programs.
Unfortunately, plan errors are a common fact of the day-to-day administration of a retirement plan error. With the right team surrounding them, plan sponsors can mitigate potential plan defects. Yet if they have plan errors, there is enough room for the plan sponsor to correct them without large penalties or the risk of plan disqualification.
As an ERISA attorney who drafts plan documents at a flat fee, my biggest competitors are not other ERISA attorneys, but third-party administration (TPA) firms.
Plan documents are just another service that TPAs can provide and they can provide it either for free (as most of the bundled providers do) or at a cost that is highly competitive against most law firms. Some TPA firms have a legal department that drafts these plans, others have paralegals or plan administrators handle that duty. I know a thing or two about this topic, having done that as the Director of ERISA Legal Service for a certain TPA for almost 5 years.
As you know, retirement plans are legal entities and plan documents are legal documents that have legal consequences to the plan sponsor and the plan trustees. Would you want these plan documents to be drafted by someone who wasn’t an attorney? Even if your TPA has a legal department, there is no attorney-client relationship between the TPA’s attorney and the plan sponsor. So what? With an attorney-client relationship, the plan sponsor’s needs come first. With a TPA attorney, the TPA’s needs come first because a TPA attorney doesn’t have that duty of care. The independent ERISA attorney is essentially a check on the TPA, to ensure proper administration. A TPA attorney can’t do that because they are the TPA.
I have a client who has had their defined benefit plan butchered by two consecutive actuarial firms. An independent ERISA attorney could have alleviated some of the problems before they happened, namely paying someone a lump sum even though the law prohibited that person from getting a lump sum.
Attorneys don’t have a sterling reputation when it comes to reasonable fees, especially ERISA attorneys. With a low overhead and a flat fee, I am trying my best to make needed ERISA legal work affordable to plan sponsors.