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How Much Does Your Retirement Plan Really Cost?. Presented by Harvey M. Katz, Esq. Fox Rothschild LLP 100 Park Ave. 15 th Floor New York, NY 10017 212-878-7976 973-650-7656 hkatz@foxrothschild.com. Overview. Hidden fees cost employers and participants money Who is legally responsible?
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How Much Does Your Retirement Plan Really Cost? Presented by Harvey M. Katz, Esq. Fox Rothschild LLP 100 Park Ave. 15th Floor New York, NY 10017 212-878-7976 973-650-7656 hkatz@foxrothschild.com
Overview • Hidden fees cost employers and participants money • Who is legally responsible? • Department of Labor Regulations • What’s an employer to do? • Conclusion
Explicit Fees Charged to Retirement Plans and Sponsors • Recordkeeping Fees • Custodian Fees • Third Party Administration Fees • Plan document filing • Set up, conversion costs • Annual audit fees • Trustee service costs • Non-discriminatory testing fees • Participant Education fees
Hidden Fees – Brokerage Costs • Whenever the fund manager buys or sells a security, he pays for it which means you pay for it. • Even though fund may pay a lower commission rate, based upon volume trading, • These costs are not included in the Annual expense ratio or the prospectus. • Statement of Additional Information for the fund will contain statement
Asset Management/Fund Expenses • Asset management fee is not the only cost a retirement plan will incur. • Plans must also pay funds expenses, and this is where you’ll find fixed expenses and variable expenses. • Every mutual fund and ETF charges the annual expense ratio. This pays for, the fund’s recurring operating costs, the fund manager’s salary. • Average expense ratio is about 1.5%, although many are more 2%, • The annual expense ratio is actually debited on a daily basis. Contained in the prospectus
Revenue Sharing • Mutual Fund 12b-1 Fees • Used to compensate brokers and sales personnel • Shared with recordkeepers, brokers, consultants and administrators • Sharing arrangements are generally hidden from consumers
Undisclosed and Partially Disclosed Fees • Asset management fee • brokerage commission costs • 12b-1 fees • Investment transfer expenses • Other asset based fees and charges • Undisclosed/partially disclosed “revenue sharing” arrangements • Termination Charges/ Asset value adjustments
Department of Labor Focus • DOL does not care about fees paid by employers • Focus is on fees paid by plans that detract from investment performance • Compliance burden is imposed upon fiduciaries • Disclosure obligation is imposed upon providers
How Does ERISA Regulate Plans and Providers? • Fiduciaries are responsible for operation and administration of plan • Functional definition of the term fiduciary • Professionals generally not responsible even though may be fiduciaries for some purposes
How Does ERISA Regulate Service Providers • ERISA §406(a)(1)(C) generally prohibits a plan fiduciary from engaging a “party in interest” to furnish goods or services to the plan (“Prohibited Transactions”) • A “fiduciary” is a person with discretionary authority or who provides investment advice for a fee • A “party in interest” includes persons providing services to the plan.
Exemptions from Prohibited Transactions • Dual services are prohibited but for the Prohibited Transaction exemption • Arrangements between plans and service providers are exempt as Prohibited Transactions if: (i) the contract or arrangement is reasonable; (ii) the services are necessary for the plan’s establishment or operation; and (iii) no more than reasonable compensation is paid for the services. (See ERISA §408(b)(2)).
Prior Regulation Versus Interim Final Regulations • Under the previous final regulations under ERISA §408(b)(2), a contract or arrangement was deemed reasonable if it permitted the plan to terminate the contract or arrangement without penalty on reasonably short notice.
Department of Labor Regulations • The Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration recently issued interim final regulations (Labor Reg. §2250.408b-2(c)) that require information disclosures by certain ERISA plan service providers
Purpose of Final Regulations • The purpose of the final regulations is to assist plan fiduciaries in assessing the reasonableness of contracts or arrangements, compensation, and any potential conflicts of interest. • Using power as an advisor/fiduciary to increase/maintain compensation
More Stringent Provider Requirements • The new interim final regulations impose more stringent information disclosure requirements on covered service providers to provide specified information to a “responsible plan fiduciary” for certain contracts and arrangements. If such disclosures are not made, the contracts or arrangement will fail to be reasonable and thus, will not be exempt as a Prohibited Transaction.
INTERIM FINAL REGULATION REQUIREMENTS • Covered Plan: The final regulations apply only to “covered plans” which include most employer–sponsored plans, • Not SEPs, SIMPLE plans, or IRAs (or Welfare Plans)
Covered Service Provider • Covered Service Provider: A “covered service provider” is a service provider that enters into a contract or arrangement with the covered plan and reasonably expects to receive $1,000 or more in compensation, directly or indirectly, from the Plan. • No formal contract is required
Specific Service Providers • ERISA fiduciary or as a registered investment adviser; • Recordkeeping services or brokerage services to a covered plan that is an individual account plan with participant directed investments in connection with such recordkeeping services or brokerage services; • Expects to receive “indirect” compensation or certain payments from related parties.
No Formal Contract Required • The plan fiduciary must receive initial disclosure information in writing but the final regulations do not provide a particular manner or format for such disclosure. • final regulations do not require that a formal contract or arrangement itself be in writing or that any representations concerning the specific obligations of the service provider be included in a written contract or arrangement.
Disclosure Requirements • Services: A description of the services to be provided • Status: Status of the provideri.e. as a fiduciary, service provider etc. • Compensation: all direct and indirect compensation
Basis on which Compensation is Charged • A description of any compensation that will be paid among the covered service provider, an affiliate, or a subcontractor, in connection with services • transaction basis (e.g., incentive compensation) • or is charged directly against the covered plan’s investment • A description of any compensation in connection with termination of the contract or arrangement. • Offsets against other fees • Manner of receipt
Example – Fiduciary Investment Services • Fiduciaries for investment vehicles holding plan assets must provide additional information : • any compensation charged directly against the amount invested in connection with the acquisition, sale, transfer or withdrawal from the investment contract, etc.; • the annual operating expenses if the return is not fixed; and • any ongoing expenses in addition to annual operating expenses.
Disclosure - Timing • The initial disclosure information must be provided reasonably in advance of the date the contract is entered into and extended or renewed. • Any changes to the initial disclosure information must be provided as soon as practicable but no later 60 days from the date the service provider is informed of such changes. • Service providers are required to provide, upon request any other information that is required for the covered plan to comply with the reporting and disclosure requirements of Title I of ERISA and its regulations.
Fiduciary Burdens • New Regulations will become effective 2012 • Plan Fiduciaries now will have information concerning fee arrangements and how fees are computed and imposed • No excuse for failure to negotiate appropriate fees • Participant disclosure required
Fiduciary Risk – Participant Litigation • Hecker vs. Deere. Participants charged Deere violated its fiduciary duty by providing investment options that charged excessive fees and failed to adequately disclose the fee structure to participants. • Wal-mart sued by their participants in 2008, which has gained the support of the DOL And most recently the case against • Caterpillar which agreed to pay $16.5 million to settle charges that the company violated its fiduciary duty by offering options with “excessive fees’ and concealed administration costs.
Conclusion – New Burden • No easy answers – burden on plan fiduciaries • Look for providers whose fees are transparent • Review fees and expenses carefully • No one size fits all
Contact Information Harvey m. Katz, Esq. 212.878.7976 hkatz@foxrothschild.com