Fiduciary liability unclear when selecting and monitoring default retirement investments

Fiduciary liability unclear when selecting and monitoring default retirement investments
Plan sponsors appreciate auto enrollment and qualified default investments, but there are imperfect fits at the individual participant level.
DEC 23, 2015
The Labor Department justifiably can claim credit for its role in the success that auto enrollment and qualified default options have had in boosting worker retirement savings. These measures were enacted following the passing of the Pension Protection Act of 2006. Nonetheless, a recent Government Accountability Office study suggests widespread uncertainty about potential fiduciary liability when selecting and monitoring default investments. Prior to the Pension Protection Act, studies showed two major problems with defined contribution plans: 1) many workers simply failed to enroll; and 2) when they did enroll, they failed to diversify properly. At the time, an estimated one-third of eligible workers failed to take advantage of these important savings plans. If workers enrolled but failed to select investment options, plan sponsors often placed them into cash or low-risk stable value funds to avoid fiduciary liability in the event of a market correction. When implementing the Pension Protection Act, the DOL created the safe harbor that allows plan sponsors to automatically enroll employees who do not take action and identified the three types of investments (known as qualified default investment alternatives) that sponsors can select to qualify the plan for that protection: a balanced fund, a target date series or managed accounts. Like other safe harbors under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, the QDIA safe harbor does not absolve plan sponsors of their basic fiduciary duties. Among other things, plan fiduciaries must prudently select and monitor QDIAs on an ongoing basis. (Related read: 12 predictions about the Labor Department's fiduciary rule) The GAO report, which was released in August, examined which default investments plan sponsors select, and why; how they monitor these investments; and what challenges they face in adopting a QDIA. The report reveals that eight years after the rule's adoption, numerous questions remain, particularly regarding fiduciary liability. The report, requested by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., first reviews the safe harbor regulation, current DOL guidance and three industry studies conducted annually between 2009 and 2013. The agency, which is the independent auditing arm of Congress, also interviewed 96 stakeholders conversant with various aspects of 401(k) plans, undertook a content analysis of literature on plan QDIAs and analyzed responses to an online questionnaire from 227 plan sponsors. The results suggest plan sponsors appreciate the ability to offer asset diversification as a default option, but recognize the imperfect fit at the individual participant level. For example, one sponsor noted that the investment mix for a middle-aged participant will differ depending on the type of QDIA offered, whether it's a balanced fund, an off-the-shelf TDF, a TDF that's customized for the plan (based on various factors such as salary growth and contribution rates), or a managed account tailored to each individual participant's demographics (age, gender, salary account balance, other assets). Some also were confused by DOL regulatory guidance that heavily emphasized age as a major determinant but then made an exception for balanced funds, which maintain static weightings of stocks and bonds. With regard to the latter, the QDIA regulation indicated sponsors should consider the “participant population as a whole.” The age determinant – which advisers associate with investment time horizon – raised other questions from more than half of the respondents in the questionnaire. Some were unsure whether worker demographics applied to both potential and existing participants, or only to those in the plan itself, or simply to those who defaulted through auto enrollment. Most preferred TDFs over the other options since various target dates allowed more flexibility matching employees to funds. (More insight: In times of turmoil, investment policy statements are key) Others plan sponsors were unsure of what factors to consider in monitoring the QDIA. According to the report, DOL officials said changes in investment fees, strategies or the investment team might be factors to consider in replacing one QDIA with another. Sponsors had widely different views on monitoring, though. One sponsor exchanged its existing QDIA for a publicly traded TDF due to greater transparency, while another switched to a TDF due to their popularity in the marketplace. Another sponsor, concerned about generating new fiduciary liability, decided against replacing its QDIA even though it thought another one would have been an improvement. Benchmarking was considered to be impractical for those who had selected managed accounts. Other sponsors rightly viewed benchmarking investment performance of same-year TDFs as challenging given the widely varying glide paths. The consensus view expressed in the report is that sponsors are not convinced that all QDIAs are created equal. Despite the DOL's indications that all qualified options are protected, plan sponsors still want guidance on making decisions in the best interests of their participants and assurances that they continue to be shielded from fiduciary liability for QDIA decisions. The lack of clarity on these and other issues prompted the GAO to recommend that the DOL assist fiduciaries through clearer guidance or regulations. The DOL, which reviewed the draft before its release, generally concurred with the GAO's findings. The agency added that it will consider a Request for Information from the public or a research project of its own in determining whether additional guidance was needed. Blaine F. Aikin is president and chief executive of fi360 Inc.

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