According to a news release, the Fund Central enhancements include:
Fees and expenses applicable to plan investment alternatives.
Benchmark information for plan investment alternatives.
The availability of summary prospectuses.
The availability of separate account performance data.
Added flexibility in determining what content the site presents.
Newkirk’s service includes investment performance information for different time periods: one month, three months, one year, three years annualized, five years annualized, and 10 years annualized, with links provided to fund data sheets and prospectuses. In addition, the recent agreement with NewRiver, Inc., provides needed summary prospectus functionality.
Lifetime Income Hearing Witnesses Demand Fiduciary Shield
A strong theme in testimony from witnesses at this week’s hearing
into providing lifetime income options in retirement plans was a
warning of how much sponsors fear incurring liability in provider
selection and participant education.
Numerous presenters at the two-day Washington, D.C., session
sponsored jointly by the U.S Departments of Labor (DoL) and Treasury
insisted that sponsors were concerned that, without detailed regulatory
guidance, their eventual choice of a lifetime income option provider
and their educational efforts could well land them in fiduciary hot
water under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).
So,
because provider selection and education will be more complex than in
other retirement plan service areas, a number of the witnesses
requested that the DoL’s Employee Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA) and Treasury officials consider a variety of safe harbor
protections.
“Under current law, the selection of an
annuity provider is fraught with potential missteps that could result
in continued liability for the plan sponsor well into the future,” said
Janet Boyd, Director of Government Relations for The Dow Chemical
Company, who appeared on behalf of the American Benefits Council. “To
rectify this, plan sponsors need clear, simple fiduciary guidance
allowing them to make lifetime income options available to plan
participants without risking a significant increase in potential
fiduciary liability.”
Most witnesses started by agreeing
that a strong and comprehensive participant education effort would have
to be mounted for a lifetime income option to be effective – or to be
accepted at all.
“The individual comments in response to
the (agencies request for information) RFI overwhelmingly expressed a
lack of trust in service providers, employers/ plan sponsors, and the
government as an administrator of lifetime income benefits,” declared
Rebecca Davis, who offered testimony on behalf of the Pension Rights
Center. “We believe that their fears are best addressed by ensuring
that any implementation of a required annuity option in 401(k)-type
plans be accompanied by a large public education campaign. The comments
demonstrate a lack of understanding of the value of a lifetime stream
of income.”
“It is our belief that these products often
need to be sold to participants and clear education and communication
is critical,” agreed Martin Schmidt, Chairman, Institutional Retirement
Income Council, in his testimony.
(Cont...)
Safe Harbor Education?
Nevertheless,
of particular fiduciary liability concern, was exactly how plans would
be forced to determine and provide educational materials detailing
potential lifetime income streams and about the series of complex
decisions participants have to make to set up their annuity account.
Some
witnesses proposed the burden be shifted back to EBSA to provide sample
education materials and that sponsors get safe harbor protections for
simply providing the DoL materials to their employees.
“Many plan
sponsors would also like to provide the tools necessary to help
employees decide how to make their retirement savings last. However,
there is concern that the plan sponsor may not be the best source for
information on lifetime income products,” the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
said in a statement presented for the hearing. “For example, many plan
sponsors do not have sufficient information regarding individual
retirement funding issues or various lifetime income options. Also,
there is concern that becoming too involved in this area may increase
an employer's fiduciary liabilities without providing an equal benefit
in workforce productivity. For these reasons, the Chamber suggests that
the DOL provide this information on its Web site or in materials that
employers can provide to their employees. Moreover, plan sponsors and
employers should not incur any fiduciary responsibility for providing
to their employees information that was developed by DOL.”
(Cont...)
Educating about Fees
Among
the participant education-related issues raised was how the recent fee
disclosure regulations should be changed to include disclosures on
annuity product charges
In addition, Dan Campbell, Defined
Contribution Administration Practice Leader at Hewitt Associates,
argued participants will need a significant amount of fee data to make
the best decisions.
“We believe the DOL should clarify that
the rules on fee disclosures to plan fiduciaries and plan participants
should apply to all fees that could potentially arise in all phases of
plan participation—whether it’s in the accumulation phase, decumulation
phase or at distribution,” Campbell asserted. “For example, if a
lifetime income option provides participants with choices throughout
their lifetime, and additional or different fees could apply based on
those choices, plan sponsors and participants should be made aware of
all the possible fees that could apply with respect to the choices
available throughout the usage of the product.”
Campbell
specifically called for separate fee disclosures on a lifetime income
product from those about investment management fees. “This unbundling
of fees will give fiduciaries and participants a clearer picture of the
true costs of the program,” he said. “It will also enable them to
compare various lifetime income option providers and therefore
facilitate competition, keeping costs down for plans and plan
participants.”
Support for Adding Income Options
Finally,
most presenters agreed the basic underpinning of the hearings – the
provision of lifetime income options to retirement plan participants –
is a good thing.
“We encourage the DOL to encourage adoption of
income solutions within plans or through plans to enable reduced sales
and distribution charges and increased financial security for plan
participants,” said Campbell. “Plan sponsors have a unique opportunity
to influence the decisions of millions of Americans when it comes to
lifetime income options. Additionally, they can leverage their size,
scale and fiduciary prudence to deliver cost-effective solutions
designed with the participants’ best interests in mind.”
For its
part, Allianz, an annuity provider, offered that it “believes that plan
participants (a) need access to education and guidance on retirement
planning; (b) need the ability to purchase secure retirement products
with principal guarantees; and (c) need to be able to easily convert a
portion of their accumulated retirement assets into guaranteed lifetime
income. “
(Cont...)
A Contrarian Speaks
Offering
a contrarian view was Stephen P. Utkus, Principal, Vanguard Center for
Retirement Research, who testified “we anticipate that a portfolio
withdrawal program, not an income annuity, will be the dominant income
strategy used by retiring plan participants.”
Utkus testified:
“Most participants will want to remain invested throughout retirement,
and will want to generate a significant part of their income using a
withdrawal plan—a plan they establish on their own, with the help of a
financial planner or adviser, or with the new generation of payout
funds. This preference for a portfolio-based withdrawal plan reflects
rational preferences for liquidity and flexibility, given the presence
of a safety net from Social Security and other programs and assets.”