The Matrix Retirement Platform is designed to bring
objective, fiduciary-friendly investment management and asset-allocation services
to retirement plan advisers and their plan sponsor clients, according to a statement
from Securian.
Powered by Matrix, a proprietary retirement services
platform from Broadridge Financial Solutions, the new solution provides access
to online tools that can help streamline investment analysis and menu selection.
The tools can also help advisers manage levelized compensation, build model
portfolios and monitor ongoing investment performance.
The solution was designed with a specific subset of advisers
in mind—namely fee-based retirement plan advisers who prefer to utilize
levelized compensation across plan assets and who help plan sponsors manage fiduciary
responsibilities and risks, according to Securian.
Rick Ayers, vice president at Securian Retirement, says the open architecture
arrangement allows advisers to access thousands of funds with no proprietary
restrictions.
By using this site you agree to our network wide Privacy Policy.
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to hear a case raising fiduciary issues and questions about what constitutes prudent investment decisionmaking within employee stock ownership plans (ESOP).
The court agreed to hear Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer
(docket number 12-751)—a case that the U.S. Solicitor General had advised the
Supreme Court justices to review, according to the Supreme Court of the United
States Blog (SCOTUSblog), which is sponsored by Bloomberg Law.
The case comes to the high court on an approved petition for
a writ of certiorari—a document which a losing party files with the court
asking it to review the decision of a lower court—after an extended appeals
process. Earlier iterations of the case have been argued in the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals, as well as the U.S. District Court for the Southern
District of Ohio, case documents show.
Although the Solicitor General urged the Supreme Court to
rewrite the questions of the case, the court did not do so, according to the
SCOTUSblog post, and instead accepted only one of the two standing questions as
raised by Fifth Third Bancorp: “Whether the Sixth Circuit erred by holding that
respondents were not required to plausibly allege in their complaint that the
fiduciaries of an employee stock ownership plan abused their discretion by
remaining invested in employer stock, in order to overcome the presumption that
their decision to invest in employer stock was reasonable, as required by the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 . . . and every other circuit
to address the issue.”
According
to SCOTUSblog, the Supreme Court chose to bypass a second question about the
effect on fiduciary duties of statements that a financial institution makes in
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Fifth Third Bank has an employee profit-sharing plan,
defining various contribution options for the company’s employees. Plan
employees make voluntary contributions from their salaries and direct the purchase
of investments for their individual account from options that the plan trustee
has selected. In the time period at issue in the case, the trustee offered the
option to invest in the company’s own stock through various mutual fund and
collective fund vehicles.
Two former employees of the bank filed suit in September
2008 over investment option decisions made by various officials at the bank and
its holding company during the period before July 10, 2007. The lawsuit
contended, according to SCOTUSblog, that the company switched from being a
conservative bank lender to a lender in the subprime mortgage market. The
lawsuit also contended that the president and other top officials within the
bank knew the new investment strategy was far riskier, because of a high
potential for defaults, and yet failed to do anything about the continued
investment in company stock.
Between July 2007 and September 2009, the company’ stock
price dropped significantly, causing the employee plan to lose tens of millions
of dollars on its investments. The investments, the workers’ lawsuit argued,
continued long after it was prudent to maintain them.
A federal district judge dismissed the lawsuit, finding that
the company was entitled to a presumption that its continued investment in
company stock was reasonable. However, the 6th Circuit revived the lawsuit,
finding it could proceed on the claim that the officers had violated their
fiduciary duty and caused the losses to the plan by failing to divest the plan
of stock in the company and failing to remove company stock as an investment
option for the employees (see "Court
Revives Fifth Third Stock Drop Suit"). The 6th Circuit ruled the
presumption is not to be applied at the pleading stage of such a lawsuit.
In asking the Supreme Court to review the case, Fifth Third
Bancorp asked for clarification of the kind of proof that is required to
overcome the presumption that such an investment was a reasonable one. The 6th
Circuit, the petition contended, was wrong in failing to require proof that
continued investment in company stock was not prudent.
The
case is likely to be heard in March 2014, according to SCOTUSblog.