An analysis by consulting firm Mercer found this decrease
was primarily due to adjustments based upon information released in year-end
financial statements. The collective deficit of $276 billion as of February 28
is up $43 billion from the estimated deficit of $232 billion measured on January 31.
Mercer also points out equity markets rebounded in February,
posting returns in excess of 4% during the month, based on the S&P 500
Index. The Mercer Yield Curve discount rate for mature pension plans dropped
seven basis points during the month, leading to an increase in liabilities that
offset the asset gains.
Mercer estimates these factors would have increased funded
status by approximately 1% in February. However, mitigating the positive
returns was information released in year-end financial statements, which showed
a slightly worse funded status than previously estimated. The new data released
by approximately one quarter of the S&P plan sponsors covering roughly half
of the total pension obligations for these plans reduced the aggregate funded
ratio by approximately 3%, for a net decrease in the month of 2%.
The newly reported numbers indicate asset values were
slightly lower than previous estimates as a result of a broad market trend
toward higher fixed-income allocations that occurred throughout 2013 as many
plan sponsors locked in gains from their equity returns. In addition,
liabilities were somewhat higher than estimated, as many plan sponsors have
begun to adopt more conservative assumptions regarding how long pensioners
live, resulting in increased liabilities.
“Early indications from 10-K filings [to the Securities and
Exchange Commission] are that plan sponsors made some significant steps towards
risk management in 2013,” says Jonathan Barry, a partner in Mercer’s retirement
business, based in New York. “Some sponsors have begun to get out in front of
potentially large increases that we anticipate will begin to impact pension
liabilities over the next year or two. We are seeing increased interest from
plan sponsors in risk transfer strategies, such as annuity purchases or lump
sum cashouts in 2014, as a way of further managing the many risks to which
these plans are exposed.”
Mercer estimates the aggregate funded status position of
plans operated by S&P 1500 companies on a monthly basis. The estimates are
based on each company’s year-end statement and by projections to February 28 in
line with financial indices. This includes U.S. domestic qualified and
non-qualified plans and all non-domestic plans.
The
estimated aggregate value of pension plan assets of the S&P 1500 companies
as of December 31, 2013, was $1.85 trillion, compared with estimated aggregate
liabilities of $1.96 trillion. Allowing for changes in financial markets
through February 28, changes to the S&P 1500 constituents and newly
released financial disclosures, at the end of February the estimated aggregate
assets were $1.86 trillion, compared with the estimated aggregate liabilities
of $2.13 trillion.
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The ERISA Industry Committee (ERIC) contends that because
both the temporary relief and the proposals for permanent relief are narrowly
construed, the relief will apply only to a limited number of plans.
In December 2013, in Notice 2014-5 (see “IRS
Provides Nondiscrimination Relief for Closed DBs”), the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) provides temporary nondiscrimination relief for certain plans
that provide ongoing accruals but have been amended to limit those accruals to
some or all of the employees who participated in the plan on a specified date.
It permits certain employers that sponsor a closed DB plan and also sponsor a
defined contribution (DC) plan to demonstrate the aggregated plans comply with
the nondiscrimination requirements of § 401(a)(4) of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) on the basis of equivalent benefits, even if the
aggregated plans do not satisfy the current conditions for testing on that
basis. In addition, the notice requests comments about possible permanent
changes to the nondiscrimination rules under § 401(a)(4).
The agencies should issue guidance to provide
plans with permanent relief as soon as possible;
Additional relief should be provided with
respect to benefits, rights and features (BRF);
The agencies should provide soft frozen DB plans
with additional options to satisfy the nondiscrimination requirements;
DC plans that provide enhanced benefits to
former defined benefit plan participants should be provided with additional
options for satisfying the nondiscrimination requirements; and
Contributory plans that otherwise satisfy the
nondiscrimination requirements should not be considered discriminatory merely
because some highly compensated employees (HCEs) contribute more than some
non-highly compensated employees (NHCEs).
To satisfy nondiscrimination testing for soft frozen DB
plans, ERIC suggests matching contributions should be included for more types
of nondiscrimination testing for DB plans. Additionally, the agencies should
provide an alternative for certain plans that have been in existence for a
number of years. Under this proposed alternative, a soft frozen plan would be
deemed to satisfy the coverage and nondiscrimination rules if it:
was in existence for at least five years before
it was closed to new participants (the “closure date”);
continued to satisfy minimum coverage and
nondiscrimination tests for at least five years after the closure date;
covers a closed group of participants that
continues to accrue benefits under a preexisting benefit formula;
did not have any changes made to the plan’s
benefit formula, accrual method, or benefits, rights, and features after the
closure date, other than with respect to (1) adverse changes that are made
solely to HCEs, (2) beneficial changes that are made solely to NHCEs, and (3)
changes required to comply with the law; and
demonstrates that it is nondiscriminatory by
satisfying the average benefits percentage test for every year the plan does
not otherwise satisfy the Code § 410(b) minimum coverage and Code § 401(a)(4)
nondiscrimination rules.The ERISA Industry Committee (ERIC) contends that because
both the temporary relief and the proposals for permanent relief are narrowly
construed, the relief will apply only to a limited number of plans.
In December 2013, in Notice 2014-5 (see “IRS
Provides Nondiscrimination Relief for Closed DBs”), the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) provides temporary nondiscrimination relief for certain plans
that provide ongoing accruals but have been amended to limit those accruals to
some or all of the employees who participated in the plan on a specified date.
It permits certain employers that sponsor a closed DB plan and also sponsor a
defined contribution (DC) plan to demonstrate the aggregated plans comply with
the nondiscrimination requirements of § 401(a)(4) of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) on the basis of equivalent benefits, even if the
aggregated plans do not satisfy the current conditions for testing on that
basis. In addition, the notice requests comments about possible permanent
changes to the nondiscrimination rules under § 401(a)(4).
The agencies should issue guidance to provide
plans with permanent relief as soon as possible;
Additional relief should be provided with
respect to benefits, rights and features (BRF);
The agencies should provide soft frozen DB plans
with additional options to satisfy the nondiscrimination requirements;
DC plans that provide enhanced benefits to
former defined benefit plan participants should be provided with additional
options for satisfying the nondiscrimination requirements; and
Contributory plans that otherwise satisfy the
nondiscrimination requirements should not be considered discriminatory merely
because some highly compensated employees (HCEs) contribute more than some
non-highly compensated employees (NHCEs).
To satisfy nondiscrimination testing for soft frozen DB
plans, ERIC suggests matching contributions should be included for more types
of nondiscrimination testing for DB plans. Additionally, the agencies should
provide an alternative for certain plans that have been in existence for a
number of years. Under this proposed alternative, a soft frozen plan would be
deemed to satisfy the coverage and nondiscrimination rules if it:
was in existence for at least five years before
it was closed to new participants (the “closure date”);
continued to satisfy minimum coverage and
nondiscrimination tests for at least five years after the closure date;
covers a closed group of participants that
continues to accrue benefits under a preexisting benefit formula;
did not have any changes made to the plan’s
benefit formula, accrual method, or benefits, rights, and features after the
closure date, other than with respect to (1) adverse changes that are made
solely to HCEs, (2) beneficial changes that are made solely to NHCEs, and (3)
changes required to comply with the law; and
demonstrates that it is nondiscriminatory by
satisfying the average benefits percentage test for every year the plan does
not otherwise satisfy the Code § 410(b) minimum coverage and Code § 401(a)(4)
nondiscrimination rules.
ERIC contends plans that have been in existence for several
years and provided meaningful benefits to workers for all those years would
clearly not have been created to take advantage of these special rules.
Additionally, the conditions proposed above would discourage companies from
freezing plans. Alternatively, the agencies should provide special testing for
aggregated mature plans.
ERIC also lays out recommendations for testing alternatives
for DC plans with companies that also sponsor a hard frozen DB plan, and DC
plans that include nonelective contributions allocated to a closed group of
participants who previously participated in a DB plan that is now hard frozen.
In its comment letter, the American
Academy of Actuaries asks regulators to make any changes to nondiscrimination
rules retroactive and offers suggestions for protections against abuse.
The academy says it generally supports the averaging of
allocation rates for DC plan benefits in the minimum aggregate allocation
gateway provided for cross-testing. However, it believes that by itself, this
change would help only a limited number of situations due to the high
equivalent allocation rates for older, long-service employees in DB plans. The
academy offers additional ideas about how to make this approach more useful.
The
academy says it observes when a DB plan is closed to new entrants, the plan
administrator almost always resorts to using the minimum aggregate allocation
gateway in order to attempt to satisfy the cross-testing rules when the
“primarily DB in character” gateway becomes inapplicable. This particular
gateway requires every NHCE benefiting under the plan to have a minimum
allocation rate based on the highest HCE rate. In practice, the academy has
found when there is a grandfathered final average pay formula, the required
NHCE allocation rate will almost always be 7.5% of IRC § 415(c) compensation
due to the high accrual rate produced by an older, longer service HCE who
receives even a modest pay increase.
It suggests:
Easing
the criteria for the minimum aggregate allocation gateway so that every
NHCE need not receive a 7.5% allocation when a final average pay DB plan
is closed. Easing of this gateway could be accomplished through some
combination of reducing the maximum required allocation for NHCEs below
7.5% or permitting non-elective employer contributions to § 403(b) and
employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) to be reflected in the test.
Allowing
cross-testing of aggregated DB/DC plans for a DB plan that satisfied the
gateways at the time the plan was closed, even if the plan would no longer
satisfy the gateway. The logic is that if the DB plan is closed, there may
very well be a long service, older grandfathered employee with a very
large equivalent allocation rate. The presence of this employee requires
the 7.5% minimum aggregate allocation for all NHCEs. New entrants will
have the benefit of being covered by a DC plan their entire careers, and
thus will have significant opportunity to accumulate retirement savings.
Pegging the allocation to the gateway required by the equivalent
allocation rate for a 65-year-old HCE with 40 years of service is
inordinately generous and typically untenable.
The academy says the alternative for aggregated DB/DC plans
that could satisfy nondiscrimination using a lower interest rate would be
helpful, but it will further increase the complexity of an already difficult
set of regulations. It discusses other, more direct alternatives.
Regarding
the safety valve alternative under which plans can request permission to
disregard outliers suggested by regulators, the academy contends historically
these types of requests are often impractical. Many plan sponsors find the
current Internal Revenue Service user fees to be cost prohibitive and the time
necessary to obtain a ruling to be problematic. Although situational rulings
may be a viable option for larger plan sponsors, the vast majority would not
view this as a practical option unless costs were significantly reduced and
additional time was granted to retroactively correct a situation if the ruling
was unfavorable.