Burrmont
Compliance Labs LLC announced The Fiduciary Responsibility eSource’s searchable
database now includes a discussion of privacy and security issues.
With
privacy and security breaches on the rise and ever more invasive, this is a
topic that plan fiduciaries can only avoid at their peril, says ERISApedia.com.
This enhancement includes a privacy and data securities issues checklist
authored by Andrew C. Liazos and Ann Killilea of the Boston office of McDermott
Will & Emery.
The
Fiduciary Responsibility eSource is written by nationally recognized Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
and former Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and Labor Department attorney Charles
Humphrey. “This enhancement is consistent with my objective of providing
advisers and plan sponsors with easy-to-read, practical guidance and tools for
them to do their jobs,” Humphrey states.
In
addition to The Fiduciary Responsibility eSource, ERISApedia.com offers
extensive government and other source material and The Qualified Plan eSource—a complete treatise for ERISA professionals
working with defined contribution plans, written by Timothy McCutcheon, the publisher of ERISApedia.com
ERISApedia.com
provides retirement plan sponsors, administrators, attorneys and advisers with access
to compliance information and retirement industry materials. With a platform
that combines search tools and a user-friendly interface, the website answers frequently asked questions from retirement plan sponsors
and service providers.
For the most part, during the August 19 through August 25
market dive, most broad equity asset classes—U.S. stock, emerging markets, real
estate, etc.—took big hits, notes Rod Greenshields, consulting director at
Russell Investments in Seattle.
But, while these asset classes were seeing losses from 7% to
more than 11%, the Barclays Aggregate Bond Index was up 0.1%, he notes. “This
reinforces why you have bonds. Plan sponsors have been questioning bonds, with
expected interest rate increases, but the volatility in recent weeks shows why
they need bonds,” Greenshields tells PLANADVISER.
Joe Halpern, CEO of Exceed Investments in New York City,
adds that the equity products that have fared better during the recent market
swings are the ones that look to provide some downside protection, by being
tactical or having a hedge in place. “A few products in the market have done
that and been able to reduce the pain by having less downside,” he says.
According to Greenshields, strategies that have held up best
do not sell when the market swings down—not selling in the short-term is the
best strategy.
But, why certain investments hold up better is not same for
all scenarios, he says. “For the recent period, so much of equity volatility
seems to stem from people’s concerns over China and the ripple effect it would
have over our economy. But, the people looking at the U.S. economy saw a disconnect
from those fears. Unemployment numbers and sales numbers weren’t showing a
recession would follow.”
Greenshields notes that these spurts of major market
volatility have happened pretty regularly historically, but it hasn’t happened
in a while, and people tend to react more when that is the case.
NEXT: Innovation in investments
Halpern tells PLANADVISER now is a great opportunity for
plan sponsors and their advisers to reassess what they have in their retirement
plan portfolios. Over the past few years, there has been innovation in
investments, looking for ways to protect during downturns and diversify when
market shake-ups happen.
“This is a good opportunity to look around to see some of
products that are faring well and what makes sense to incorporate into
portfolios. A market upheaval allows you to gauge managers and how certain
products perform in the market,” he says. “It comes down to two questions: What
do I need to do to the portfolio to prepare for further volatility; and what
can plan participants deal with, afford and handle behaviorally?”
Halpern says the problem with some products is they have no
exposure to the market and only provide safety on the downside, so they are not
taking much risk and don’t have good exposure during the upside. “What we focus
on is defined outcome investing. We provide a level of definition to the
downside and to the exposure on the upside, so the end user understands
risk/reward,” he says.
Exceed Investments co-launched a suite of three indexes with
the NASDAQ last September that provide defined exposures to the S&P 500.
Exceed’s first fund, SHIIX, is a defined outcomes product focused specifically
on income generation and wealth preservation. SHIIX, which follows one of the
indexes, seeks to provide a floor on loses to 12.5% and upside gain limited to a target
of 15%.
According to Halpern, Exceed did back testing and analysis
back to 2001 which shows, in 2008, when the market was down 38%, the product
was down only 11%. In 2013, when the market was up 32%, the product was up more
than 13%. More recently, Halpern shares, at the end of August, the product was
down 7%, but the market was down 12%.
NEXT: Selecting investments for retirement plans
Plan sponsors and advisers cannot control the market, but
they have control over setting up diverse investment options in retirement
plans, Greenshields says.
“Equities are more interesting to people, so they get more
headline news. People like to talk about stocks, and bonds are boring in
comparison,” he notes. “One result of this is that plans have many more
investments available to access slices of the equity market, but maybe have
only one or two bond funds.”
He points out that if participants are told not to put all
their money in one basket, they will look at what baskets are offered, and they
tend to spread their money evenly among those choices. “Some investors may put too much in stock funds simply because there are more of them in the plan.”
Greenshields notes that the entire universe of fixed-income
investments is large in number and large in dollar. He suggests plan sponsors
align that with the number of fund options in their plans. He points out that
in a “balanced” fund, 40% is primarily in U.S. bonds, while the 60% of equity
is sliced up among different types.
According to Greenshields, Russell Investments is a big
proponent of risk-based and target-date funds in defined contribution (DC)
retirement plans because they insulate participants against behavioral biases.
“Good plan design is the best thing to counteract market challenges,” he says.
“While its good [for plan sponsors and advisers] to look at
how investments are doing in the short term, they need to think about the
overall time horizon, because that’s when participants get the benefits of
investments—over the long-term,” Greenshields concludes.