A
federal court has approved a settlement of a class action Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) lawsuit against Terex Corporation alleging
fiduciary breaches related to holding company stock investments in its 401(k)
plan.
According
to the settlement agreement, Terex will fund $2.5 million in an escrow account,
and that amount, less any court-approved fees and expenses and administrative
costs to the plan, will be allocated to the accounts of participants of the plan
who had portions of their accounts invested in Terex common stock or units in
the Company Stock Fund during the settlement class period.
The
complaint alleges that Terex’s stock price was inflated, due in part to the subprime mortgage crisis,
and that plan fiduciaries failed to provide information to plan participants
about the true nature of the company’s financial situation and the true value
of stock. According to the complaint, plan fiduciaries breached their duties
under ERISA by continuing to allow the plan to hold large amounts of assets in
company stock, and certain fiduciaries breached their duties to monitor others to
whom management and administration of plan assets was delegated.
The
compliant notes that there were other investment options in the plan, and if
participants had been informed of problems the company was having, they would
have chosen other investments. When the company’s true financial status was
made public, the share price of its stock fell and participants suffered
losses.
Terex
has denied any wrongdoing.
Court documents
related to the case may be viewed here.
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A Q&A document about small individual retirement account (IRA) savers by
the Department of Labor (DOL) takes a look at the interplay of IRA-holders, rollovers
and access to professional advice.
Most people think owners of
small-balance IRAs are individuals or households
with minimal assets, but this is a fallacy. According to the DOL’s report, households
in the lower half of income distribution hold less than one-third of small IRAs.
The reason? These households are much likelier to use work-based plans to save
for retirement. Just 10% of households in the bottom half of the income
distribution own any IRA assets, compared with 25% who have assets in a
job-based plan.
Small-balance IRAs are mostly held
by wealthy and upper-middle-class households—which hold more than two-thirds of
these accounts—that are generally homeowners, for whom these assets usually
constitute a component of a larger financial portfolio, such as a job-based defined
contribution (DC) plan, stocks and mutual funds.
Middle- and working-class small
savers in the bottom half of the income distribution are most at risk from
conflicts of interest because of their limited ability to absorb financial
losses, the DOL contends. The rollover
process—by which they generally enter the IRA market—leaves them vulnerable to conflicted
advice, because they are least able to absorb the costs of hidden fees and
lower returns.
Losing money through conflicts
of interest can happen to savers of any size, the DOL points out, but low- and
middle-income small savers are particularly vulnerable to the negative impacts.
These losses can have a real and significant impact on a smaller saver’s
ability to achieve economic security in retirement.
NEXT: Rollovers can be
rocky terrain.
The DOL is particularly
concerned with those low- and middle-income workers and families that enter the
IRA marketplace through rollovers from a workplace-based retirement plan. Small
savers depend heavily on these plans to do most of their saving, so rolling
over these assets is one of the most important financial decisions they can
make. Right now, the DOL contends, many retirement investment advisers do not
have to adhere to fiduciary standards when giving rollover advice, and
depending on the arrangement, their advice does not have to be in the saver’s
best interest.
Receiving advice in the
existing IRA market varies, depending on the amount of assets, the DOL points
out, and low- and middle-income small savers may have access to different
services and levels of service than those with higher balances. The phrases “financial
advice” or “professional adviser” to most people means some type of
full-service personalized financial advice, but according to the DOL, low- and
middle-income small savers do not receive
this advice.
When it comes to advice, size
matters, the DOL points out. Large investment firms, with account balance
minimums in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, generally don’t offer these
services to individuals with investable assets of $50,000, $25,000 or lower,
but instead steer these investors to call centers or online services.
Many savers of modest means frequently
turn to other lower-cost options instead of full-service professional advice
from professional advisers. Data from the Survey of Consumer Finances show that
very few households with low incomes or small IRAs seek financial advice from
brokers, with many more looking to friends or relatives, bankers and the Internet
for advice.
Among non-elderly households in
the bottom 25% of earners, only 4% used brokers for financial advice, while 43%
turned to friends or relatives, 32% turned to bankers, 28% looked online, 15% sought
advice from financial planners, and even fewer sought it from print media or
television and radio. Even when looking at all owners of small IRAs—whether low-,
middle-, or upper-income—only 15% seek financial advice from brokers. In short,
according to the DOL, low- and middle-income small savers generally do not
receive the kind of detailed personalized advice that many envision when they
think of financial advice.
NEXT: Fiduciary re-proposal
would improve advice.
The DOL
emphasizes that the fiduciary re-proposal not only clearly allows for all
savers to continuing receiving retirement and investment education, but in fact
would improve the quality of advice for savers because of additional clarity about
the distinctions between education and advice.
General retirement and
investment education can be provided to all savers, large or small, without
triggering fiduciary responsibility, the DOL states. Education can include
information about the importance of saving, how retirement plans work, and how the
mix of investments should change as someone ages. Information about assessing risk
tolerance, historic differences in rates of return between different types of
investments, and how to estimate how much income a person will need in
retirement are also cited as acceptable types of education by the DOL—none of which
will trigger any fiduciary responsibilities on the part of the adviser.
The proposed rule also seeks to
provide greater clarity about the line between education and advice than existed
before, so that savers, advisers, and plan sponsors can be more certain of
where one ends and the other begins. In particular, the new rule will help
clarify where this boundary lies when it comes to advice and education
concerning rollovers and distributions. By helping more advisers understand
these distinctions, the Department believes the proposed rule will increase the
quality of the education provided to savers which in turn can help them make
more well-informed financial decisions. Such high-quality education can be
particularly beneficial to low- and middle-income small savers who have less
financial experience and may be less familiar with the investment landscape.
Nothing in the proposed rule
prevents advisers from providing financial advice to small savers, the DOL
emphasizes. Advisers will be able to deliver advice to all savers and charge
for the costs of the advice delivered. The only difference is that advice must
now be in the savers’ best interests.
The Department also believes
the proposed rule may actually lead more small savers to seek out financial
advice, as they will be able to trust that the recommendations they are
receiving are being provided to them with their best interests in mind.
In a survey sponsored by TIAA-CREF,
64% of respondents said it was hard to
know what sources can be trusted—a larger number than pointed to any other
obstacle to getting good advice. Other research has shown that investors
identify trust as the most important quality in professional financial advisers
and that financial trust is correlated with both the usage of advice and the
likelihood of seeking out professional advice.