Examining the Fiduciary Rule Proposal’s Education Carve-Out

Among the many provisions and definitions in the forthcoming DOL fiduciary rule will likely be an “education carve-out,” considered to be one of the most high-stakes elements of the rulemaking for retirement plan industry providers.

ERISA attorneys will be looking to learn a lot from the final version of the fiduciary rule, expected any day now from the Department of Labor (DOL) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

Two of the most widely quoted voices in the often-contentious debate that has surrounded the rulemaking effort are Brad Campbell, counsel in Drinker, Biddle and Reath’s Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Practice Group, and Fred Reish, a partner in the firm who leads the teams dedicated to employee benefits, compensation and financial service.

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The pair recently hosted a webcast covering the fiduciary rule in-depth, highlighting a variety of elements in the complex regulation that could derail current industry practices around variable compensation and other real or perceived sources of conflicts of interest. During the call, Reish and Campbell repeatedly stressed that the “education carve-out will be vital to how advisers, recordkeepers and investment managers set up and rely on call centers, and how they talk to participants and retirees.”

Reish explains the DOL’s proposed version of the rulemaking would bring most service providers touching a retirement plan into the fiduciary relationship, “meaning they could no longer make recommendations that will directly or indirectly increase their own compensation without potentially triggering a prohibited transaction.” Many service providers have expressed worry that the sources currently providing the most basic and widely available education and advice—the call centers of defined contribution plan recordkeepers and investment managers—will be prohibited from answering any questions that touch on specific products. Some worry that the rule, as proposed, will be so strict that any discussions about portfolio allocations or different asset classes might also range into the realm of fiduciary advice. 

In an effort to appease these and other concerns, the DOL rulemaking includes an extensive number of “carve-out” provisions, among them the “education carve-out,” which would discount some forms of non-product focused investment education from the range of services to be brought under the fiduciary umbrella.  

“Under the carve-out, services that constitute pure investment education—including call centers providing general information about the different forms of accounts or distributions and the important considerations for using each—would probably not be considered fiduciary advice under the proposal. However, it will be important to keep in mind that under the rule, ‘education’ is not a vague concept to be skimmed over in a general discussion about products. The education should be unbiased and complete, and avoid discussion of individual products.”

NEXT: More on this key carve-out 

Reish and Campbell further explain that in the proposed version of the fiduciary rule, asset-allocation models and educational charts showing the performance of different asset classes “probably would also just be education, not fiduciary advice.” But, Campbell warns, “if you start to mention specific products at all or start to answer these questions, that is almost certainly going to be fiduciary advice. Even if a participant asks you directly, you won’t be able to answer it.” 

This is the basis of the industry concern that call centers may have to stop answering even very simple questions from defined contribution (DC) plan participants, even questions that would not present much of an opportunity for conflict or harm. 

Not a surprise, Reish and Campbell say they will be closely reading the final version of the rule to see how it addresses these concerns, “which the industry has voiced very clearly by now.” A related aspect to watch closely, they suggest, is how the DOL “handles the large-plan carve-out for advice,” which would essentially give plans with $100 million or more in assets more flexibility to solicit investment advice on a non-fiduciary basis.

“As we take the proposal, if a plan has $100 million or more, I can give fairly specific investment information to that plan without being a fiduciary,” Campbell explains. “How this part of the proposal is or is not modified will be significant in terms of what compliance challenges the industry faces and, ultimately, what paths of communication and compensation are available under the final rule.”

One potential outcome is that the DOL will lower that asset hurdle or find another way to allow plans to continue to bring in some basic level of education from non-fiduciary providers. “We think DOL will fix some of this with respect to DC plans,” Reish says. “If you want to come in an talk about one product or one asset class, they’ll probably force you to mention a list of options that could serve the client equally well. On the individual retirement account (IRA) side, it is even more tricky to see how this carve-out would be workable, given the way IRA platforms are structured today. So this will be very important.”

“This will be yet another important aspect to watch for, the platform provider carve-out, and whether it will be workable for IRA providers,” Campbell agrees. “The proposal includes some limitations on when investment and DC recordkeeping platform providers will be considered fiduciaries, but it doesn’t seem to apply the limitations to IRA platforms. There is not an automatic carve-out for IRA providers, in other words, but many people would like to see this change in the final version.”

Adviser Boosts Retirement Confidence

Whether people work with an adviser has an impact on how they assess their own confidence in retirement, says EBRI’s latest data.

American workers’ confidence in their ability to retire comfortably, which hit record lows between 2009 and 2013 before increases in 2014 and 2015, leveled off at “very confident” this year.

The 26th annual Retirement Confidence Survey from the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), the longest-running survey of its kind, finds the percentages of workers who are somewhat confident increased and workers who are not at all confident decreased.

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Twenty-one percent of workers are now very confident they will have enough money to live comfortably throughout their retirement years (statistically unchanged from 22% in 2015 but up from 13% in 2013). Forty-two percent say they are somewhat confident, compared with 36% in 2015 and 38% in 2013.

EBRI also found that the increase in confidence between 2013 and 2016 occurred primarily among those with a plan. Among those with a plan, the percentage of those very confident increased from 14% in 2013 to 28% in 2015 and is back down to 26% in 2016.

In contrast, the percentage of those describing themselves as very confident has remained statistically unchanged among those without a plan (10% in 2013, 9% in 2014, 12% in 2015, and 10% in 2016). Workers without a plan are more than three times as likely to say they are not at all confident about their financial security in retirement (11% with a plan vs. 38% without).

For plan sponsors, the top takeaway is that confidence in retirement continues rebounding since financial crisis, says Luke Vandermillen, vice president at Principal Financial Group. “It’s no surprise that people’s confidence took a dip in 2008-09, and we’ve been crawling back since,” he tells PLANADVISER. “We’ve seen increases year over year since then, and 2016 is better than 2015.”

Picking apart the data, Vandermillen says, the top factor that drives confidence is whether or not someone has access to a retirement plan, either through an employer or by using an individual retirement account (IRA). Next, people who spoke to an adviser are more confident than those who did not.

NEXT: The difference an adviser makes

Whether plan advisers are working with employees whose retirement is around the corner or years down the road, that interaction has a huge impact, Vandermillen says. According to EBRI’s data, 53% of retirees who spoke with an adviser are very confident about retirement. Retirees who did not speak with an adviser were less confident (just 31% said they were confident). For those people not yet retired, the gap is even bigger: 32% vs. 16%.

While the survey didn’t yield any big surprises, Vandermillen says it is interesting to look at whether people are saving enough, or people describe themselves as confident. “Are they confident with good reason?” he asks. “Is there a difference between confidence levels and participation rates? Participation rates have been kind of flat within plans, in the range of 70% to 80%. While awareness of retirement plans continues to rise along with confidence, participant behavior has not really changed. “What can we do to make people take more action?” he asks.

Vandermillen recommends advisers in the defined contribution (DC) market make sure their plans have a good communication strategy in place. “Particularly around market volatility, there’s an opportunity to reassure people they are on the right track,” he says.

The survey also examined other financial aspects of retirement: workers express the highest levels of confidence about their ability to pay for basic expenses (43% very confident). They are less likely to feel very confident about their ability to pay for medical expenses (22%) and least likely to feel very confident about paying for long-term care expenses in retirement (16%). Compared with 2015, more workers feel very confident about having enough money for basic expenses. However, there has also been a gradual rise since 2012 in worker confidence about paying for medical and long-term care expenses in retirement.

Nineteen percent of workers are not at all confident that they will have enough money to live comfortably throughout their retirement years (still above the low of 10% in 2007 but below the 24% in 2015 and 28% in 2013). Finally, 35% of workers are not too or not at all confident they will have enough money for retirement, down from 49% in 2013. 

The 2016 Retirement Confidence Survey report is available at EBRI’s website.

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