Voya Retirement Insurance and Annuity Company, a member of the Voya
Financial, Inc. family of companies, has entered an agreement to provide
pension payments to approximately 5,000 retirees and beneficiaries
currently covered under the Chemtura Corporation Retirement Plan.
Chemtura will purchase a group annuity contract for approximately $350 million.
Beginning
on May 1, Voya will start making the pension payments to retirees and
beneficiaries of the plan. Individuals will continue to receive their
same monthly benefits. They will experience no other changes except that
the payments will come from Voya instead of Chemtura.
“We are
pleased that Chemtura has placed its trust in Voya to help support the
thousands of retirees and pension plan beneficiaries who rely on these
important benefits for their retirement income,” says Rick Mason,
president of Small / Mid Corporate and Institutional Investment Markets
at Voya Financial. “As the retirement landscape continues to evolve,
many employers with traditional defined benefit plans are looking to
reduce the uncertainty associated with managing these programs.”
As defined benefit plan sponsors look to reduce liabilities and costs
and better manage funding for their plans, the pension risk transfer market has steadily grown, and shows no signs of slowing.
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Following a sit-down with one SEC commissioner, CEFEX leadership
predicts the regulator will propose new requirements for third-party advisory
practice reviews before the close of 2016.
It’s a common argument applied across industries that saddling
all service providers with onerous preventative regulations will just slow down
the good apples, without rooting out the rotten.
Whether or not that is true depends on who you ask—but
according to CEFEX, provider of compliance support and reviews in the
registered investment advisory (RIA) industry, the Securities and Exchange Commission
doesn’t seem to think so. At least, not as it pertains to establishing greater
numbers of mandatory third-party compliance reviews for RIA practices.
On February 9, 2016, CEFEX met with SEC Commissioner Kara
Stein to “describe our certification process and to communicate our view that a
third-party audit program appears to be the most favorable approach for increasing
oversight of RIAs,” explains Carlos Panksep, CEFEX managing director. Panksep notes
that CEFEX requested the meeting, which was accepted by Commissioner Stein, to share commentary on a potential
rule and discuss SEC Chair
Mary-Jo White’s suggestion back in November 2015 that the regulator was seriously
considering new rules requiring third-party compliance reviews for registrants.
That particular suggestion from Chair White did not grab as much
immediate attention as, say, the SEC’s ReTIRE Initiative or some other broad-based projects targeting brokers and RIAs, but it may have the most significant impact. (Also see “SEC Kicks Off Cybersecurity Assessments.”) Panksep explains that the SEC is clearly in listening mode as it pertains to the need for a new rule and the eventual shape of any regulations proposed, but CEFEX is already thinking about how it will tailor
its own programming to help advisory firms meet the potentially forthcoming SEC
rules. “I also welcome comments from certified firms regarding your experience with
both third-party and SEC compliance audits,” he says.
Admittedly, CEFEX is not exactly in a difficult position from
which to advocate for more mandatory reviews and compliance requirements, but
the firm also makes the argument that greater prevalence of third-party reviews
would do a lot to solve the deep-seated compliance issues being hotly contested
in today’s investment markets. As Panksep and others have argued, third-party
reviews of practice compliance could be a more subtle and adaptable approach
compared with the blanket policy approach being taken by the Department of Labor (DOL) in
its separate fiduciary rulemaking.
NEXT: What CEFEX told the SEC
Panksep says he told the SEC that CEFEX believes a
third-party review program can be successfully implemented “in a way which
leverages the broad reach of private-sector examiners while maintaining
critical SEC oversight.” It is always a fine line between effective regulation
and affordable regulation, Panksep explains, but leveraging existing industry
infrastructure, whether public or private, will be critical in keeping the cost
of compliance with any new rulemaking down to an acceptable level.
“As mentioned in our meeting, CEFEX runs a scalable online
examination system which can serve as a practical model,” Panksep says. “CEFEX-certified
advisory firms voluntarily subject themselves to our examinations, thereby demonstrating
that the examinees are well-organized, transparent, and operating in conformity
to specific fiduciary practices.”
An SEC third-party examination program should focus on “straightforward,
evidence-based fact-finding like asset verification and consistency between
advisory practices and Form ADV and website disclosures or other marketing
materials,” Panksep argues. “The program would assess conformity to specific
practices that the Commission deems to be most conducive to examination by a
third party. It could also help uncover potential problems that may require
more in-depth review by SEC examiners, thereby enabling the SEC build a more
complete risk-profile of advisory firms examined so it can direct greater
resources to higher-risk firms.”
From previous discussions with the Office of Compliance
Inspections and Examinations (“OCIE”), Panksep feels that it is “helpful for
National Examination Program staff to have access to independent information
and exposure to private sector analytical tools.”
“A well-designed external examination program can help
achieve these desirable outcomes, in addition to meeting the core objective of
providing factual findings on matters specified for examination by the SEC,”
Panksep concludes. “I look forward to the SEC’s proposed third-party exam
initiative and will gladly provide comments. In the meantime, I would be
pleased to offer details of our examination program to others at the Commission.”