Fifty
percent of business owners plan to increase their 401(k) matches, with 55% of
this group saying it is because of rising revenue, Nationwide found in an
online survey of 1,069 business owners with up to 299 employees.
Thirty-six
percent of business owners who currently do not offer a retirement plan say
they expect revenue to increase in the next year or two, and this
will prompt them to offer a retirement plan.
Among Millennial business owners, 85% plan to increase their 401(k) matches,
compared to 31% of Baby Boomer business owners and 49% of Gen X business
owners. Forty-seven percent of all business owners believe they should offer a
retirement plan, but this rises to 70% of Millennial business owners.
Only 39% of business owners think their employees are on track to retire, and
72% think the U.S. is facing a retirement readiness crisis. Thirty-two percent
of business owners recently increased their contributions in order to attract
and retain talent.
“With tight labor markets as a result of the continued economic expansion, it’s
more important than ever for employers to offer benefits like retirement plans
that can differentiate their business as a destination for top talent and a
workplace where employees want to stay and grow,” says John Carter, president
of retirement plans at Nationwide. “America’s workers rely on
employer-sponsored retirement plans as their primary way to save for
retirement.”
U.S.
District Judge Patrick J. Schiltz of the U.S. District Court for the District
of Minnesota has dismissed a consolidated lawsuit alleging Wells Fargo violated
its duties of prudence and loyalty under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act (ERISA) by keeping company stock as an investment in its 401(k)
plan when plan fiduciaries knew the stock price was inflated.
Schiltz
relied on the pleading standards set forth by the U.S. Supreme Court in Fifth Third v. Dudenhoeffer to
make his decision. While the plaintiffs did put forth alternative actions plan fiduciaries
could have taken to avoid participant losses after the September 2016
disclosure of fraud allegations against Wells Fargo caused its stock price to
drop significantly, Schiltz found the plaintiffs did not plead specific facts
to make plausible their allegation that, under the circumstances of the case, a
prudent fiduciary “could not have concluded” that a later disclosure would
result in a smaller loss to the company stock fund than an earlier disclosure.
“Plaintiffs’
prudence claim largely rests on their conclusory assertion that early
disclosure of corporate misconduct is always better for a plan than later
disclosure. That assertion is simply not true, as multiple courts have
recognized,” he wrote in his opinion.
Plaintiffs
allege that the plan fiduciaries knew or should have known about the fraud as
early as 2005. Schiltz said plan fiduciaries’ decision about whether to
disclose the information earlier than 2016 is a “fact‐sensitive
inquiry.” Citing a court decision in a lawsuit against Target Corporation, he also said the fiduciary’s decision should not be “evaluated from the
‘vantage point of hindsight.’”
In
his opinion, Schiltz put forth the many questions plan fiduciaries must
consider when determining whether disclosure would cause a fund more harm than
good. For example:
Just
how serious is the alleged fraud?
How
much would disclosure affect the company’s stock price in the short run? How
about in the long run?
How
many shares of company stock does the plan currently own?
How
many additional shares will plan participants purchase if disclosure is delayed
for a month? Or a year?
How
confident is the fiduciary that he or she has all relevant information, so that
a single complete and accurate disclosure can be made?
Should
the fiduciary wait to get more information before disclosing the fraud so as to
avoid a piecemeal release of a disparate array of half‐truths
and incomplete data to the market?
Should
the fiduciary wait until the company’s fraud can be disclosed simultaneously
with some remedial action, such as a settlement with the SEC, the resignation
of the company’s CEO, or the rollout of a new company initiative to win back
its customers’ trust? “Being able to pair an announcement of fraud with an announcement
of remedial action may cushion the bad news and thus mitigate the dropin the
stock price,” Schiltz noted.
Would
it be more beneficial to disclose the fraud through normal channels rather than
through the fiduciaries of a 401(k) plan?
Cases Come Down on the Side of Defendants
Schiltz
conceded that this list of considerations is not exhaustive, but he said it is
sufficient to make the point that an earlier disclosure is not always better
than a later disclosure. “A dozen fiduciaries in the same position could weigh
the same factors and reach a dozen different (but equally prudent) conclusions
about whether, when, how, and by whom negative inside information should be
disclosed,” he wrote.
Schiltz
cited several post‐Dudenhoeffer cases that came down on the side
of the defendants. For example, in Whitley
v. BP, P.L.C., the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that a prudent fiduciary “could very easily conclude” that early disclosure of
BP’s past safety breaches “would do more harm than good” to the plan.
The
plaintiffs argue that their case is different because it involves fraud that
was ongoing at the time that defendants failed to disclose. Schiltz conceded
that ongoing fraud is one factor that a prudent fiduciary might consider in
deciding whether early disclosure would better protect the plan’s assets; disclosing
the fraud will usually end the fraud, and less fraud will usually mean less
damage to the company. However, he said “ongoing fraud is not a talisman that
will always satisfy Dudenhoeffer’s
pleading standard. Rather, it is simply another factor that Defendants might
have considered when deciding whether to make an earlier disclosure.”
Wells Fargo and the
United States government announced in September 2016 that thousands of Wells
Fargo employees had engaged in unethical sales practices, including opening
deposit accounts and issuing credit cards without the knowledge or consent of customers.
Plaintiffs’ attorneys took no time to start filing lawsuits, with a first, second and third lawsuit all filed in October 2016.