Retirees with Dementia in Need of Financial Assistance
A study by the CRR finds that while there are several sources of financial assistance for those suffering from cognitive impairment, some of these are underutilized.
Most retirees suffering from mild cognitive impairment or dementia
need assistance managing their finances in order to prevent the risk of making financial
mistakes or falling victim to fraud and abuse.
The Center for Retirement
Research at Boston College (CRR) says the Social Security’s Representative
Payee Program can be a major source of support for these individuals. The
program allows a designated person to receive and manage another person’s Social Security Benefits — the only source of income for several American
retirees. Payees also must submit reports to Social Security indicating that
all expenditures were in the best interests of the beneficiary.
However, the CRR’s research suggests that only 9% of those
suffering from dementia and 70 years of age or older have a payee. And although
this research points out that most retirees suffering from dementia have some
source of financial assistance such as a non-impaired son or daughter, much can
be done by social services organizations and financial services practitioners
to help retirees manage their money and prevent falling victim to fraud.
According to the CRR, “Groups vulnerable to having no help available include those with less
education, minorities, and individuals living in densely populated areas.” The
research also indicates that those isolated from non-impaired spouses or
children within 10 miles are likely to receive no financial assistance.
As for those suffering mild cognitive impairment or dementia
and receiving financial help, most seek the assistance of a professional.
According to CRR research, 63.2% of these individuals seek financial assistance
through a power of attorney. About 36.6% receive help from a child, and about
29.1% receive help from a spouse.
The research also suggests that living in a tight-knit
community and involvement with a religious organization may also increase the likeliness
of having access to financial assistance. The CRR notes, “Having a strong
community, as indicated by involvement with a Catholic Church or residence in a
small county, is associated with being more likely to have help.”
Thus, it’s important for financial advisers to maintain
strong, personal relationships with vulnerable clients.
The CRR’s study used data from the Health and Retirement
Study (HRS) linked to administrative Social Security records in order to document
what share of retirees with mild cognitive impairment or dementia use the
Representative Payee Program or other sources of financial assistance.
“Are Many Retirees with Dementia Lacking Help?”
can be accessed at CRR.BC.edu.
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Annuity Contract Termination ERISA Challenge Will Proceed
The plaintiff alleges that the contract’s cancellation was not made with his and the other beneficiaries’ interests in mind, but rather to improve the parent/subsidiary companies’ financial positions and to make them a more attractive target for potential buyers.
The latest retirement industry litigation decision comes out
of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern
Division, pertaining to an Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
challenge filed against the company CNA Financial, its subsidiaries and the
fiduciaries of its 401(k) plan.
Plaintiffs alleged various violations of ERISA related to the cancellation of a
group annuity contract. Also named as a defendant in the lawsuit is the plan
trustee, Northern Trust Company.
The defendant and Northern Trust moved under Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) to dismiss all claims against them, while the
Continental defendants moved to dismiss one claim. With this new decision the
motions are all denied, “except as to the plaintiff’s request for damages
relief against Continental.”
Important to note, this represents only an interim decision
in the case, and in resolving a Rule 12(b)(6) motion the court “assumes the
truth of the operative complaint’s well-pleaded factual allegations, though not
its legal conclusions … In setting forth those facts at the pleading stage, the
court does not vouch for their accuracy.”
Relevant background shared in the decision states the
plaintiff is a former employee of CNA Financial, an insurance holding company.
The plaintiff was a participant in the CNA 401k Plus Plan, and Northern Trust
was the plan’s trustee. One of the plan’s investment options was a fund called
the CNA Fixed Income Fund. According to case documents, until the end of 2011,
a core investment of the fund was a group annuity contract offered by a company
which at that time was a subsidiary of CNA Financial.
According to case documents, the parent company was
permitted to discontinue the contract only in limited circumstances, such as
the plan’s failure to qualify as a qualified pension, profit-sharing, or stock
bonus plan under Section 401(a) of the Internal Revenue Code; the failure of
the plan’s trustee to make required contributions; or a decision by the plan’s
trustee or sponsor to make other funding arrangements for the plan. The plan
itself, by contrast, could terminate the contract at any time, within the
confines of the fiduciary duty.
At some juncture, the plan and the parent company added a
“Minimum Interest Guarantee Rider” to the contract in question, which
guaranteed that the annual interest rate credited to the plan’s investment
under the contract would never fall below 4%. According to the text of the
decision, the rider remained in place until December 31, 2011, when the
contract was discontinued “pursuant to an agreement executed two days earlier
between Northern Trust and [the parent company], which provided that at the
request of’ the plan’s trustee, the contract would be cancelled.”
The plaintiff alleges that the contract’s cancellation was
not made with his and the other beneficiaries’ interests in mind, but rather to
improve the parent/subsidiary companies’ financial positions and/or to make
them a more attractive target for potential buyers. Details in the case
documents suggest that prior to the contract’s cancellation, the contract had
earned returns at or above the 4% floor; it earned a 6.5% gross rate of return
in 2007 and 2008, 6.25% in 2009, 4.55% in 2010, and 4% in 2011.
“Because interest rates had fallen to much lower than those
in place when the rider was executed in 1990, the 4% guarantee represented a
favorable rate for the plan,” the decision states. “Had the plan not cancelled
the contract, the plan’s overall earnings during … almost certainly would have
been higher, because most of the plan’s funds had been invested in the contract
with its guaranteed a minimum 4% return … So the contract’s cancellation likely
had significant negative financial consequences for the plan.”
NEXT: Plan assets
versus guaranteed contracts
In weighing the arguments presented by the various parties
as to whether the charges should be heard in a full trial, the court notes that
the “contract certainly was an asset of the plan,” but just as important is
whether the contract was a guaranteed minimum interest rate rider as well.
“The circuits have followed two approaches in determining
whether something is a plan asset under ERISA. Citing Leigh v. Engle,
the Ninth Circuit adopted a functional approach asking whether the item in
question may be used to the benefit (financial or otherwise) of the fiduciary
at the expense of plan participants or beneficiaries,” the decision states.
“This approach is also applied in Acosta v. Pac. Enters. Other
circuits, following Department of Labor guidance, have adopted a property
rights approach, under which the assets of a plan generally are to be
identified on the basis of ordinary notions of property rights under non-ERISA
law … The Seventh Circuit has not adopted either approach, and it is
unnecessary to choose between them here because the contract’s guaranteed
interest rate rider was a plan asset under both.”
So the guaranteed minimum interest rate was an “asset” of
the plan, but was its termination along with the contract a “use” or “transfer”
of the asset? The decision goes on: “As noted, the contract effectively gave
the plan the right to a dollar amount from [the parent company] equal to the
difference between a 4% return and whatever the plan otherwise have earned from
the contract. The contract’s termination effectively transferred that right
back to [the parent company], for it no longer had to make good on its 4%
guarantee.” The conclusion is that the plaintiff “has properly pleaded the
occurrence of a prohibited transaction under Section 406(a)(1)(D).”
For its part, Northern Trust seeks dismissal of certain
counts, the claims alleging violations of Sections 404(a)(1) and 405(a), on the
ground that it was a directed trustee and therefore did not violate any
fiduciary duties. Particularly, Northern Trust contends that the plaintiff has
not alleged that it breached any fiduciary duties of prudence or loyalty,
reasoning that it “is self-evident that, at the time of the cancellation,
Northern Trust could not perform the hindsight comparison of return rates after
cancellation.”
“But the complaint alleges not only declining returns after
the contract’s cancellation, but also declining returns for several years prior
to the cancellation,” the decision points out. “Northern Trust saw multiple
consecutive years of declining returns approaching closer and closer to the
contract’s guaranteed 4% floor, and rather than maintaining that floor for the
plan in what clearly appeared to be a declining market, it allowed the plan to
give it up for nothing in return. Although the evidence may show that Northern
Trust had valid reasons for doing what it did, the court at this stage is
limited to the complaint’s well-pleaded factual allegations and the reasonable
inferences drawn therefrom. Those facts give rise to a reasonable inference
that Northern Trust’s following the direction to relinquish the contract in a
declining market was plainly imprudent, thereby breaching its duty of prudence.
“
Other counts against the various defendants are considered
and allowed to proceed past this initial procedural hurdle—but again it remains
unclear how the actual case will pan out. One count has been tossed by the
court, targeting one of the subsidiaries of the parent company involved.