New Guidance Issued For Timing of Some Individual Account Benefit Statements

The Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) has issued new guidance of the timing of participant benefit statements for plans in which participants cannot direct their investments.

Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2007-03provides that plan administrators of individual account plans that do not allow for participant direction of investments will be treated as acting in good faith compliance with a reasonable interpretation of section 105 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), as amended by the Pension Protection Act of 2006 when statements are furnished to participants and beneficiaries on or before the date on which the Form 5500 Annual Return/Report is filed by the plan for the plan year to which the statement relates.

The bulletin said the statements should in no event be provided later than the date, including extensions, on which the Annual Return/Report is required to be filed by the plan.

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Previously, the EBSA had established in Field Assistance Bulletin 2006-03 that, pending the issuance of further guidance, the furnishing of pension benefit statement information not later than 45 days following the end of the relevant period (calendar quarter or calendar year) will constitute good faith compliance with the requirement to automatically furnish pension benefit statements by individual account plans. The guidance was revised because EBSA said compliance with the earlier 45-day good faith period appears to be impossible or very expensive for many of these plans unless the benefit statements were based on data from the end of the prior plan year.

EBSA said many individual account plans that do not permit participants and beneficiaries to direct the investment of assets in their individual accounts may not be able to comply within the 45-day period as many of these plans are profit-sharing plans. That means the sponsors of those plans do not contribute profit-sharing contributions until after the sponsor’s business tax return is completed.

Similarly, non-participant directed individual account plans sponsored by partnerships cannot make contribution determinations until completion of the partnership tax return.

ETF Assets Grow by $49 Billion in September

As of September 28, 2007, 560 exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the U.S., managed by 17 ETF managers, had assets totaling approximately $554 billion, according to State Street’s ETF Snapshot.

Overall, U.S. industry assets increased significantly from approximately $505 billion in August 2007. Fifteen new ETFs were launched during the month of September.

International and size-based ETFs experienced considerable asset growth, gaining $18 billion and $17 billion, respectively. Large-cap ETF assets grew by over $13 billion in September. The SPDR S&P 500 (SPY) was the category leader, contributing over $9 billion in asset growth.

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Sector, style, specialty, and fixed income ETFs showed strong growth for the month, adding a combined $13 billion, the data showed. Led by large-caps, which gained $13 billion, all categories of size-based ETF assets grew in September, with the exception of micro-cap.

During the month, growth-based ETFs outpaced their value counterparts in asset growth. As a group, sector-based ETFs experienced asset growth of $3.9 billion for the month. Only financials-based sector ETFs lost assets in September.

Of the 17 managers, Barclays Global Investors (BGI) had the largest AUM with $311billion across 139 ETFs, followed by State Street with $133 billion across 60 ETFs.

The ETF Snapshot is here. http://statestreetspdrs.com/snapshots/chapters/view/54#section131

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