Institutional assets tracked by the Wilshire Trust Universe
Comparison Service delivered a median return of 3.25% for all retirement plan
types in the third quarter of 2017.
As Wilshire lays out, this implies a median one-year gain of
11.40%, markedly higher than the low- to mid-single digit returns that had been
forecasted
by many.
“This quarter marked the eighth consecutive positive
quarter, the longest string of positive quarterly returns for all plan types
since June 1998, which marked a string of 14 positive quarters in a row,” explains
Robert Waid, managing director, Wilshire Associates. “This quarter’s return
boosted the one-year return to 11.40% for the year ending September 30, 2017,
compared to 11.31% for the year ending June 30, 2017.”
Wilshire’s data shows this was the best one-year return
since the year ending June 30, 2014. That year ended with a 15.51% median
return and a third consecutive quarter to post an annual return above 10%.
For context, the Wilshire 5000 Total Market Index returned
4.59% for the third quarter and 18.89% for the year ending September 30, 2017,
while the MSCI AC World ex U.S. for international equities rose 6.16% in the
third quarter and 19.61% for the year. At the same time, the Wilshire Bond
Index also gained 0.63% in the third quarter and 0.96% for the year.
“This resulted in a positive range of median plan-type
returns in the second quarter, as the low median return was 2.03% for Taft
Hartley Health and Welfare Funds and the high median return was 3.63% for public
funds with assets greater than $5 billion,” Waid reports. “For one-year
returns, the low median return was 7.15% for Taft Hartley Health and Welfare
Funds and the high median return was 12.81% for public funds with assets
greater than $5 billion.”
Other data from Wilshire shows, for the third quarter in a
row, large public funds outperformed small public funds. Large foundations and endowments
continued to have significant exposure to alternatives, with the median exposure
rising slightly to 37.94% in the third quarter. All plan types with assets
greater than $1 billion experienced median returns of 3.28% for the third
quarter and 11.83% for the year ending September 30, 2017, compared to plans
with assets less than $1 billion, which experienced median returns of 3.23% for
the third quarter and 11.19% for the year.
As Waid further observes, in the third quarter, only Taft
Hartley Health and Welfare Funds experienced median returns worse than the
60/40 portfolio, which returned 3.01%. This pulled the median return for all
plan types down slightly to 3.25%, but it remained above the 60/40 portfolio
for the third consecutive quarter.
“The first quarter of 2017 was notably the first time this
happened since the quarter ending June 2015,” Waid notes.
Wilshire TUCS is a cooperative effort between Wilshire
Analytics, the investment technology unit of Wilshire Associates Incorporated,
and custodial organizations. More research and information is available here.
District Court Grants Thrivent Injunction in Fiduciary Lawsuit Targeting DOL
A decision out of a federal district court in Minnesota represents something of a mixed bag for both the plaintiff, Thrivent Financial for Lutherans, and for Department of Labor defendants.
Even as the U.S. Department of Labor, under the leadership of
President Donald Trump and Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta, considers what
it will do with the fiduciary rule expansion implemented by the Obama administration,
it is also fighting several anti-fiduciary rule lawsuits in various district
courts across the U.S.
One such challenge was filed by Thrivent Financial for
Lutherans back in October 2016. According to the complaint, the lawsuit challenges only
the Department of Labor’s (DOL) adoption of the Best Interest Contract
Exemption (BICE) to the extent that it requires Thrivent to abandon its
“longstanding commitment to alternative dispute resolution.” The lawsuit is not
challenging the validity of the new rule as a whole, plaintiffs argue.
This week the U.S. District Court for the District of Minnesota
ruled on a number of important preliminary motions in the case. Before the court
were a motion for a preliminary injunction filed by plaintiff Thrivent
Financial for Lutherans; a motion for a stay filed by the Secretary of Labor
and the DOL collectively; as well as two cross motions
for summary judgment filed by both parties. For the reasons set forth in a newly published order, plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction is granted;
defendants’ motion for a stay is granted; plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment
is denied without prejudice; and defendants’ motion for summary judgment is
withdrawn.
As the order lays out, Thrivent brought this suit pursuant
to section 702 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. Section 702,
“challenging a requirement contained in [the new DOL fiduciary] rule which it
claims would effectively prohibit it from requiring individual arbitration to
resolve disputes with its members.” Thrivent argues that the new requirement “contravenes
the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), which broadly reflects an emphatic federal
policy in favor of arbitral dispute resolution.” In its complaint, Thrivent asks
the court to declare the requirement in violation of the APA and the FAA, and
enter a permanent injunction prohibiting its enforcement.
NEXT: Important details from
the decision
Background information in the decision states that, because
most of the members of Thrivent trade infrequently and do not need ongoing
financial advice, Thrivent’s financial representatives work under a
“transaction-based” compensation model, meaning they receive a commission for
each transaction. The court acknowledges Thrivent’s assertion that this model
is more appropriate for most of its members than the competing “fee-based”
model, where the consumer pays compensation periodically based upon a
percentage of the assets under management, or as a flat rate, regardless of whether
transactions occur.
Turning to the matter of the BICE, the court notes that since
1999, “Thrivent has required that disputes with members related to insurance
products be resolved through its Member Dispute Resolution Program, or MDRP. The
MDRP provides for a multi-tiered dispute resolution process, escalating
eventually (if necessary) to binding arbitration based on the rules of the
American Arbitration Association. Of particular relevance to this matter, the
MDRP mandates that all mediation or arbitration be individual in nature—representative
or class claims of any sort, whether arbitral or judicial, are expressly
barred.”
Thrivent contends that its commitment to individual
arbitration is “important to the membership because it reflects Thrivent’s
Christian Common Bond, helps preserve members’ fraternal relationships, and
avoids protracted and adversarial litigation that could undermine Thrivent’s
core mission.” Because its MDRP—which is incorporated into every one of its
insurance contracts—requires individual arbitration and expressly bars class or
representative claims, Thrivent asserts that it cannot currently comply with
the BICE requirements.
The decision on these matters is complicated by the shifting
outlook of the DOL, now under the ostensibly anti-regulatory leadership of
President Trump: “In light of DOL’s changed position, the court first considers
whether it retains jurisdiction to consider the parties’ pending motions.
Pursuant to Article III of the Constitution, cases that do not involve actual,
ongoing controversies, are moot and must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.”
The decision continues: “DOL now concedes that the BIC
Exemption’s anti-arbitration condition contravenes the FAA, and asserts that it
will not enforce violations of that condition against Thrivent. While DOL
acknowledges that its actions in the
near future are likely to
moot the case, it concedes that the case is not yet moot … DOL also represents
that it is coordinating a non-enforcement policy with the IRS. But it appears
that these efforts are ‘ongoing,’ and are neither definite nor complete. DOL
further recognizes that enforcement of the rule does not rest exclusively with
the government, and if the applicability date is not delayed as proposed, a
retirement investor could assert an ERISA enforcement claim against Thrivent
for actions in any period during which the challenged provision applies.”
NEXT: More from the text of
the decision
The court is satisfied that an actual, ongoing
controversy exists between the parties. Although the court "recognizes the
presumption of good faith given to governmental actors when voluntary cessation
is involved, the anti-arbitration condition remains in place, the potential
actions of two different agencies are implicated, the rulemaking process can be
lengthy, and Thrivent requires certainty for purposes of advance planning and
legal compliance.”
After determining the case is not moot, the court steps
through various factors to determine whether preliminary injunctive relief is
warranted. The court finds that Thrivent “has sufficiently demonstrated the
threat of irreparable harm, both now and in the future.” This is so because, “notwithstanding
DOL’s current efforts to extend the BIC Exemption’s applicability date, its own
guidance recognizes that regulated entities such as Thrivent may incur undue
expense to comply with conditions or requirements that DOL ultimately determines
to revise or repeal. While monetary loss alone does not warrant injunctive
relief, the current state of regulatory limbo threatens Thrivent with harm that
cannot be remedied monetarily.”
Further supporting the decision to issue injunctive relief,
as noted, DOL concedes that the anti-arbitration condition violates the FAA. Thus
the court finds that Thrivent “is likely to succeed on the merits.” In addition,
“consideration of the remaining factors of the balance of harms and public
interest also weigh in Thrivent’s favor. DOL will suffer no harm, and the
public interest will be served, if it is enjoined from enforcing an invalid
rule.”
Important to note, given DOL’s reassessment of the
challenged provision of the BICE, the court “finds that DOL has
sufficiently demonstrated the need for a stay.” The court says staying this matter will allow
the administrative process to fully develop, possibly resolving this dispute,
and thereby promoting judicial economy. “Moreover, in light of Thrivent’s
injunctive relief, awarded above, Thrivent will not be prejudiced by the entry
of a stay at this time,” the court says. “In fact, Thrivent expressed its
willingness to enter into a stay if the Court were to grant its Motion for a Preliminary
Injunction.”
Finally, the court clarifies that DOL’s pending motion for summary
judgment is withdrawn, and in light of the court’s rulings concerning
injunctive relief and a stay, the court denies plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment
without prejudice.