Retirement Plans Still Vital in Talent War to Retain Employees

Research from Voya finds U.S. workers still value a retirement plan about as much as a flexible work arrangement. Ubiquity Retirement + Savings backed up the findings, saying it will double sales of 401(k)s in part due to the war for talent.



Research from retirement plan provider Voya Financial released Tuesday found that 60% of American workers are more likely to stay with their employer if the job includes an employer-sponsored retirement plan.

Retirement benefits were a top three draw for employees, ranking just below a competitive salary (64%) and flexible work hours (63%), according to the October survey of about 1,000 U.S. workers aged 18 or above. While shifts in the workplace stemming from the pandemic have popularized flexible and hybrid schedules, a strong retirement savings plan plays as important a role as ever, Heather Lavallee, CEO of wealth solutions and president CEO-elect of Voya Financial, said in a press release.

“Employers need to remember the employer-sponsored retirement plan is a critical component to helping individuals prepare for a more secure financial future,” Lavallee said.  

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U.S. job openings rose in September from the prior month despite volatile markets and rising inflation, with demand outpacing the number of unemployed people looking for work, according to the latest data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Meanwhile, the employment cost index, a measure of worker wages and benefits, showed that benefits increased 5% for the 12-month period ending in September 2022.

Ubiquity Retirement + Savings, a plan provider for small businesses, reinforced the message that companies are looking to retirement benefits as a talent draw. The San Francisco-based firm said Tuesday that sales of its flat-fee 401(k) offering outpaced the company’s “most aggressive” projections due in part to the demand from small businesses to add plans in order to support and retain talent.

“We anticipate by the end of the year we will have grown twofold based on how we ended 2021,” Michael Bissett, vice president of business growth for Ubiquity, said in an emailed response.

Ubiquity noted in a press release job turnover and the Great Resignation as a driver for businesses to buy its customizable, flat-fee retirement plans. Employers are emphasizing benefits packages to both keep employees and outduel competitors, the company said.

“We had a banner year as small business owners across industries such as professional services, benefit and insurance agents, retirement and wealth management advisors, payroll firms, credit unions, law firms, healthcare doctors, dentists and other gig workers increasingly responded to the need for competitive retirement plan offerings that differentiate them amid the great talent war,” Ubiquity Founder and CEO Chad Parks said in the release.

Ubiquity’s record growth so far in 2022 in both revenue and 401(k) plan count was also driven by partnerships and state mandates for workplaces to offer retirement plans, Bissett said. The privately-held firm declined to give specific figures, but touts more than 100,000 participants and $3 billion in retirement assets under administration through its automated recordkeeping and plan management offerings.

“This is a testament to how well our marketing team has gotten the message out about our mission as well as the strength of our partnerships with institutional and individual advisers,” Bissett said.

At a T. Rowe Price retirement industry media briefing on Tuesday, experts at the Baltimore-based investment manager also cited the continued talent squeeze as driving retirement plan benefit pitches and sales.

“The talent gap is a major driver for offering retirement plans,” Michael Doshier, a Senior Retirement Strategist for T. Rowe Price, said in a webcast of the briefing. “Turnover has been huge for the firms advising retirement plans.”

Doshier said that about two-thirds of the firms they survey cited talent retention and acquisition as a top concern they want to address.

About 68% of workers surveyed by Voya say they have plans to save for retirement next year, with 79% agreeing that sticking to long-term investment during a volatile market is important.

“It’s extremely encouraging to see individuals keeping a focus on their long-term goals, despite the rollercoaster of financial extremes many have experienced over the past several years,” Lavallee said.

Applications and Implementation of The New Marketing Rule

Various leaders within the SEC discussed in a public seminar today some of the interpretations and applications of the new marketing rule.


The compliance date for the SEC’s new investment adviser marketing rule, Advisers Act Rule 206(4)-1, was November 4. At a compliance seminar hosted today by the SEC, panelists elaborated on some of the applications of the new rule and what the SEC will be looking for in its enforcement.

The new marketing rule says any communication directed to one or more persons that discusses performance is an advertisement and is subject to The Investment Adviser’s Act of 1940. If the communication contains information on hypothetical performance, then it is advertising even if it is addressed to only one person.

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Christopher Mulligan, the private funds senior adviser for the SEC’s Division of Examinations, explained during the seminar that advisers need to be careful with the one-on-one communication exemption. If an adviser sends essentially the same message to multiple persons one at a time, then that communication would likely be considered an advertisement, as if it had been sent to many persons simultaneously. Sending similar communication to one person at a time is not a loophole in the provision.

Bao Nguyen, a co-chair of investment industry practice and head of the Registered Investment Adviser Practice at Kaufman Rossin, a CPA and advisory firm, says the rule is designed to exempt one-on-one tailored communication. The exemption for materials sent to one person is designed to allow unique materials that only apply to a particular client, not to be a workaround to the rule.

The rule also says any ad which contains information on gross performance must also display information on net performance.

Christine Schleppegrell, the acting branch chief for the private funds branch of the SEC’s Division of Investment Management, explained that performance ads have a high potential to mislead investors, and providing information on gross performance is misleading because it does not show the true return an investor can expect.

She also addressed the charge that “performance” can be an ambiguous word since it has many metrics. She encouraged the virtual seminar’s audience to consider the reasoning behind the rule and said actors should ask themselves if the performance metrics they provide present the risk of misleading investors that the SEC was trying to address with the rule.

Robert Baker, the assistant director for the asset management unit of the Division of Enforcement in Boston, explained that many of the rule’s provisions merely codify and make explicit rules which only existed as case law previously. One example he provided was the idea of time period “cherry picking” or using dubious performance time intervals which exaggerate expected asset performance by choosing a start and end date most favorable to the adviser.

According to Nguyen, an advertisement must provide performance data in 1-, 5- and 10-year intervals under the new rule, to the extent that data is available for that portfolio, as opposed to intervals chosen by the adviser. This specificity is designed to make enforcement actions against cherry picking easier to execute for the SEC.

Baker also explained that the amended marketing rule requires advisers to be able to substantiate factual claims made in their marketing materials. This is a “great tool of enforcement,” he said, because it shifts the burden of proof from the SEC (proving a figure is mistaken could be challenging if the adviser did not keep adequate records) to the adviser, who has to, upon the SEC’s request, provide evidence that the claim is true.

Nguyen adds that certain well-known facts or public information, such as the performance of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, are not applicable here. Instead, the SEC is interested in claims of fact that rely on privately held or lesser-known information. This is important for recordkeepers at advisory firms, since they must now maintain data and other documents that substantiate claims of fact and make them available to the SEC on request.

Nguyen provides as an example an adviser who claims they previously managed $50 billion at another position. Since this claim could be misleading if the manager actually had a mid-level role as part of a larger team, that adviser must keep records that show they were the primary manager of that portfolio and provide it to the SEC if requested.

Baker went on to say that a fund may have to withdraw or change an advertisement if a portfolio manager leaves, even if that PM was not mentioned in the ad, which was an action the SEC could not have brought before the amended rule took effect.

In other words, according to Nguyen, if a firm had a CIO that made investment decisions and its portfolio had a good return, when that CIO moves on to another firm, then the initial firm can no longer advertise based on that performance data. It could potentially mislead investors into thinking that they can expect the same returns despite different management. To use that data in an ad, it must disclose that the CIO left, possibly impacting future performance.

Mulligan, in summarizing the approach advisers should take to comply, said there are no shortcuts and “most advisers are really going to have to take a close look at their materials.”

Nguyen concurs and says the SEC will be looking for specific compliance policies and procedures, and the absence of such policies are “low hanging fruit” for SEC enforcement action.

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