Retirement Industry People Moves – 10/27/23

NAGDCA elevates Hiers to executive board president; Principal Asset Management hires Seaver as market director; Savvy Advisors recruits Most as principal wealth manager; and more.


NAGDCA Announces Hiers as Executive Board President

Kelly Hiers

The National Association of Government Defined Contribution Administrators announced the elevation of Kelly Hiers to NAGDCA executive board president. NAGDCA is the premier professional association for plan administrators and services providers of government-sponsored defined contribution retirement plans.

Hiers currently serves as DC plans administrator at the Virginia Retirement System. She replaces Sandy Blair, the administrator for the California Savings Plus program, and is replaced as executive board vice president by Mo Raihan, the chief retirement officer at NYC Health + Hospitals.

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“We’re delighted to have Kelly helming the NAGDCA executive board,” Matt Petersen, NAGDCA’s executive director, said in a statement. “We look forward to continuing to work with her in her new position as she continues to share her extensive experience and insights in furtherance of NAGDCA’s efforts to support public sector plan sponsors.”

Principal Asset Management Hires Seaver as Market Director

Greg Seaver

Principal Asset Management has bolstered its investment product division, hiring Greg Seaver as market director in the investment-only division, effective October 9, a Principal spokesperson confirmed.

Seaver is responsible for selling Principal mutual funds, collective investment trusts, separate account and stable value products to retirement plan and investment consultants, institutional bank trusts, registered investment advisers and other defined contribution investment professionals in the Northeast.

He reports to Rob Logan, managing director for the investment-only unit at Principal Asset Management. Previously, Seaver was a vice president of DC investments at Hartford Funds.

Savvy Advisors Recruits Most as Principal Wealth Manager

Michael Most

Savvy Advisors Inc., a registered investment adviser affiliated with Savvy Wealth Inc., announced that Michael Most has joined the firm as principal wealth manager. He will leverage Savvy’s proprietary technology, lead generation capabilities and automated marketing support to further scale his practice.

Based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Most is the 11th adviser to partner with Savvy nationally.

“As an individual adviser at Savvy, I feel the possibilities are endless,” Most said in a statement. “I have access to cutting-edge technology that will allow me to enhance client satisfaction and streamline back-office tasks—all while enabling me to grow my practice exponentially.”

Most spent the last 10 years of his career working as a financial adviser and private wealth manager at LPL Financial, where he managed approximately $80 million in assets under management. Prior to his role at LPL, Most was a senior financial adviser at Ameriprise Financial Services. At Ameriprise, Most also worked as a training manager and district manager.

Kito Joins Fiduciary Trust International as Wealth Director

Kenneth Kito

Fiduciary Trust Co. International, a global wealth manager and wholly-owned subsidiary of Franklin Templeton, announced that Kenneth Kito has joined the firm as a wealth director, based in the New York office.

“New York and the surrounding markets comprise a vital region for our organization, and Ken is exactly the type of focused and talented professional we look for as we expand our office here,” Anne Fitzpatrick Donahue, regional managing director responsible for Fiduciary Trust International’s New York office, said in a statement.

Kito joins Fiduciary Trust International from its parent company, Franklin Templeton, where he served as territory specialist for retail U.S. distribution in Greater Philadelphia and New Jersey. He joined Franklin Templeton via its acquisition of Legg Mason Global Asset Management in 2020.

At Legg Mason, Kito held the position of assistant vice president of U.S. distribution and served as the dedicated point of contact for clients across the national wirehouse industry, as well as independent wealth management firms.

First Sentier Investors Expands Americas Team With Altman and Mazzariello as Sales Executives

Chase Mazzariello

Elizabeth Altman

First Sentier Investors, a global investment manager, announced it has expanded its distribution team in the Americas with the appointments of Elizabeth Altman and Chase Mazzariello, who report to Bachar Beaini, its New York-based regional managing director for the Americas.

“Elizabeth and Chase both bring significant business development experience to our team and will enhance our sales and distribution efforts as we raise the profile of the firm’s differentiated investment strategies in North America,” Beaini said in a statement.

Altman, a senior director, primarily supports Igneo Infrastructure Partners, the global unlisted infrastructure manager within the First Sentier Investors Group. Altman joined First Sentier Investors from Global Infrastructure Partners, where she was responsible for investor relations and capital-raising activities in North America.

Mazzariello, also a senior director, focuses on the investment brands and strategies of First Sentier Investors, including Igneo, Asia and emerging markets equity specialist FSSA Investment Managers, global listed infrastructure and global property securities. Mazzariello joined First Sentier Investors from Penserra Global Investors, where he was a partner and head of sales and distribution.

First Sentier Investors manages $137.8 billion in assets, as of September 30, for a global client base. In the Americas, First Sentier Investors manages more than $8 billion and employs a team of 48 people.

State AGs Appeal Dismissal of Suit Challenging DOL’s ESG Rule

The Department of Labor’s defense continues on two tracks, one in Wisconsin, and 2another in the 5th Circuit.

A group of 26 state attorneys general have appealed to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals the dismissal of their complaint challenging the legality of the Department of Labor’s final rule permitting environmental, social and governance factors to be used when selecting retirement plan investments.

The states’ lawsuit, Utah et al. v. Walsh, was dismissed on September 21 by the U.S. District Court for the District of Northern Texas because the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 does not specifically forbid ESG factors or a tiebreaker test that permits non-financial factors to be used in ERISA-covered investment decisions. Additionally, the DOL’s final rule states that fiduciaries must still act prudently and cannot subordinate financial factors to non-financial ones.

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The appeal notice did not spell out the legal argument for the appeal. The appeal was also signed by industry plaintiffs Liberty Energy Inc. and Liberty Oilfield Services LLC, two fossil fuel firms; and Western Energy Alliance, a fossil fuel lobby.

The original complaint argued that ESG investing is unlawful under ERISA because ESG factors are non-financial factors and would undermine retirement savings in order to advance political and ethical goals, especially in terms of environmental and climate concerns. The attorneys general argued it would hurt retirees’ savings in their respective states and would also harm investment in the fossil fuel industry, hurting tax revenues in those states.

Of the 16 judges on the 5th Circuit, which hears cases from Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, 12 were appointed by Republican presidents. While it is considered on the conservative end of the appellate courts, U.S. District Judge Matthew J. Kacsmaryk, who dismissed the case, is also widely considered conservative because of his rulings on abortifacients and immigration policy.

In his dismissal order, he acknowledged that the suit should be dismissed, even though “the Court is not unsympathetic to [the] Plaintiffs’ concerns about ESG investing, [but] it need not condone ESG investing generally or ultimately agree with the [DOL] Rule to reach this conclusion.”

A separate lawsuit challenging the ESG rule in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, Milwaukee Division, is still ongoing in Braun, Luehrs v. Walsh. Its plaintiffs make the same objections to the rule: that ESG investing will allow sponsors to select imprudent investment menu options for political reasons that will ultimately undermine investment returns in retirement plans.

The DOL’s rule, finalized in November 2022, does not require ESG factors to be used in investment selection. It permits them, but only to the extent that ESG issues are financial considerations and that the investment is otherwise prudent. Non-financial factors may only be considered as a tiebreaker between two options which both equally serve the interests of the plan.

The DOL rule also permits sponsors to include investment menu options that take participants’ non-financial interests and preferences into account, as long as those menu options are still prudent. This provision is intended to increase plan participation by allowing sponsors to provide participants with an incentive to use the plan that goes beyond economic returns. This provision has not been a focus of either lawsuit.

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