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Showing posts with label Employee Retirement Income Security Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Employee Retirement Income Security Act. Show all posts

Thursday

Thought Capital: New Participant Fee Disclosure Rules: What Plan Sponsors Need to Know

FROM: 
Thought Capital 
New Participant Fee Disclosure Rules: 
What Plan Sponsors Need to Know

TO:
The new participant disclosure rules are intended to help ensure that all participants and beneficiaries in participant-directed individual account plans have the information necessary to make informed decisions.

Compliance should not be terribly
burdensome for plan sponsors
.
Effective date update:  On July 13, 2011, the Department of Labor (DOL) announced an extension of the deadline for the participant disclosure rules.

Initial disclosures must now be furnished no later than the later of:
      ·60 days after the plan's anniversary date that occurs on or after Nov. 1, 2011, or
    ·60 days after the effective date of the plan sponsor-level fee disclosure rule (April 1, 2012)

Please take this change into account as you proceed in reading.

Executive Summary

In October, the Department of Labor ("DOL") published final regulations that require plan administrators (typically the plan sponsor) to disclose certain fee and investment information to participants and beneficiaries in Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) covered participant-directed individual account plans, which include the vast majority of 401(k) and private-sector 403(b) plans.  The final regulations will apply to plan years beginning on or after November 1, 2011.  Thus, for calendar-year plans, the regulations will become effective January 1, 2012.

The new participant disclosure rules are intended to help ensure that all participants and beneficiaries in participant-directed individual account plans have the information necessary to make informed decisions about plan participation and selection of investment choices for their accounts.  

Of course, record keeper and investment service providers to individual account plans have long helped plan sponsors make information about plan fees and investment-related expenses available to participants and beneficiaries, typically through a secure website.  The new regulations, however, require plans to affirmatively provide specified information to "participants," defined broadly to include all individuals eligible to participate in the plan (without regard to whether an individual has an account balance).

For the most part, the information required to be disclosed under the regulations is not dissimilar from the information that is typically made available to participants and beneficiaries today, although the new regulations require disclosure of investment-related performance and fee information in a comparative format, which may differ from current practice.The new rules also create more uniform fee and performance disclosure requirements for different types of investment options, which may help plan sponsors as well as participants effectively compare investment alternatives.

"The new rules also create more uniform fee and performance disclosure requirements for different types of investment options, which may help plan sponsors as well as participants effectively compare investment alternatives. "

Compliance should not be terribly burdensome for plan sponsors.  Plan administrators should work with their record keeper to see that the necessary information is gathered and the required disclosures developed.  Helpfully, plan sponsors are permitted to rely in good faith on information provided by their service providers, such as record keeper and investment providers, who will assist with providing the required information and developing the required disclosures.

The new rules may have broader repercussions.  It is possible that the new rules and their comparative format requirement will indirectly affect covered individual account plans by helping to inform the number and types of investment alternatives that plans offer to participants.  In addition, since the regulations highlight the manner in which plan administrative services are financed, they may influence plan sponsors' approach to financing plan costs.

By Davis and Harman LLP, for the Principal Financial Group*


Hollis Lamon
Lamon & Stern
Atlanta, Georgia

Contact Hollis Lamon of Lamon & Stern today for all your retirement planning needs! 770-951-8411

Monday

A Letter To Our Planned Sponsor | ERISA

Dear Plan Sponsor,

As a Plan Sponsor of a qualified retirement plan, we know that you are being constantly bombarded by representatives in our business who insist that they can assist you with your Retirement Plan.

As a broker dealer Lamon & Stern, Inc. can and will help you and your company by providing a thorough review of your existing plan including your investment policy statement and your fiduciary practices.

Most Plan Sponsors are not aware of all the fiduciary responsibilities and requirements that have been imposed by ERISA (Employee Retirement Income Security Act).  ERISA was enacted to protect participants and beneficiaries in retirement plans and Plan fiduciaries must follow ERISA's standards properly to perform their duties to avoid potential liability.  I have enclosed a pamphlet, "The Success Quiz", which will allow you to review your current practices and determine the level of your fiduciary success.  It is not uncommon for Plan Sponsors to score poorly on this quiz; which means that you have some weakness that needs to be corrected to improve your fiduciary practices.

The "Success Quiz" is a brief overview of the requirements that a fiduciary should be following in order to meet the requirements imposed by ERISA.  If you will take the time necessary to review this quiz, we will be glad to setup a mutually convenient time to review your results and provide you with a more extensive Fiduciary Handbook which will help you in establishing and maintaining a well thought out and compliant fiduciary program.  In addition, we will also review the new regulations which have been released by the Department of Labor aimed at helping plan sponsors know and understand the various fees that are associated with their retirement programs.

Lamon & Stern works very closely with Pension Financial Services, Inc. ("PFS"), a local consulting and administration firm.  PFS has been providing services to Plan Sponsors throughout the Southeastern U.S. since 1982 and is certainly one of the largest firms of its kind.  PFS specializes in qualified retirement programs and the principals and consultants in that firm have over 150 years of combined experience.  As a team, Lamon & Stern, Inc. and PFS will also offer a no cost, and no obligation review of your current plan design and your fiduciary practices.

My office will set up an appointment with myself and Earle Garvin, President and CEO of Pension Financial Services to review your plan and discuss any gaps you may have in your plan's compliance with ERISA.

Sincerely,

Hollis Lamon
Lamon & Stern, Inc.

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