New Participant Disclosure Requirements A new set of participant disclosure requirements will take effect for most 401(k) and 403(b) plans later this year (Participant Disclosure Regulation). The regulation creates a new ERISA fiduciary duty for administrators of all retirement plans that provide for participant investment. Plan administrators of covered plans will need to give participants an expanded array of information that meets specific content, formatting and frequency requirements. The requirements apply to plan years beginning on or after November 1, 2011. The new regulation substantially expands section 404(c) disclosure requirements and applies without regard to whether a plan is designed to comply with section 404(c). Congress and regulators recently have become concerned with the fees paid directly or indirectly by retirement plan participants. Such fees also have been the subject of class action lawsuits alleging that plan fiduciaries breached their ERISA fiduciary duties by not adequately considering (and limiting) fees charged to participants’ accounts. The new regulation creates an entirely new set of disclosure obligations for plan administrators, which are distinct from the disclosure requirements of ERISA section 404(c). The new regulation was issued under ERISA section 404(a)(1), which requires plan fiduciaries to act prudently and solely in the interest of plan participants. Unlike compliance with ERISA section 404(c), which is voluntary, ERISA section 404(a)(1) is a mandatory, core fiduciary obligation. As a result, plan administrators that do not comply with the new disclosure requirements may be subject to claims of breach of their ERISA fiduciary duties of prudence and loyalty. The plan administrator of an ERISA-covered plan is the person or persons so designated in the plan documents. If the plan documents do not name the plan administrator, then the administrator is the sponsor of the plan. The new Participant Disclosure Regulation requires that plan administrators provide participants two broad categories of information: plan-related information and investment-related information. Plan-Related Information General information consists of:
The disclosure of administrative expenses must include an explanation of any fees and expenses for general plan administrative services that may be charged against participants’ individual accounts on a plan-wide basis, and which are not reflected in the total annual operating expenses of the plan’s investment alternatives. An example of such an administrative expense is a plan-wide recordkeeping fee. The disclosure must explain the basis on which such fees are allocated to each account (e.g., pro rata, per capita). In addition to annual reporting, administrative expenses must be reported to each participant in a quarterly statement that reports:
The disclosure of individual expenses must include an explanation of any fees that may be charged to participants’ account on an individual, rather than a plan-wide, basis, and which are not otherwise reflected in the total annual operating expenses of any of a plan’s investment alternatives. Examples of these expenses include fees to process plan loans and qualified domestic relations orders, fees for investment advice and brokerage windows, as well as commissions, front or back-end loads or sales charges, redemption fees, transfer fees, and optional rider charges in annuity contracts. Similar to the requirement for administrative expenses, individual expenses must be reported annually, and participants must receive a quarterly statement that reports:
Investment-Related Information The extensive investment-related information includes:
A plan must also provide to participants any materials that it receives relating to the exercise of voting, tender and or similar rights for an investment alternative if such rights are passed through to the participant under the plan. Besides the information required to be automatically provided, a plan must provide certain investment-related information to a participant upon request. For each investment alternative, the available information includes:
The investment-related information described above must be provided in chart format. The chart must be dated, include contact information for the plan administrator, and provide statements concerning the availability of more information via the web and paper copies. The DOL has created a model chart which can be used to satisfy these formatting requirements. Plan administrators are permitted to include additional information to what is required under the model chart, so long as that information is accurate and not misleading. The other information that must be provided annually can be included in the plan’s summary plan description or in a participant’s benefit statement. The quarterly disclosures described above may also be provided in participant benefit statements. The DOL has reserved for further guidance the issue of how these disclosures should be furnished to participants. Until further guidance is issued, plan administrators are permitted to provide these disclosures electronically, so long as they comply with the DOL’s current electronic delivery rules. The Participant Disclosure Regulation will require considerable amounts of information to be collected and organized. Tracking plan-related fee information and providing it to participants in a timely fashion, may pose logistical difficulties for some plans. Many plan sponsors and administrators will need to coordinate closely with their external recordkeepers or other administrative services providers to meet the new disclosure requirements. While much of the investment-related information already exists for the typical mutual fund or similar publicly traded investment alternative, collecting this information and keeping it updated may present logistical challenges. In addition, plans that offer customized investment alternatives instead of SEC-registered mutual funds will need special procedures for collecting necessary investment performance information. The new disclosure requirements may pose some additional practical issues for administrators of ERISA-covered 403(b) plans, particularly those that have not in the past sought to comply with ERISA section 404(c). Administrators of such plans may need to allocate additional time to understanding the specific information required to be disclosed for investment options that are part of an annuity contract, and to coordinate with their annuity providers for how that information will be delivered. In addition, the new disclosure requirements emphasize the need for sponsors of 403(b) plans to clearly understand whether their plans are covered by ERISA Posted in General Articles |
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