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DOL’s 404a-5 participant disclosure regulation requires plan administrators (e.g., employers) to make specific disclosures to individuals (e.g., employees) participating in 401(k), 403(b), and other defined contribution plans that allocate investment responsibility to participants (participant-directed plans).
What is ICI’s position on 401(k) participant disclosure?
What is the purpose of the participant disclosure rules?
Why are the rules changing?
What does the regulation require?
Who is subject to the new regulation?
What types of plans are subject to the regulation?
Does the regulation apply to individual retirement accounts (IRAs)?
Who receives the information?
How are plan fees and costs disclosed?
What are the time frames for disclosure?
How do these disclosures differ from the information mutual funds already provide to individual plan participants?
How is the information presented?
Did the Department of Labor issue a model disclosure chart?
Does this chart have to be used?
May a plan administrator deliver disclosures electronically?
Should participants consider factors other than fees in selecting investment options?
Where can I get additional information?
The Institute strongly supported the Department of Labor’s participant disclosure regulation (404a-5) and service provider disclosure regulation (408b-2), issued in October 2010 and February 2012, respectively. These regulations cover disclosure of fees and other pertinent information that plan administrators (typically the employer sponsoring the plan) must provide to their plan participants (workers) and information that service providers, such as recordkeepers and investment managers, must provide to their plan-sponsor clients.
401(k)s are the most popular type of individual account retirement plan and have become the nation’s primary private-sector device for retirement savings. Participant direction of investments has become a dominant feature in these plans. As 401(k)s assume increasing importance for future retirees, clear, meaningful disclosure ensures that plan sponsors and plan participants have the information they need to make informed decisions. Under the DOL rules, participants in these plans must receive a standardized set of disclosures on all investment options in their plans and plan administrative fees. These disclosures ensure greater uniformity of disclosures from investment type to investment type. In this respect, information that has long been available from mutual funds—for example, the identification of investment objectives, principal strategies and risks, historical performance, and fees—now is required to be provided directly to participants for both mutual fund and non–mutual fund investments. With such uniformity, participants should find it easier to make the comparisons needed to make better-informed investment choices.
401(k)s are the most popular type of individual account retirement plan and have become the nation’s primary private-sector device for retirement savings. Participant direction of investments has become a dominant feature in these plans. As 401(k)s assume increasing importance for future retirees, clear, meaningful disclosure ensures that plan sponsors and plan participants have the information they need to make informed decisions.
The rules require that participants receive basic information on the plan and its designated investment options on or before the date they can direct the investment of their account and annually thereafter, with access to more information online and upon request, and require quarterly detailing of expenses charged to a participant’s account for administrative services. Participants receive a comparative chart on the plan’s investment options and may receive copies of prospectuses (including summary prospectuses) on request.
The disclosures are divided into two broad categories of information.
Plan administrators as defined under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). Recognizing that plan administrators are likely to receive much of the required information from plan service providers, the final rule protects plan sponsors from liability for inaccurate or incomplete information furnished by third-party service providers or issuers of designated investment options, as long as the plan administrator uses the information reasonably and in good faith. Compliance with the regulations is a joint effort between plan administrators and service providers.
The regulation applies to any ERISA-governed individual account plan that allows the plan participant to self-direct investments. This would include 401(k) plans and some 403(b) plans.
No. IRAs—including IRA-based plans like SEPs, SAR-SEPS, and SIMPLEs—are exempt.
Plan participants. The Department of Labor defines “participants” to include all employees eligible for the retirement plan, not only those who elect to participate in the plan.
The method of disclosure will vary depending on the type of fee or expense. The actual amount deducted from an account for plan-level or individual-level administrative expenses must be identified on a quarterly basis. In the initial and annual disclosure, however, these administrative expenses may be described more generally. For investment-related fees and expenses, the initial and annual disclosure must provide the amount and a description of any shareholder-type fees (fees charged directly against the participant’s investment, such as sales charges). In addition, the initial and annual disclosure must reflect the total annual operating expenses of the investment, if applicable, shown as a percentage (expense ratio) and as a dollar amount based on an investment of $1,000 (assuming no returns).
Although the DOL’s requirements for mutual funds closely track the SEC’s mutual fund disclosure rules, the new disclosures are more focused for an individual investing in a fund through an employer-sponsored plan. This focus facilitates participants’ understanding of the fees they pay for both administrative services and investment-related services, and allows for an easier comparison of different types of investment alternatives. The regulations, for the first time, require comparable information for non–mutual fund investment options, taking into account the differences in structure between mutual funds and other types of investments.
All of the disclosures must be written in a way that can be easily understood by the average plan participant. The investment-related disclosures must be presented in a comparative format.
Yes. The model chart may be used to satisfy the requirement.
No. In addition, a plan administrator may include additional information that is appropriate for comparison beyond what is required.
A plan administrator may deliver participant disclosures electronically to three categories of participants:
The request for the email address must be accompanied by a notice (provided annually thereafter) explaining, among other things, which disclosures will be provided electronically, how to access them, and the participant’s right to opt out of electronic delivery at any time. For the full description of all conditions, please consult the applicable DOL rules and guidance.
Yes. Fund fees are one of many important elements that should be considered when making a decision about whether to select a particular fund. It is important to remember that funds’ fees and expenses represent the cost incurred for the services received from the funds, such as portfolio management and account maintenance. Participants also should consider what is appropriate for a well-diversified portfolio and consider the funds’ investment objectives, strategies, risks, and historical performance.
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