THE ERISA RETIREMENT PLAN LAW
SPELLS OUT FIDUCIARY ISSUES*
By: Louis
P. Stanasolovich, CFP™, President
Bad securities markets leave retirement plan
participants questioning the people in charge.
Lawsuits are often filed and employers who are
fiduciaries are the targets.
Fiduciaries come in two forms: the person who
controls the management of a plan or its assets,
or a firm who is paid to give investment advice.
Individuals can be fiduciaries for limited
purposes and perform other, non-fiduciary duties
regarding the same retirement plan. Individuals
who simply follow directions or guidelines are
not considered a fiduciary.
Fiduciaries must be named in the plan’s
documents so that plan participants or other
interested parties (the IRS) know who is
responsible. Employers can designate themselves
as a fiduciary, but plan documents should specify
a standing committee or the job title of a person
who will carry out the fiduciary
responsibilities.
Generally, anyone who provides investment
advice (Registered Investment Advisors) to
employers or plan participants or select
securities for a fee is considered a fiduciary.
Employers who sponsor plans are fiduciaries
because they can fire service providers and
select investment managers and/or consultants.
Administrators who make plan management decisions
are also fiduciaries.
When hiring a fiduciary, consider the
following:
- Qualifications with respect to education,
credentials, licensing and registrations,
relevant experience.
- Compensation issues.
- Services.
- Frequency of monitoring and reporting
performance.
- Bonding and professional liability insurance
coverage.
- The scope of organizational resources.
Businesses have the responsibility to review a
fiduciary’s performance at least annually.
Fiduciary duties include:
- Acting in the exclusive interest of plan
participants and control expenses.
- Making decisions that a prudent person
familiar with retirement plans would.
- Diversifying investments.
- Preventing co-fiduciaries from committing
breaches and rectify the actions of others.
- Holding plan assets within U.S.
jurisdiction.
- Bonding in the amount of 10 percent of funds
handled up to a $500,000 maximum.
- Acting according to the terms of plan
documents unless the documents are in conflict
with ERISA.
- Avoiding prohibited transactions.
ERISA permits civil actions to be brought by a
participant, beneficiary or other fiduciary
against a fiduciary for breach of duty.
Fiduciaries are personally liable for any losses
to the plan resulting from breach of duty –
even if they are unaware of a violation.
Fiduciaries can also be held liable for failing
to act in the plan’s best interest or failing
to take reasonable steps to correct another
fiduciary’s breach of duty.
Fiduciaries have a great deal of
responsibilities and penalties are severe.
Employers must act responsibly when dealing with
any retirement plan.
* This article was published in the Small
Business News publication in January, 2003.
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Louis P. Stanasolovich, CFP, has been named as one of the
best financial advisors in America six times by Worth magazine
and has been honored by Medical Economics as one of the best
financial advisors in America for doctors four times, and by
Mutual Funds magazine two consecutive years. He is CEO,
President and founder of Legend Financial Advisors, Inc., a
fee-only financial advisory firm with headquarters located in
Pittsburgh. Legend provides Wealth Advisory Services including
Comprehensive Financial Planning and Investment Management to
individuals and businesses.
Legend Financial Advisors, Inc.
5700 Corporate Drive, Suite 350
Pittsburgh, PA 15237-5829
Phone: (412) 635-9210
Fax: (412) 635-9213
Toll Free: (888) 236-5960
E-mail: legend@legend-financial.com
Web Site: www.legend-financial.com