Your company probably offers its employees a retirement plan. If
so, can you identify all
of your plan fiduciaries? From a risk management perspective, it’s critical for
business owners to know who has fiduciary status — and the associated
liability. Here are some common, though in some cases overlooked, plan
fiduciaries:
Named fiduciaries. The
Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) requires a plan to have named
fiduciaries. The plan document identifies the corporate entity or individual
serving as the named fiduciary. If they aren’t immediately identified, the plan
document will set the requirements for naming them.
Plan trustees. These
are people who have exclusive authority and discretion to manage and control
the plan assets. The trustee can be subject to the direction of a named
fiduciary. These plan fiduciaries have a broad scope of responsibility.
Board of directors and committee members. The
individuals who choose plan trustees and administrative committee members are
considered under ERISA to be fiduciaries. Typically these are the members of
the corporate board of directors. The scope of their fiduciary duty focuses on
how they fulfill that specific function, and not on everything that happens
with the plan itself. The law also sees as fiduciaries people who exercise
discretion in key decisions about plan administration, including members of the
administrative committee, if such a committee exists.
Investment managers and advisors. The
named fiduciary can appoint one or more investment managers for the plan’s
assets. People or firms who manage plan assets are plan fiduciaries. However,
individuals employed by third party service providers can fall into different
fiduciary categories. The investment manager who has complete discretion over
plan asset investments has the greatest fiduciary responsibility. In contrast,
a corporation or individual who offers investment advice, but doesn’t actually
call the shots, has a lesser fiduciary responsibility.
These are just a few examples. Anyone who exercises
discretionary authority over any vital facet of plan operations may be
considered a “functional fiduciary.” Please contact our firm for a review of
your retirement plan and its fiduciaries.
© 2017
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