Target Date Funds. TDFs: Due diligence is more than set and forget for plan sponsors

Similar documents
Target-Date Funds: Not as Simple as Set It and Forget It

An Evaluation of Target-Date Funds for the Salesforce.com 401(k) Plan

Target date funds: Translating Department of Labor guidance into action

Fiduciary Considerations with Target Date Funds

Target date funds: Translating Department of Labor guidance into action

Improving the Target Date Fund Selection

Custom Target Date Strategies: Considerations for Plan Sponsors

FOR INSTITUTIONAL USE ONLY / NOT FOR PUBLIC USE

The Looming Liability of Target Date Funds

Benefit from a new fiduciary approach

QDIA POLICIES: A Guide for Plan Sponsors

Considerations for Plan Sponsors: CUSTOM TARGET DATE STRATEGIES

PLAN DESIGN STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS

Fiduciary guidebook for target date funds

Fiduciary Checklist. Fiduciary Source troweprice.com/centuryplan. Century Retirement Solutions

Framework for investment policy statement

OPEB, LX Edition. What s under the hood of a benefits valuation

The Case for Rethinking TDFs as QDIAs

Sample of Investment Policy Statement

Six key survey findings:

INVESTMARK 3(21) FIDUCIARY SERVICES PROGRAM

Overcome the Increased Scrutiny of Your Organization s Retirement Plan

managed accounts QUALIFIED DEFAULT INVESTMENT ALTERNATIVES (QDIAS)

Contents. Introduction to PSCA s 58th Annual Survey Respondent Demographics Employee Eligibility Participant Contributions...

Passive target date funds: Separating myth from reality. Many active decisions go into passive fund design

Voya Target Retirement Fund Series

Contents. Executive Summary Full Data Tables Respondent Demographics Employee Eligibility Participation...

Service Models: Tools for Improving Outcomes. Diana Jordan, AIFA Director, Client Experience Unified Trust Company, N.A.

STRATEGIC. Sophisticated investments. Simple to use. Target Date Strategy Funds. russellinvestments.com

PROMOTING PLAN SUCCESS

Savings InSight and the Competition

TARGET DATE COMPASS SM EVALUATE AND SELECT TARGET DATE FUNDS WITH GREATER KNOWLEDGE AND CONFIDENCE SM. Powered by J.P. Morgan Spectrum TM

Outsourcing: To Delegate or Not?

3(38) Fiduciary Services. 3(21) Co-Fiduciary Services & INVESTMARK FIDUCIARY SERVICES FOR RETIREMENT PLANS

SAMPLE OF INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENT

June Target date funds: Why the to vs. through analysis falls short and what you should be considering

Part 2A of Form ADV: Firm Brochure

Plan Health Pro SM Workbook A guide to the information used in the evaluation process.

Attractive option for college saving

Sophisticated investments. Simple to use.

Retirement Plan Consulting

Service. Support. Recognition.

Deep Experience. THOUGHTFUL INNOVATION. Target date solutions from T. Rowe Price

RETIREMENT PLAN PANEL DISCUSSION

Final Regulation on Participant-Level Fee Disclosures. By: Andrew Varady, Esq. Associate General Counsel, MetLife

Learn More About: Glass Jacobson Financial Group 401(k) Plan Services

Contents. Executive Summary Full Data Tables Respondent Demographics Employee Eligibility Participation...

State of Florida Deferred Compensation Plan. Investment Policy and Product Selection and Retention Policy

Pensions regulator consultation on regulating work-based defined contribution pension schemes. Response from Buck Consultants

Deep Experience. THOUGHTFUL INNOVATION. Target date solutions from T. Rowe Price

A Fiduciary Handbook. Managing DC Plan Investments: Updated August 2016

A. PLAN SPONSORSHIP. Plan Sponsor Name: Type of Plan Sponsor. Plan Name: Plan type 1 (401(k), 457, 403(b), ESOP or other):

Investment outsourcing options for your pension plan

Customized Target Date Solutions

DEFINED CONTRIBUTION DELEGATED SOLUTIONS ALLOWING YOU TO FOCUS ON STRATEGIC ISSUES

TARGET DATE. EVALUATION Top advisors share experiences and insights on the use of target date funds

The Nuts and Bolts of Public Defined Contribution Plans. Presented by: Jacob Peacock Director of Retirement Solutions

DC Managed Accounts: Shining a Spotlight on Investment Advice

Why John Hancock? Partner with a leader who has the courage and conviction to put Participants 1 st

Understanding Fiduciary Responsibilities

CASE STUDY: Plan Sponsor Insights on Custom Target-Date and Re-Enrollment

Fiduciary Standards Checklist RETIREMENT INVESTMENT CONCEPTS

Investing done differently FOR FINANCIAL PROFESSIONAL AND PLAN SPONSOR USE ONLY. NOT FOR USE WITH EMPLOYEES.

Plan Sponsor Attitudes 2017

Establishing a New Retirement Plan from A to Z

Considerations for Implementing a Custom Target Date Approach: A Guide for Defined Contribution Plan Sponsors

Voya Index Solution Portfolios

Advancements in target date fund delivery. Weighing the pros and cons of collective investment trusts and customization in target date design

A New Paradigm DELIVERING RETIREMENT BENEFITS TO HEALTHCARE AND HIGHER EDUCATION EMPLOYEES

The Impact of the Default Investment Decision on Participant Deferral Rates: Managed Accounts vs Target-Date Funds

Jenise Gaskin, CPA. Business Process Outsourcing Practice Group Leader Employee Benefit Plan Audit Group Leader

Click to edit Master title style New Ballgame for 401k Plans

Deep Experience. THOUGHTFUL INNOVATION. Target date solutions from T. Rowe Price

2014 Retirement Webinar Series

Asset Management Programs, Retirement Plan Services and other Advisory Services Form ADV, Part 2A

Checklist for Employee Benefit Plan Sponsors

Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Fiduciary Audit File

Managing investment responsibilities. WEIGHING THE OPTIONS IS AN INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENT RIGHT FOR YOUR PLAN?

401(k)ollaborate. Retirement Services. Helping You Expand Your Retirement Plan Business. For financial advisor use only. Not for use with the public.

Target-Date Funds: It s Time to Take a Closer Look

As plan sponsors realize a redesign is needed, target date funds get a second look.

Fiduciary Responsibilities and Oversight for Deferred Compensation Retirement Plans

PERSPECTIVES ON RETIREMENT

Choose the Target Date Series That s Best for Participants. Retirement Target Date Funds 2017 Edition

HOW TO VET TARGET DATE FUNDS

Investment Policy Statement

Target Date Fund Selection: More Than Simply Active vs. Passive

The Hidden Challenges of Customization

Selecting Target Date Funds: The RFP Process

ENABLING BETTER RETIREMENT OUTCOMES THROUGH TARGET DATE INVESTMENT STRATEGY DESIGN

CollegeAmerica 529 College Savings Plan. Invest in their future.

INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENT ( IPS ) DEVELOPMENT TOOLKIT FOR 403(b) CHURCH PLANS

The first of these laws, the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, established

Retirement Readiness. The Next Big Thing

One pathway to more personalized investment portfolios

January 21, 2015 ERISA FIDUCIARY CHECKUP

The next chapter in retirement solutions.

Options for Retirement Benefits OPTIONS FOR RETIREMENT BENEFITS. Charles M. Lax

FLORIDA RETIREMENT SYSTEM. Investment Plan Investment Policy Statement

RETIREMENT AND DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENT

Transcription:

Target Date Funds TDFs: Due diligence is more than set and forget for plan sponsors

TDFs: Due diligence is more than set and forget for plan sponsors The recent DOL fact sheet on Target Date Funds ( Tips for ERISA Plan Fiduciaries ) helps plan fiduciaries to select and monitor TDFs and other investment options in 401(k) and similar participant-directed individual account plans. Although the fact sheet is helpful, it doesn t necessarily provide plan sponsors with a set of criteria to consider in assessing their TDFs. You can use the following checklist to create a prudent process for selecting and reviewing TDFs. The sections are aligned with the DOL fact sheet, but provide more detail on how you can select and monitor your TDFs. The best way to use this checklist is in conjunction with the DOL fact sheet. 1. Develop a process for the selection of TDFs Determine the goals for including this option in your plan: Is the 401(k) plan the only retirement plan for your employees? Is it considered a benefit by them? Do you want to be an asset gatherer or force lump sum distributions by a designated age? Is the goal of the plan to provide retirement income? Or to supplement retirement income? Will the TDFs be the QDIA? How is your current fund line-up structured? What is the number and type of funds offered? Is there a tiered approach? Is there a clear strategy for the funds that are provided? What is the current usage of fund options? Are your employees financially savvy? Does the plan offer competing funds (Target Risk Funds, managed accounts)? Does your plan have sufficient assets to negotiate a judicious investment expense? Once you determine the role of the TDFs in your plan, align it to your demographics. Things to consider include: Employee age groups Average working career and tenure Salaries Deferral and contribution rates Employee turnover How long participant defined contribution money stays in the plan Leakage and withdrawals rates Legacy defined benefit plan benefits Normal retirement date for your employees Plan design features such as auto-enrollment, auto-escalation, auto-invest provisions Whether the TDFs use a to or a through strategy and how this aligns with your population 2

Your replacement ratio for retirement income for their participants (60%, 70%, 80%?) The expected returns of the TDFs Whether the asset size dictates using proprietary or custom TDFs Other considerations in the initial selection of a TDF series: Fees and expenses Active versus passive approach Alignment of roll-down strategy and glide-path Rebalancing procedures and timing Asset classes in the TDFs number and type, liquidity, transparency, volatility The sub asset class diversification Vendor/fund company support on disclosure and participant information Performance of the fund series versus other TDFs Form of investment vehicle mutual fund, commingled fund, separate accounts? Capital Market Assumptions used to generate the glide-path allocation and the expected returns - are they forward-looking or historical? How frequently are these updated? 2. Develop a process for periodic review of TDFs Review the goal of the TDFs in your 401(k) plan each year, and determine if there have been any significant changes such as: Elimination of another retirement plan Addition of another plan Change in the employee population s age, salary, general retirement dates Corporate actions merger, spin-off Any reductions in force, or large influx of new employees Changes to the QDIA Changes in the fund line-up Addition/deletion of competing options balanced funds, managed accounts, another TDF option due to a merger 3

Quarterly TDF performance review Develop a peer group of TDFs for comparisons Compare performance to a weighted index Review the fees Review the strategy and roll-down Determine if and when the funds were rebalanced Determine if there is any change in personnel Ascertain if asset classes were added or deleted from the TDFs 3. Understand the glide-path and the investments Understand the underlining glide-path strategy for your TDFs, since the asset allocation is probably the most critical component of long-term performance for participants. Key points here include: Overall glide-path philosophy: managing growth versus controlling volatility Speed of transition over the TDF series Asset classes added or reduced for each of the years Risk/return expectations for each of the years Equity exposure for each TDF (maximum and minimum) Equity risk is it managed by downscaling equity exposure and reducing return potential, or by broadening diversification? Other asset classes included to enhance returns at each period Timing of the reductions in higher risk asset classes How portfolios have been tested for market stresses How liquidity and inflation risks are addressed for years closer to retirement How the glide-path affects participant outcomes How participant risks are addressed 4. Review expenses and fees Both initially and for the on-going monitoring of the TDFs, review the fees and expenses associated with the funds, and benchmark these against similar funds to insure you re not being overcharged. Consider: The glide-path and whether the funds are to or through funds. Through funds typically have higher equity allocation, with higher management fees and expense ratios. The types of asset classes included in the TDFs, for example, small cap and alternatives have higher expense ratios and management fees. How the fund provider assesses the fees on the TDFs is it a bundled fee? How many underlying funds are involved, and are there fees for each? Is the fee for the TDF weighted using a pro-rata weight of the underlying funds? Is there a separate fee for the asset allocation? For rebalancing? Are there separate fees for communication and disclosure notices? Are there transaction fees? Sales loads? Withdrawal or transfer fees? What is the investment vehicle: mutual fund, collective or commingled funds, or separate accounts? Collective funds are typically less expensive than mutual funds and separate accounts usually have a graduated management fee. What class of mutual fund retail or institutional? What is the expense ratio difference? Is securities lending involved in the fund? Does any of the revenue from this offset the fee? If the TDFs are separate accounts, is there an administrative fee on top of the management fee? Is there any revenue sharing involved in the TDFs? What is it and how accounted for? 4

5. Evaluate proprietary versus custom TDFs Evaluate whether asset size dictates using proprietary or custom TDFs. Review this issue periodically as assets in the TDFs increase. Advantages of pre-packaged TDFs Bundled product No need to select underlying funds/managers No need to rebalance funds Name and brand recognition of mutual fund families Drawbacks of pre-packaged TDFs Inappropriate risk management framework Lack of asset class diversification Arbitrariness of the glide-path Ignores plan participants complete risk profile Can t act on fiduciary oversight of underlying funds Independent asset allocation versus self-dealing fund companies Advantages of Custom TDFs Incorporates population demographics and can align the glide path accordingly Builds on current funds and managers, reducing fiduciary oversight for TDFs (the underlying funds are already being monitored) Removes an underlying fund if it doesn t meet objectives Adds additional asset classes/funds when appropriate Aligns glide-path with demographics Easily provides decumulation funds within the plan and keeps plan assets under your purview. Can incorporate lifetime income investment vehicle at an age-appropriate time Disadvantages of Custom TDFs More governance and oversight for asset classes /asset allocations if custom TDFs are separate accounts Need to monitor rebalancing Need to monitor underlying managers and funds Need to re-evaluate the glide-path periodically Need to re-run the asset allocation when Capital Market Assumptions change Need to revisit glide path construction periodically Need to insure that you have the capabilities to implement a custom fund Assess your ability to design, maintain and update a custom TDF. Additional considerations: Outsourcing to money manager or investment consultant Fees of proprietary funds versus custom approach Developing Capital Market Assumptions and periodic updates TDF communication Additional information for custom TDF for fee disclosure 6. Develop effective employee communication Review your provider s communication materials including portal support and fact sheets. Ensure they accurately represent the funds they describe, and enable participants to make informed decisions, including: Discussion of the glide-path strategy Asset allocation over time and how it changes Rebalancing provisions Fees and expenses Underlying asset classes and diversification Risks inherent in the TDFs The fact that TDFs can lose money 5

7. Comply with fee disclosure Review the fee disclosure notices to be sure they comply with the current regulations. For plans offering customized TDFs, commingled funds, or multi-manager TFD s, fee disclosure will probably become your responsibility and require more involved work in calculating the annual operating expenses, the turnover characteristics, and the risks involved. For example, it may be necessary to obtain the fees for each of the component underlying funds, the rebalancing time-frames, and weigh these for an average annual fee. You must also disclose the turnover characteristics of each fund and associated risks. 8. Use available resources to review and evaluate TDFs To appropriately benchmark your TDFs: Determine what index or composite index to use and who provides it Vendor Consultant Custom index Create a comparative universe to review your TDF series using: Morningstar or Lipper peer groups Custom peer-group universe Custom passive index weighted in same proportion of assets as in TDF TDF indexes. Dow Jones, mutual fund index If you select an active TDF series periodically compare to an index version Benchmark the fees periodically Understand the inherent biases in prepackaged funds Understand the performance attribution for: Asset allocation Underlying fund performance 9. Incorporate procedures in IPS If you already have selection, monitoring, and termination procedures for plan fund options/managers in your Investment Policy Statement, just add a reference that these procedures also apply to TDFs. But with increased DOL scrutiny on TDFs you might want to carve out a special section to illustrate due diligence, identifying: Fiduciaries involved in selecting and monitoring the TDFs Plan evaluation criteria for the selection and review processes Timing of the periodic due diligence Benchmarking Fee policy 10. Document Whether making the initial TDF selection or conducting periodic reviews, best practice is to document the process and decisions/actions to be taken. Acknowledge the initial selection process in the meeting minutes and include: All factors considered (Item #1) Competing strategies and funds considered and reasons for not selecting them Reasons for selecting the TDF series On an on-going basis, document the analysis and action items in the meeting minutes referring to procedures and supporting reports. Note that a review took place, outline the issues discussed, and acknowledge in writing the actions to be taken. 6

About the author Martha Spano is a Principal and Senior Investment Consultant in Buck Global Investment Advisors. Martha is responsible for all aspects of investment consulting including governance, investments, manager structure and selection, and performance monitoring. Martha has over 25 years of experience working with and writing about issues regarding defined contribution plans. She has a undergraduate degree in Criminal Justice from California State University, Long Beach, two Masters degrees, one in Public Administration from California State University, Long Beach and one in Dispute Resolution, Straus Institute of Law, Pepperdine University. She is also a Certified Board Source Governance Trainer. To find out more, contact: 1 866.355.6647 or hrconsulting@xerox.com About Buck Consultants at Xerox Within Xerox, Buck is the consulting strength of the Human Resource Services (HRS) division. Buck offers advisory, technology, and administration solutions to help you effectively manage your programs while engaging your employees in their health, wealth, and career. By integrating our HR consulting know-how with HRS core services, we can offer additional innovative and customized solutions to help you overcome your HR challenges. Together, we can ensure you have the right people in the right positions at the right time to save money and achieve your business goals. Learn more at www.xerox.com/hrconsulting. Since the invention of Xerography more than 75 years ago, the people of Xerox have helped businesses simplify the way work gets done. Today, we are the global leader in business process and document management, helping organizations of any size be more efficient so they can focus on their real business. Headquartered in Norwalk, Conn., [remove United States,] more than 140,000 Xerox employees serve clients in 180 countries, providing business services, printing equipment and software for commercial and government organizations. Learn more at www.xerox.com. 2014 Xerox Corporation and Buck Consultants, LLC. All rights reserved. Xerox and Xerox and Design are registered trademarks of Xerox Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. Buck Consultants is a registered trademark of Buck Consultants, LLC. in the United States and/or other countries. BP2825