Set
Up a 401K
A participant-directed retirement savings plan, such as a 401(k)
plan, is an important tool to help your employees achieve a secure
retirement. As part of offering this type of program, you or someone
you choose must select the investment options from which your
employees will choose, select the service providers for the plan
and monitor the performance of the investments and the provision
of services. All of these duties require you to consider the costs
to the plan.
You or the person you select to carry
out these responsibilities must comply with the standards provided
under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA).
This federal law protects private-sector pension plans. The
law's standards include ensuring that you act prudently and
solely in the interest of the plan's participants and beneficiaries.
Understanding fees and expenses is important
in providing for the services necessary for your plan's operation.
This responsibility is ongoing. After careful evaluation during
the initial selection, the plan's fees and expenses should be
monitored to determine whether they continue to be reasonable.
While ERISA does not set a specific level of fees, it does require
that fees charged to a plan be "reasonable."
Of course, the process of selecting a
service provider and investment options should address many
factors, including those related to fees and expenses. You must
consider the plan's performance, over time, for each investment
option. This selection process and continual monitoring will
make it possible for your employees to make sound investment
decisions.
As part of your evaluation process,
here are 10 questions to help focus your consideration of fees
and expenses:
l. Have you given each of your prospective
service providers complete and identical information with regard
to your plan?
2. Do you know what features you want
to provide (e.g., loans, number of investment options, types
of investments, Internet trading)?
3. Have you decided what fees and expenses
you, as plan sponsor, will pay, which your employees will pay
and/or which you will share?
4. Do you know which fees and expenses
are charged directly to the plan and which are deducted from
investment returns?
5. Do you know what services are covered
under the base fee and what services incur an extra charge?
Do you know what the fees are for extra or customized services?
6. Do you understand that some investment
options have higher fees than others because of the nature of
the investment?
7. Does the prospective service arrangement
have any restrictions, such as charges for early termination
of your relationship with the provider?
8. Does the prospective arrangement assist
your employees in making informed investment decisions for their
individual accounts (e.g., providing investment education, information
on fees and the like) and how are you charged for this service?
9. Have you considered asking potential
providers to present uniform fee information that includes all
fees charged?
10. What information will you receive
on a regular basis from the prospective provider so that you
can monitor the provision of services and the investments that
you select and make changes, if necessary?
Remember...
- Provide all prospective service providers
with complete and identical information about the plan and what
you are looking for so you can make a meaningful comparison.
This information includes the number of plan participants and
plan assets, as of a specified date.
- Consider the specific services you
would like provided. The types and frequency of reports to the
employer, the communications to participants, educational materials
and meetings for participants all must be considered. The availability
and frequency of participant investment transfers, the level
of responsibility you want the prospective service provider
to assume, what services must be included and what are possible
extras or customized services, and optional features, such as
loans, Internet trading and telephone transfers.
- Make informed decisions in selecting
and monitoring your plan service providers and investments.
- Fees are just one of several factors
you need to consider in your decision making.
- All services have costs. Compare all
services to be provided with the total cost for each prospective
provider.
- Consider obtaining estimates from more
than one service provider before making your decision.
- Cheaper is not necessarily better.
- Ask each prospective provider to be
specific about which services are covered for the estimated
fees and which are not. To help in gathering this information
and in making equivalent comparisons, you may want to use the
same format for each prospective provider. See www.dol.gov/dol/pwba
for an example of a uniform fee disclosure format to assist
in your selection and monitoring process.
- Fees and expenses can have a significant impact on your employees'
retirement savings.
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