Trust Builders has released its new batch processing module
for the TRAK-Online retirement readiness portal; the tool is designed to help
advisers provide interactive retirement readiness illustrations to plan
sponsors and plan participants.
For example, advisers can import participant census data
into the batch processing module to generate a personalized, one-page gap analysis
report for each participant.
A contribution analysis report can help advisers show plan participants
how different contribution levels affect retirement savings and their current
take-home pay. This report can be modified by advisers to meet individual participant
needs. Customizable features include the ability to model increasing
contributions over time.
The participant benchmark report is specifically designed for
plan sponsors. It allows advisers to provide plan sponsors with current data
about their plan as well as insight into the plan’s performance over time,
offering a window into what’s working and what can be improved.
Annuities Industry Fiduciary Challenge Dwelt Blow In Federal Court
A U.S. District Court has handed down a DOL-friendly ruling in
one piece of anti-fiduciary rule litigation that is seeking more leniency for
fixed-index annuity providers.
A U.S. District Court judge has denied a motion for
preliminary injunction filed by annuity firm Market Synergy in a case focused
on whether fixed-index annuity providers will be able to use the so-called “84-24
prohibited transaction exemption [PTE],” rather than the “best-interest
contract exemption [BIC],” when bringing sales and compliance procedures into alignment
with the new Department of Labor (DOL) fiduciary rule.
Several attorneys had suggested to PLANADVISER that the litigation
filed by Market Synergy would likely be among the first of a sizable
handful of anti-fiduciary rule lawsuits to receive a ruling—given its narrow
focus on fixed-index annuity sales conditions and the request for preliminary injunction made by the plaintiff.
Turns out they were correct.
In short, plaintiffs in the case feel they will never be
able to make the BIC workable given the commission-heavy distribution arrangements traditionally
used for fixed-index annuities, and so they want the DOL to be forced to allow
annuity providers to work under the 84-24 exemption, as had been initially
proposed by DOL but subsequently dialed back in the final version of the rulemaking. While their case can still proceed without receiving an order
for preliminary injunction, it is clear that the court believes the plaintiff
is not likely to succeed on the merits of their claim. Thus the “extraordinary
relief of preliminary injunction” was not granted, and the future of the case remains uncertain.
Specifically, the plaintiffs had sought a court-ordered
injunction on the implementation of the portions of the DOL rulemaking that may
directly impact the sale and service of fixed-annuities—especially PTE 84-24 and the BIC. Plaintiffs
suggest business revenues could fall by almost 80% under the amended version of
PTE 84-24 because the rule change prohibits plaintiff and others affiliated
with it from receiving third-party compensation for fixed-index annuity (FIA)
sales. The plaintiff also anticipates that the independent market organizations
(IMOs) and insurance agents that it works with to distribute FIAs will
experience significant revenue losses. And, the plaintiff forecasts that more
than 20,000 independent insurance agents could exit the marketplace if the rule
change takes effect.
NEXT: On the court’s
decisionmaking
According to the text of the ruling, PTE 84-24 simply provides
regulatory relief to insurance agents and others who, according to the DOL’s
new regulatory definition, are “fiduciaries” and who receive compensation from
third parties in connection with transactions involving an Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA) plan or individual retirement account (IRA).
“Unless an exemption like PTE 84-24 applies, ERISA and the
IRS Code prohibit fiduciaries from receiving third-party compensation,” the
ruling states. “With the new rule, the DOL revoked PTE 84-24’s exemption of
annuity contracts that do not satisfy the DOL’s newly created definition of a ‘Fixed
Rate Annuity Contract.’ In doing so, the DOL specifically excluded fixed-index
annuities from the PTE 84-24 exemption.”
Plaintiffs suggest these actions stand in violation of the Administrative
Procedure Act and Regulatory Flexibility Act, among other issues, but the DOL argues
that the rule changes are natural to its function and necessary to protect
consumers. The DOL asserts that FIAs are “complex transactions that involve
significant conflicts of interest at the point of sale.” Because of these
characteristics, the DOL contends that FIA sales require more stringent rules
governing the payment of third-party compensation, and thus should not enjoy exemption
under PTE 84-24.
To reach the decision announced this week, the court suggests
it “needed not decide whether the DOL’s amendment to PTE 84-24 is appropriate
given the DOL’s consumer protection concerns. It also need not question whether
the DOL’s amendment is improper because it imposes significant challenges to
plaintiff’s business model … Instead, because the lawsuit challenges the DOL’s
action under the Administrative Procedure Act and (APA) Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA) of 1980, the court must determine whether plaintiff is likely to
succeed on the merits of its claim that the DOL failed to follow the
appropriate procedures in exacting the rule changes.”
To make the case, Market Synergy asserts that the DOL
violated the APA and RFA in four ways: (1) the DOL failed to provide notice
that it would remove FIAs from the scope of the exemption in PTE 84-24; (2) the
DOL arbitrarily treated FIAs differently from all other fixed annuities; (3)
the DOL failed to consider the detrimental effects of its actions on
independent insurance agent distribution channels; and (4) the DOL exceeded its
statutory authority by seeking to manipulate the financial product market
instead of regulating fiduciary conduct.
The text of the decision shows none of these arguments was
particularly persuasive to the court—at least not persuasive enough to warrant
preliminary injunction. Additional details on the decision are presented in the
text of the decision.