Chemical Distributor Faces Excessive Fee Suit Against 401(k) Plan

The plaintiffs say defendants failed to utilize the lowest cost share class for many of the mutual funds within the plan, and failed to consider collective trusts, commingled accounts, or separate accounts as alternatives to the mutual funds in the plan, despite their lower fees.

An Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) lawsuit has been filed against chemical distributor Brenntag North America Inc. alleging the company and other fiduciaries of the Brenntag USA Profit Sharing Plan failed to take measures to ensure reasonable investment and recordkeeping fees.

According to the complaint, the plan has nearly half a billion dollars in assets that are entrusted to the care of the plan’s fiduciaries, qualifying it as a large plan in the defined contribution (DC) plan marketplace. The lawsuit says Brenntag, as sponsor of a large plan, failed to use its bargaining power to reduce plan expenses and also failed to scrutinize each investment option to make sure it was prudent.

Want the latest retirement plan adviser news and insights? Sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters.

The plaintiffs allege that from January 8, 2014, to the present, the defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the plan and its participants by “failing to objectively and adequately review the plan’s investment portfolio with due care to ensure that each investment option was prudent, in terms of cost; and maintaining certain funds in the plan despite the availability of identical or similar investment options with lower costs and/or better performance histories.”

The plaintiffs say defendants failed to utilize the lowest cost share class for many of the mutual funds within the plan, and failed to consider collective trusts, commingled accounts, or separate accounts (at least for the majority of the class period) as alternatives to the mutual funds in the plan, despite their lower fees.

The complaint suggests that the fiduciary task of evaluating investments and investigating comparable alternatives in the marketplace is made much simpler by the advent of independent research from companies like Morningstar. It also notes that ERISA-mandated monitoring of investments leads prudent and impartial plan sponsors to continually evaluate performance and fees, resulting in great competition among mutual funds in the marketplace. “This has led to falling mutual fund expense ratios for 401(k) plan participants since 2000. In fact, these expense ratios fell 31% from 2000 to 2015 for equity funds, 25% for hybrid funds, and 38% for bond funds,” the lawsuit states. It cites data from the Investment Company Institute (ICI) that illustrates 401(k) plans on average pay far lower fees than individual retail investors.

The plaintiffs argue that passively managed funds, because they are simply a mirror of an index, offer both diversity of investment and comparatively low fees. By contrast, they say, actively managed funds, which have a mix of securities selected in the belief they will beat the market, have higher fees, to account for the work of the investment managers of such funds and their associates. They cite data that supports their argument that while higher-cost mutual funds may outperform a less-expensive option, such as a passively-managed index fund, over the short term, they rarely do so over a longer term.

The lawsuit also says more expensive share classes are targeted at smaller investors with less bargaining power, while lower cost shares are targeted at institutional investors with more assets, generally $1 million or more, and therefore greater bargaining power. “Large defined contribution plans such as the [Brentagg] plan have sufficient assets to qualify for the lowest cost share class available,” the complaint states. The plaintiffs argue that “a fiduciary to a large defined contribution plan such as the plan can use its asset size and negotiating power to invest in the cheapest share class available. For this reason, prudent retirement plan fiduciaries will search for and select the lowest-priced share class available.”

The lawsuit points out that throughout the class period, the investment options available to participants were almost exclusively mutual funds. The plaintiffs argue that plan fiduciaries such as the defendants must be continually mindful of investment options to ensure they do not unduly risk plan participants’ savings and do not charge unreasonable fees. They say some of the best investment vehicles for these goals are collective trusts, which pool plan participants’ investments further and provide lower fee alternatives to even institutional and 401(k) plan specific shares of mutual funds.

In addition, they say separate accounts are another type of investment vehicle similar to collective trusts, which retain their ability to assemble a mix of stocks, bonds, real property and cash, and their lower administrative costs. “Separate accounts are widely available to large plans such as the plan, and offer a number of advantages over mutual funds, including the ability to negotiate fees. Costs within separate accounts are typically much lower than even the lowest-cost share class of a particular mutual fund,” the complaint states. “By using separate accounts, total investment management expenses can commonly be reduced to one-fourth of the expenses incurred through retail mutual funds,” it adds, citing the U.S. Department of Labor’s Study of 401(k) Plan Fees and Expenses.

Using 2018 as an example year, the lawsuit says 20 out of 23 funds in the Brenntag plan—87% of funds—were much more expensive than comparable funds found in similarly sized plans. It alleges that the expense ratios for funds in the plan in some cases were up to 91% above the median expense ratios in the same category. Additionally, the lawsuit alleges that expense ratios for the American Funds target-date funds were in the bottom quartile—meaning they were the most expensive for all American target-date funds.

The plaintiffs also accuse the defendants of failing to monitor or control the plan’s recordkeeping expenses. They say the market for recordkeeping is highly competitive, with many providers equally capable of providing a high-level service, so they vigorously compete for business by offering the best price. The defendants are accused of failing to prudently manage and control the plan’s recordkeeping costs by failing to track the recordkeeper’s expenses by demanding documents that summarize and contextualize the recordkeeper’s compensation, such as fee transparencies, fee analyses, fee summaries, relationship pricing analyses, cost-competitiveness analyses, and multi-practice and standalone pricing reports; identify all fees, including direct compensation and revenue sharing being paid to the plan’s recordkeeper; and conduct a request for proposal (RFP) process at reasonable intervals, and immediately if the plan’s recordkeeping expenses have grown significantly or appear high in relation to the general marketplace.

The plaintiffs argue that to the extent that a plan’s investments pay asset-based revenue sharing to the recordkeeper, prudent fiduciaries monitor the amount of the payments to ensure that the recordkeeper’s total compensation from all sources does not exceed reasonable levels, and require that any revenue sharing payments that exceed a reasonable level be returned to the plan and its participants.

They also argue that an RFP should happen at least every three to five years as a matter of course, and more frequently if the plans experience an increase in recordkeeping costs or fee benchmarking reveals the recordkeeper’s compensation to exceed levels found in other, similar plans.

According to the lawsuit, the increase in recordkeeping costs (as measured on a per participant basis) for the Brenntag plan far outpaced the modest growth in the number of participants from the start of the class period until the present, indicating the plan’s fiduciaries failed to leverage the growing size of the plan (by both participants and assets) to achieve lower per-participant costs.

Retirement Industry People Moves

Sales SVP joins Allianz Life; Transamerica adds RVPs to mid-market retirement plans; Academic consultant to support American Century ETF platform; and more.

Art by Subin Yang

Sales SVP Joins Allianz Life 

Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America has hired Heather Kelly as senior vice president of Advisory Sales and Strategic Accounts. Kelly will be responsible for helping build the strategy, sales results and growth of Allianz Life’s Advisory Channel along with relationship management with the company’s Broker Dealer partnerships. She will report directly to Chief Distribution Officer Eric Thomes and will be a part of the Allianz Life Distribution Leadership Team. 

“Heather brings a deep understanding of the Advisory and RIA channels as well as an understanding of the importance of insurance-based solutions in helping to provide protection against risks within retirement,” says Thomes.

For more stories like this, sign up for the PLANADVISERdash daily newsletter.

Kelly joins Allianz Life from United Capital. She served as senior vice president at United Capital and executive vice president of United Capital Risk Management. She was responsible for deploying strategic initiatives to educate advisers and clients on how properly designed, executed and managed insurance-based solutions can help address financial stability. Prior to joining United Capital, Kelly was managing director of Strategic Alliances at NFP Securities, and sales vice president at Leaders Group/Capitas Distributors. 

Kelly attended the University of California, Berkeley, Haas School of Business, and holds several designations from the American College including: Charted Life Underwriter (CLU), Charted Financial Consultant (ChFC), and Registered Health Underwriter (RHU). She also holds FINRA Series 6, 26 and 63 licenses.

Transamerica Adds RVPs to Mid-Market Retirement Plans

Transamerica announced that Cortney White and Bryon Eggan joined the company as regional vice presidents for mid-market retirement plans.

In their roles, White and Eggan will support financial advisers and third-party administrators (TPAs) working with retirement plans with less than $50 million in assets.

White holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Arkansas, and he will support financial advisers in Colorado and Wyoming. He will report to Tom Briggs, divisional sales manager.

Eggan holds a bachelor’s degree from Michigan State University, and his territory covers Virginia. He will report to Danny Kling, divisional sales manager.

“One of our primary focuses in 2020 is working to provide our financial advisers with the best support in the industry. We are thrilled that Cortney White and Bryon Eggan are bringing their dedication and experience to Transamerica,” says Kent Callahan, senior managing director of Workplace Distribution and head of Client Engagement at Transamerica.

Academic Consultant to Support American Century ETF Platform

American Century Investments has hired Sunil Wahal, Ph.D., as an academic consultant supporting Avantis Investors.

Wahal will contribute to many areas of Avantis Investors’ offering, including research that can inform investment strategy design and execution. “I have always been very interested in applying state-of-the-art technology and financial science for the benefit of end investors,” says Wahal. “That is why I’m so excited to join Avantis Investors. The mission to provide sound investment solutions at attractive expense ratios should benefit long-term investors.”

Wahal is the Jack D. Furst professor of finance and director of the Center for Investment Engineering at the W.P. Carey School of Business of Arizona State University. Before joining the ASU faculty in 2005, Wahal was on the faculty at Emory University and Purdue University.  His research focuses on short- and long-horizon investment strategies (momentum, profitability, and others), trading issues (trading algorithm design, trading costs and high frequency trading), and delegated portfolio management and asset allocation for large institutional investors. His work covers public equities, fixed income and private equity.  He has published in the Journal of Finance, the Journal of Financial Economics and the Review of Financial Studies, among others.

Prior to joining Avantis Investors, he served as a consultant to Dimensional Fund Advisors (2005-2019), and AJO Partners.  He sits on the investment committees for several registered investment advisers (RIAs). He regularly speaks at academic and practitioner conferences and has given numerous presentations to sovereign wealth funds, endowments, foundations, family offices, defined benefit (DB) plans, defined contribution (DC) plans and RIAs. Wahal holds a doctorate from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a master’s from Wake Forest University and a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Delhi, India.

Multnomah Group Brings In Senior Consultant

Multnomah Group has hired Greg Johnson as a senior consultant for the firm as well as its director of ERISA [Employee Retirement Income Security Act] technical services.

Johnson’s background includes more than two decades of work in the retirement plan space. Most recently, he held the position of senior director, institutional relationships at TIAA. 

“We’re excited to have Greg join our team as we support our continued growth at Multnomah Group,” says Erik Daley, Multnomah Group’s managing principal. “I’ve had the opportunity to work collaboratively with Greg over the last decade, and he has demonstrated himself as an accomplished problem solver and creative thinker.  His experience and approach will yield significant benefits to our firm and the clients we work with.”

Mercer Advisors Acquires Chicago Wealth Management Firm

Mercer Global Advisors, Inc., a national registered investment adviser (RIA), has acquired CCP, Inc., a wealth management firm located in Chicago, Illinois.

CCP serves approximately 100 households with assets under management (AUM) of approximately $140MM. CCP is owned by Steve Roberts, who will be joining the Mercer Advisors’ team along with Carin Pankros Roman and the entire CCP staff. CCP will be consolidating with Mercer Advisors’ existing office in Chicago. 

“We are excited to team up with a firm whose philosophy is in lock step with ours,” says Roberts. “We were looking for a partner that could help us to better serve our clients and provide additional resources. After meeting with Dave Barton, Mercer Advisors’ vice chairman in charge of Mergers and Acquisitions, I was convinced Mercer Advisors was the right choice for me and for my clients. We couldn’t be happier.”

Dave Welling, chief executive officer of Mercer Advisors says, “We are delighted to join forces with the CCP team and look forward to serving their clients with expanded wealth management services for years to come.”  

MassMutual Adds Several Relationship Managers

Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company has appointed several new relationship managers to support retirement plans.

Lisa Burks-Wilson will now support retirement plans in Michigan. She has 30 years’ experience in financial services and previously served as a relationship manager for retirement plans at ICMA-RC and TIAA.  Burks-Wilson has a bachelor’s degree from Howard University, FINRA Series 6, 24, 26, 51, 65 licenses as well as state insurance licenses in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware.

Kevin Catineau is a relationship manager for Massachusetts. With more than 25 years’ experience in financial services, Catineau was most recently a financial adviser for Citizens Investment Services. Earlier, he worked at MassMutual as a market director for third-party administrators.  He has a bachelor’s degree from St. Michael’s College as well as FINRA Series 6, 7, 26, 63 and 65 licenses and a Chartered Retirement Plan Specialist (CRPS) designation.

Mark Goerg supports retirement plans in New Jersey. Goerg most recently was a financial services representative for MassMutual after more than 20 years’ experience as a relationship manager for Capital Market Solutions and BNY Mellon Capital Markets. He has a master’s from Fordham University and a bachelor’s from Stonehill College. In addition, Goerg has FINRA Series 7, 55, 63 and 79 licenses.

John Harris is a relationship manager in Georgia. Harris was previously a retirement consultant for 403(b) plans at Lincoln Financial Group. In addition, he also worked as a financial adviser at VALIC and Northwestern Mutual. He earned a bachelor’s degree at Kennesaw State University and has FINRA Series 6, 63 and variable securities licenses as well as life, health and sickness insurance licenses.

Kathy Jackson is a relationship manager in Tennessee after serving MassMutual retirement plan clients as an educational specialist and previously as a senior relationship manager for Fidelity Investments.  She has more than 30 years’ experience in financial services, including the retirement and employee benefits markets. She earned a bachelor’s degree at the University of Notre Dame and has a FINRA Series 6 license and a CEBS designation.

Prabhjeet Kaur supports retirement plans in Maryland.  Kaur has more than 20 years’ experience in the retirement plans and employee benefits industries. Most recently, she was vice president of relationship management for government plans for IMCA-RC and was a senior account executive for institutional markets at Transamerica. Kaur has bachelor’s degrees from the University of North Carolina and a CEBS from the University of Pennsylvania.

Richard Luerra supports retirement plans in Southern California. He has more than two decades’ experience managing relationships for retirement plans and most recently served as a retirement plans specialist for ICMA-RC. He has a bachelor’s degree from San Jose State University, has FINRA Series 6, 63 and 65 licenses, and a life insurance license.

Matthew Marty is a relationship manager in Ohio. With more than 25 years’ experience in financial services, Marty most recently served as a managing director at Charles Schwab Corp. He has a bachelor’s degree from Bowling Green State University and holds FINRA Series 7 and 66 licenses. In addition, Marty earned Qualified 401(k) Administrator (QKA) and a Qualified Pension Administrator (QPA) certifications from the American Society of Pension Professionals & Actuaries (ASPPA).

Richard May is a relationship manager for New York State. With more than two decades’ experience in the retirement plans marketplace, May previously served as senior director for relationship management at TIAA.  He has FINRA Series 6, 7, 24, 63 and 65 licenses, is a Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU), Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC), Accredited Investment Fiduciary Analyst (AIFA) and a Certified Investment Management Analyst (CIMA).

Jose Mireles specializes in supporting government retirement plans in California. Mireles previously served as a financial consultant for TIAA. He has a bachelor’s degree from Pepperdine University as well as FINRA 7, 24 and 66 licenses as well as accident, health, life, variable life and variable annuities licenses.

David Stone supports retirement plans in Colorado.  He has more than 15 years’ experience in financial services, most recently as an associate for business development at Nuveen and a client services manager at TIAA.  Stone earned MBA and bachelor’s degrees at the University of Colorado, has FINRA Series 7 and 63 licenses, as well as life, health and variable annuities insurance licenses.

Alston & Bird Announces Partner Promotion

Alston & Bird has elected a partner in the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group

Kyle Woods (Atlanta) is partner in the Employee Benefits & Executive Compensation Group. He assists both domestic and international clients in providing competitive and attractive benefit programs to all levels of employees. Focusing on both qualified and nonqualified benefit plans, he guides employers through design, implementation, and ongoing compliance. He also advises and trains plan fiduciaries in matters of plan governance, interpretation, and administration.

«