Drinker Biddle: Tax Cuts Alter Loan Offset Rollover Requirements and More

One change in the law means that in many cases, a participant will have more time in which to effect a tax-free rollover of a plan loan offset amount that occurs following termination from employment.

Drinker Biddle staffers Christine Kong, partner; Karen Gelula, counsel; and Monica Novak, associate, have published a new client alert analysis, offering some important observations about a few of the more obscure changes included in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Acts anticipated to impact employers and their retirement plans. 

The attorneys warn that many of the elements discussed here generally apply to plan years beginning after December 31, 2017.

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As the trio points out, before President Trump Signed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a participant had 60 days to roll over a plan loan offset amount from a 401(k) or 403(b) plan account to an eligible retirement plan that accepts the rollover. “The Act extends this time period until the due date (with extensions) for filing the participant’s federal income tax return,” they note. “This new rule applies only to plan loan offset amounts resulting solely from the participant’s termination of employment or the employer’s termination of the plan. The plan loan offset provisions of the Act apply to amounts that are treated as distributed in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017.”

The Drinker Biddle attorneys observe, that when an offset occurs, the unpaid loan balance is deducted from the participant’s plan account—the loan is “offset”—and the amount of the loan offset is reported to the participant on a Form 1099-R as an actual distribution.

“This change in the law means that in many cases, the participant will have more time in which to effect a tax-free rollover of a plan loan offset amount that occurs following termination from employment,” the attorneys suggest. “Plan sponsors may wish to coordinate administration of their plan loan offset rollover rules with the plan’s third-party administrator in order to avoid inadvertently defaulting the participant’s plan loan.”

The Drinker Biddle client alert discusses the various natural disaster relief provisions that were handed down by the Internal Revenue Service during 2016 and potentially applying to 2017 taxes for sizable groups of plans and participants. Without recounting all the relief that is available, it is important to note, as the Drinker Biddle attorneys suggest, that plans adding qualified 2016 disaster distributions will need to be amended on or before the last day of the first plan year beginning on or after January 1, 2018 (for governmental plans, January 1, 2020), “or any later date that the IRS may prescribe.”

The attorneys further highlight the finalized version of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act made no direct changes to retirement plan hardship distribution rules. However, they suggest changes to the rules for deducting a personal casualty loss under Section 165 of the Code will impact 401(k) plans and 403(b) plans that follow the “safe harbor” standards for allowing participants to receive hardship distributions.

“The Act amends Section 165 of the Code to provide that personal casualty losses are deductible only to the extent such losses are attributable to a federally declared disaster (i.e., a disaster that is determined by the president to warrant federal assistance under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act). This change applies to losses incurred in tax years beginning after December 31, 2017, and before January 1, 2026,” they note. “The revisions to Section 165 of the Code have the effect of limiting the circumstances under which a plan participant may receive a hardship distribution to pay expenses to repair damage caused by a casualty loss, where the plan relies on the retirement plan safe harbor standards for approving hardship distributions. For example, under the Act, expenses to repair damage caused by a house fire would not justify a hardship distribution unless the fire is the result of a federally declared disaster.”

Generally speaking, the attorneys argue, plans that follow the “safe harbor” standards for approving hardship distributions should make sure that any necessary administrative changes are made to conform to Section 165 of the Code. “This may require coordination with the plan’s TPA,” they note, “especially if the TPA has been delegated responsibility for approving and administering hardship distributions.”

The full client alert analysis is available here.

CapitalRock Expands Analysis for Rollover and Exchange Solution

The firm's rollover/exchange analysis will consider more plan types, including 401(k), 403(b), 457, defined benefit plans and more.  

In an effort to create simpler and consolidated steps for advisers when completing rollovers or exchanges under the impartial conduct standard, CapitalRock has amplified its analysis for RightBRIDGE Product Profiler, their rollover/exchange module.

 

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Along with reducing steps taken to complete rollovers or exchanges, CapitalRock says this surplus of analysis can help in eradicating manual re-entries of data.

 

The Product Profiler, created by CapitalRock to evaluate if a 401(k) rollover is suitable for a client, is based on quantitative and qualitative questions on current fees, employer contributions and other features. The module then utilizes a scoring methodology to regulate whether a rollover is fitting for a client or not. During Q4 of 2017, the solution was stretched to incorporate several 401(k) rollovers in the analysis. Benchmarking average fees based on the size of the 401(k) and investment offerings were also implemented, according to CapitalRock.


The firm says it is now offering the rollover/exchange analysis to additional retirement plans, including 401(k), 403(b), 457, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), IRA-annuity, nonqualified annuity and defined benefit (DB) plans. This extension comes after numerous current clients from CapitalRock requested for an expansion towards other plans.

 

“After completing the first phase of the Product Profiler development we recognized the need to expand the rollover/exchange analysis to include other qualified and retirement plans. With the impartial conduct standard in place it is necessary to analyze and document the rollover/exchange process. Most firms are currently using a paper-based form to meet this requirement. By expanding the Product Profiler analysis to include additional plan types we can assist and automate much of the current process,” says John Hyde, president and CEO of CapitalRock. “Now that we have implemented the Product Profiler at more than a dozen broker dealers we have received requests from our current clients to expand the functionality for additional plans.”

 

According to CapitalRock, this added analysis will unfold in a two-step process, the first with a short set of questions determining if a more detailed examination is needed, and will be scored using color indicators. Should the indicator turn red, no additional analysis is needed. However, plans scoring a green or yellow indicator will require further detailed analysis on comparing features and fees.

 

“We recognize that the most difficult part of a rollover or exchange is comparing features and fees,” says Brian Hendricks, senior vice president of Operations at CapitalRock. “Researching and finding current plan details is often difficult. If a plan is determined to be a valid candidate for a rollover/exchange then we move on to the second step in the process and get more detailed information on both the current plan and the proposed plan/product.”

 

Aside from the RightBRIDGE Product Profiler and the RightBRIDGE scoring engine, CapitalRock plans to utilize extra resources such as their ReasonText, a feature explaining why rollovers/exchanges would benefit or hurt certain plans. If extended analysis on specific product selection is needed, the RightBRIDGE Annuity Wizard or Investment Wizard tools may be implemented, says CapitalRock.

 

The additional evaluation will be completed in the RightBRIDGE solution at the end of Q1 2018.

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