Experts: Employers Can Help with Student Loan Management

There are numerous student loan debt assistance and benefit options that advisers can bring to employers, according to a panel of experts who met last week. 



Retirement plan advisers and employers have a range of options to help students manage their student loan debt as well as save for retirement, according 
to legal and industry experts.

People with student loan debt who are also managing inflation costs and market volatility, no longer have federal support for loan forgiveness as a Biden administration program remains locked up in the courts. But advisers can work with plan sponsors on options for their participants, according to experts speaking during a PLANSPONSOR plan progress webinar series last week.

“Employers have tried to start thinking very creatively about ways to address [student loan debt management],” David Amendola, senior director, intellectual capital leader for benefits advisory and compliance at WTW.

Employers can be advised to select from direct-to-worker payments, available under 2020’s Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, or use an indirect option for student debt repayment benefits. In the current legal framework, both basic and creative options are available, explains Jeff Holdvogt, partner at McDermott Will and Emery.

Student loan debt benefits are top of mind for employers, at least in part because pandemic-era moratorium on student loan payments is ending and President Biden’s proposed program for some student loan forgiveness has been delayed in court challenges. Biden moved to forgive certain types of loans, earlier this year.

“There’s an expectation that many individuals will begin repaying student loans again sometime soon and what should employers be thinking about in terms of student loan benefits [for workers]? There’s a few different buckets of options for employers to provide student loan benefits,” Holdvogt says.

The least complex with regards to involvement for employers, is to promote a loan consolidation or refinancing option. This benefit has an employer work with an insurer or refinance company to assist the worker, “get a lower interest rate,” Holdvogt says.

An attraction of this indirect benefit arrangement is it involves limited work for the employer.

“[This is] a very straightforward way for an employer to do something to show their employee base they see this as an issue, that student loan debt is important to them and [to be seen] do[ing] something to help,” says Holdvogt.

A significant but direct-to-worker arrangement would be through an education assistance program.

The IRS program, under code section 127, allows employers to provide up to $5,250 tax free to employees each year for certain qualified educational assistance.

“The most significant currently available student loan debt benefit is the educational assistance program benefit that’s available through the CARES Act,” adds Holdvogt.

The legislation included “a provision that tacked on to the educational assistance program the ability to provide direct benefits for student loan repayments,” he adds. “An employer who already has an educational assistance program could add on to allow for a student loan benefit…to pay employees up to $5,250 per year, tax-free for qualified student loan debt.”

Congress also may act on provision contained in the SECURE 2.0 package of retirement bills, to allow employers to make 401(k) contributions to match some portion of what employees make in student loan debt payments.

“One of the reasons why the direct contribution benefit is a really impactful benefit [is] you’re asking employers to mak[e] potentially direct payments to pay down student loan debt more quickly, but if that’s offered on a broad scale, that can get really expensive,” Amendola says. “Budget wise, a lot of times the conversation goes well, ‘we’d love to do that. But we can’t really afford that right now.’ The 401(k) match is really intriguing because it’s more cost neutral than a direct benefit.”

Additional arrangements include tuition forgiveness programs, where a company will fund an individual’s education or certification in a field of study, in return for some years of the worker’s employment or in return for outright tuition forgiveness, says Jay Schmitt, a principal at Strategic Benefits Advisors.

Tuition assistance was used, in a form, successfully by a hospital system to train nurses, he says, at a large health care system that was suffering from a nursing shortage.

“They decided to buy a nursing school so they had a source of nurses coming, and if the nurse came out of school and went to work for this hospital system, the entire debt they took to get through school was forgiven,” explains Schmitt. “If they went somewhere else, only a portion of [debt] was [forgiven] but you had to stay for a couple of years and that program had fantastic uptake.”

Another creative arrangement is to allow employees to convert paid time off into funds for debt repayment.

“Some organizations have implemented and a lot of others have been interested in potentially allowing employees to convert a certain number of days and PTO into funds that would then go to pay off student loan debt,” explains Amendola. “That’s a very challenging proposition and involves tax issues that are not only challenging, [but] potentially, to some employers just nonstarters.

What type of benefit is most preferred by an employer’s workforce is likely to vary and it will depend on plan sponsor population demographics, adds Schmitt.

“If you ask a Millennial right out of college versus a Baby [B]boomer, who has been in the workforce, 30 years, you’re going to get different answers,” he says. “It completely depends on the hierarchy of what you’re dealing with, what industry you’re in, those things.”

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Investment Service and Product Launches

John Hancock launches equity income portfolios; RBC launches U.S. mutual funds with exposure to global markets; FundFront unveils third liquid alternative investment product; and more.


John Hancock Launches Equity Income Portfolios

John Hancock Investment Management announced new asset class models focused on U.S. equities, international equities and the broader fixed-income markets available to investors.

The firm, which is part of Manulife Investment Management, made the announcement on the three-year anniversary of launching its multi-asset model portfolios. The portfolios are offered on Manulife open architecture, backed by research from John Hancock.

John Hancock is offering the new equity and fixed-income models to meet demand for portfolio implementation from clients, Steve Deroian, co-head of John Hancock’s retail product, said in a release.

“We are also seeing increased demand for both home-office and third-party models as advisers realize the efficiency and flexibility offered by model portfolios,” Katie Baker, John Hancock’s head of model distribution, said in the release. “We believe our core value proposition is the access to a tenured, experienced asset allocation team and its capability to go beyond affiliated investment managers.”

RBC Launches U.S. Mutual Funds with Exposure to Emerging and Developed Markets

RBC Global Asset Management has launched two new mutual funds providing exposure to international markets: the RBC International Equity Fund and the RBC International Small Cap Equity Fund. The funds provide U.S. investors with equity exposure across emerging markets and developed markets.

The RBC International Equity Fund invests primarily in mid-cap and large-cap companies located throughout the world, excluding the United States. The fund sources its decisions from RBC GAM’s European and Asian equity investment professionals who seek to uncover strong companies that display high and sustainable levels of profitability, the firm said.

The RBC International Small Cap Equity Fund adopts the same investment philosophy and process as its mid/large-cap counterpart, the RBC International Equity Fund, and leverages investment insights generated by RBC GAM’s investment teams in London and Hong Kong. The fund provides investors with exposure to smaller companies located in emerging and developed markets outside of the United States.

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FundFront Brings to Market Third Liquid Alternative Investment Product

FundFront, a London-based alternative investment platform, is launching its third liquid alternative investment product.

The investment product was launched in partnership with California-based Dipsea Capital and goes by the name DIPC. The product is designed to produce the returns of a low-volatility income fund while also capturing large market moves. In practice, DIPC offers exposure to Dipsea Capital’s tactical relative value strategy by trading a basket of short-dated U.S. equity options along with momentum stocks.

“Investors are looking for ways to access alternative sources of returns beyond stock-and-bond portfolios for true diversification,” Amin Naj, one of three founding partners in FundFront, said in a press release. “This product offers qualified investors a simple and easy way to access Dipsea’s sophisticated investment strategy, which previously was only available to the ultra-wealthy and institutional investors.”

FundFront DIPC follows the launch of the firm’s IMMS and HACO products earlier this year, in line with FundFront’s objective to bring an elite collection of liquid alternative investments to its platform. FundFront curates from among more than 26,000 private funds and professional managers to give investors the top selection of choices, according to the firm.

Dipsea Capital is led by Christopher Antonio, who founded the firm in 2002.

PGIM Investments to Close Quant Solutions Fund; Start Value and Multi-Asset ETFs

PGIM Investments announced plans to close and liquidate the PGIM Quant Solutions Strategic Alpha International Equity ETF (PQIN), which had been designed for long-term capital growth by picking stocks based on value, quality and volatility, according to the PGIM’s website.

The exchange-traded fund’s last day of trading will be January 9, 2023, and the final day for creations or redemptions by authorized participants will be January 6, 2023, the firm said. The fund will cease operations, withdraw its assets and distribute the remaining proceeds to shareholders on January 13, 2023.

The ETF is part of PGIM’s quantitative equity specialist designed to leverage the power of technology and data, as well as advanced academic research, according to the firm. PGIM Quant Solutions manages portfolios across equities, multi-asset and liquid alternatives and also offers defined contribution solutions, with about $81 billion in client assets.

Separately, PGIM announced the launch of three actively managed ETFs: the PGIM Jennison Focused Growth ETF (PJFG), the PGIM Jennison Focused Value ETF (PJFV) and the PGIM Portfolio Ballast ETF (PBL).

The new funds bring PGIM’s active ETF lineup to eight, the firm said, with the goal of providing PGIM’s investment strategies with increased transparency and greater tax-efficiency, Stuart Parker, president and CEO of PGIM Investments, said in a press release.

The funds’ investment strategies are substantially similar to those of their respective mutual fund and institutional strategy counterparts, PGIM said. The PGIM Jennison Focused Growth ETF (PJFG) looks for long-term growth of capital by investing in a focused portfolio of primarily mid- and large-capitalization stocks believed to have strong capital appreciation potential. The PGIM Jennison Focused Value ETF (PJFV) seeks long-term growth of capital by investing in a focused portfolio of predominantly large-capitalization companies believed to be undervalued compared to their perceived worth.

The PGIM Portfolio Ballast ETF (PBL) seeks long-term capital growth with reduced volatility compared to the equity market, the company said. PBL’s long-term goal is to capture 60% of the performance of the S&P 500 on average in appreciating equity markets and to capture 30% of the performance of the S&P 500 on average in declining equity markets over a market cycle.

Northern Trust Partners with Solactive on Global Bond ESG Climate Index Funds

Northern Trust Asset Management is expanding its sustainable investment options by launching two global bond ESG funds and corresponding indices, built in partnership with German index provider Solactive.

The NT Global Bond ESG Climate Index Fund and the NT Global 1-5 Years Bond ESG Climate Index Funds target issuers that the portfolio managers believe are positioned to better manage environmental, social and governance (ESG) risks, as well as transition to a low-carbon economy.

To improve the ESG profile and reduce the carbon intensity of a fixed income portfolio, the funds apply distinct ESG approaches, with one aimed at corporate bonds and the other at government bonds, the company said. The strategies leverage the same investment process but have different duration targets, with the goal of giving investors flexibility to manage bond portfolios in a rising-interest-rate environment.

“We believe investors should be compensated for the risks they take—in all market environments—and, as we see investors increasingly look to integrate sustainability characteristics into their bond portfolios, we have partnered with Solactive to offer strategies that we believe are a compelling solution,” Marie Dzanis, Northern Trust’s head of asset management in EMEA, said in a press release.

The NT Global Bond ESG Climate Index Fund and the NT Global 1-5 Years Bond ESG Climate Index Funds, used as benchmarks for the strategies, measure the performance of a global investment-grade bond universe and integrate ESG scores and climate data into the government and corporate bonds within the index. The indices cover about 25,000 bonds issued by central governments, government-related issuers and corporations, as well as securitized debt instruments, issued by both developed and emerging markets.

The index funds are only available in Ireland, Denmark, Finland, Luxembourg, Sweden, UK and Netherlands.

MSCI to Offer Investment Tools to Screen Companies Hurting Biological Diversity

MSCI Inc. is launching investing tools in early 2023 to track companies at risk of contributing to biodiversity loss and deforestation.

The new screening tools use thousands of environmental and climate data points along with MSCI’s existing technology to locate a company’s physical operations, the company said.

The offerings include the MSCI Biodiversity-Sensitive Areas Screening Metrics, which track companies that have physical assets located in areas of high biodiversity relevance, such as forests, deforestation hot spots or species-rich areas. It will also launch the MSCI Deforestation Screening Metrics to indicate companies that may be contributing to deforestation through their supply chains. This could arise from direct operations in areas of risk, or by the production or reliance on commodities considered key drivers of deforestation, including palm oil, soy, beef and timber.

“Global biodiversity challenges, such as the spread of invasive species, land-use change and pollution, will have very tangible impacts on the way in which companies function in the near- and long-term future,” Nadia Laine, executive director and head of ESG products at MSCI, said in a press release. “MSCI aims to help institutional investors understand those risks on the portfolio level.”

Emerging financial regulations—such as the European Union Biodiversity Strategy 2023 or recent EU legislation banning imported goods connected to deforestation—are bringing companies under more scrutiny for contributing to nature loss, MSCI said. Recent research the firm has done, the ESG and Climate Trends to Watch for 2023 report, noted that companies’ level of preparation for these types of regulation is low.

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