Risks Threatening DC Plan Success

Amid market volatility, the changing role of defined contribution (DC) retirement plans, a shrinking work force and longer life expectancy, plan sponsors must tackle more issues threatening plan success.

Three risks exist for DC plans in the current retirement environment: yesterday’s risk, or the growing risk of low risk; today’s risk, that qualified default investment alternatives (QDIAs) need to be better understood; and tomorrow’s risk, or the issue of retirement income, according to BlackRock.

Participant attraction to low-risk products can be the greatest when counterparty risk is the highest, BlackRock executives said in a roundtable led by Chip Castille, managing director and head of U.S. and Canada defined contribution at BlackRock. The primary goal of low-risk products, such as stable value or money market funds, is to provide a stable yield and principal protection to participants. The key is to make sure that the investment committee understands stable value. BlackRock suggests the use of other investment options that provide similar features with fewer risks, such as a declining duration fund. In this fund, risk decreases over time until the maturity date. There is no counterparty risk and it gives the same yield as a stable value fund.

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Another alternative for low-risk funds is a target-maturity series, BlackRock said. This series of bond funds with specified maturity dates has a return target based on the term of the fund and market yields. The fund invests in high-quality fixed-income assets with individual maturities targeted to within six months to that of the fund. A target-maturity fund can be an appropriate low-risk option because of the expected return of principal maturity; the term yield for a specified investment horizon; and the relatively low volatility. This option is easy for participants to understand and the returns, over time, are similar to stable value, BlackRock contended.

The “today” risk facing plan sponsors surrounds target-date funds (TDFs) and developing a QDIA framework, according to BlackRock. One of the key ways to address this risk is to ensure TDFs are better understood. The objectives for these funds range from the newer issue of designing a TDF that gets a participant “to” and “through” retirement; to maximize consumption; to provide a reasonable range of investment outcomes; and to deliver a secure floor of retirement income, commonly through the 4% rule. Plan sponsors should consider what they want to accomplish with a TDF, and to communicate how they monitor and select these funds. This way, customization by the provider can serve its purpose, BlackRock said.

 

One issue with TDFs unfolded after the Pension Protection Act (PPA), which allowed employers to automatically enroll new hires, and also to automatically default participants who did not select investments into a TDF. This left many older employees not invested in a TDF, creating a higher risk. The solution, BlackRock said, is to hold periodic re-enrollments where all employees have the chance to be enrolled in a TDF. Re-enrolling can also allow fiduciaries to take advantage of the QDIA safe harbor. According to BlackRock, studies show that most participants make no or few adjustments to their accounts; tenured employees do not benefit from new defaults; and re-enrollment is an easy way to improve outcomes.

The issue of “tomorrow,” or retirement income, involves questions such as how does a participant generate income, should they buy an annuity and how long will they live? There is great confusion about how retirement income options work within DC plans, but there is evidence that participants want them, BlackRock said. In its DC survey, 86% of participants favored an income solution in their retirement plan, and 85% found a fund with a guaranteed income feature appealing. To address this, in-plan income options must be explored and sustainable income sources in a low-yield environment must be found.

Ultimately, the risk lies in not taking action, BlackRock said, because no action leads to an uninformed work force.

 

Majority Cloudy on ‘Cloud Computing’

 

Many Americans remain foggy about what cloud computing is and how it works, a survey found.


 

 

 

“Cloud computing” involves computer networks to store, access and share data from Internet-connected devices. Most respondents in a Wakefield Research survey of more than 1,000 American adults, however, believe the cloud is related to weather, while some referred to pillows, drugs and even toilet paper. The good news is that even those that don’t know exactly what the cloud is recognize its economic benefits and think the cloud is a catalyst for small-business growth.

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Among the results:

 

  • 51% of respondents, including a majority of Millennials, believe stormy weather can interfere with cloud computing.
  • Nearly one-third see the cloud as a thing of the future, even though 97% actually use cloud services frequently by banking or shopping online, file-sharing and participating in social networks such as Facebook or Twitter.
  • Three in five people (59%) believe the “workplace of the future” will exist entirely in the cloud, which indicates people feel it’s time to figure out the cloud or risk being left behind in their professional lives.
  • 22% admit that they’ve pretended to know what the cloud is or how it works. Some of the false claims take place during work hours, with one-third of these respondents faking an understanding of the cloud in the office and another 14% doing so during a job interview. An additional 17% have pretended to know what the cloud was on a first date.
  • Younger Americans are most likely to pretend to know what the cloud is and how it works (36% of those age 18 to 29 and 18% of those age 30 and older), as are Americans in the West (28% West vs. 22% in the U.S.)
  • 56% of respondents say they think other people refer to cloud computing in conversation when they really don’t know what they are talking about.

When asked what “the cloud” is, a majority responded it’s either an actual cloud (specifically a “fluffy white thing”), the sky or something related to the weather (29%). Only 16% said they think of a computer network to store, access and share data from Internet-connected devices. Some of the other responses include: toilet paper, pillow, smoke, outer space, cyberspace, mysterious network, unreliable, security, sadness, relaxed, overused, “oh goody, a hacker’s dream,” storage, movies, money, memory, back-up, joy, innovation, drugs, heaven and a place to meet.

 

After learning more about the cloud, 68% recognize its economic benefits. The most recognized benefits are that the cloud helps consumers by lowering costs, spurs small-business growth and boosts customer engagement for businesses.
Among those who hardly ever or never use the cloud, the top three deterrents are cost, security concerns and privacy concerns.

 

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