Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption, 21960-21989 [2015-08832]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
(e) Internal Revenue Code. Section
4975(e)(3) of the Code contains
provisions parallel to section 3(21)(A) of
the Act which define the term
‘‘fiduciary’’ for purposes of the
prohibited transaction provisions in
Code section 4975. Effective December
31, 1978, section 102 of the
Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5
U.S.C. App. 237 transferred the
authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to promulgate regulations of
the type published herein to the
Secretary of Labor. All references herein
to section 3(21)(A) of the Act should be
read to include reference to the parallel
provisions of section 4975(e)(3) of the
Code. Furthermore, the provisions of
this section shall apply for purposes of
the application of Code section 4975
with respect to any plan described in
Code section 4975(e)(1).
(f) Definitions. For purposes of this
section—
(1) ‘‘Recommendation’’ means a
communication that, based on its
content, context, and presentation,
would reasonably be viewed as a
suggestion that the advice recipient
engage in or refrain from taking a
particular course of action.
(2)(i) ‘‘Plan’’ means any employee
benefit plan described in section 3(3) of
the Act and any plan described in
section 4975(e)(1)(A) of the Code, and
(ii) ‘‘IRA’’ means any trust, account or
annuity described in Code section
4975(e)(1)(B) through (F), including, for
example, an individual retirement
account described in section 408(a) of
the Code and a health savings account
described in section 223(d) of the Code.
(3) ‘‘Plan participant’’ means for a
plan described in section 3(3) of the Act,
a person described in section 3(7) of the
Act.
(4) ‘‘IRA owner’’ means with respect
to an IRA either the person who is the
owner of the IRA or the person for
whose benefit the IRA was established.
(5) ‘‘Plan fiduciary’’ means a person
described in section (3)(21) of the Act
and 4975(e)(3) of the Code.
(6) ‘‘Fee or other compensation, direct
or indirect’’ for purposes of this section
and section 3(21)(A)(ii) of the Act,
means any fee or compensation for the
advice received by the person (or by an
affiliate) from any source and any fee or
compensation incident to the
transaction in which the investment
advice has been rendered or will be
rendered. The term fee or other
compensation includes, for example,
brokerage fees, mutual fund and
insurance sales commissions.
(7) ‘‘Affiliate’’ includes: Any person
directly or indirectly, through one or
more intermediaries, controlling,
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controlled by, or under common control
with such person; any officer, director,
partner, employee or relative (as defined
in section 3(15) of the Act) of such
person; and any corporation or
partnership of which such person is an
officer, director or partner.
(8) ‘‘Control’’ for purposes of
paragraph (f)(7) of this section means
the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or
policies of a person other than an
individual.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 14th day of
April, 2015.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
[FR Doc. 2015–08831 Filed 4–15–15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application No. D–11712]
ZRIN 1210–ZA25
Proposed Best Interest Contract
Exemption
Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), U.S.
Department of Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Class
Exemption.
AGENCY:
This document contains a
notice of pendency before the U.S.
Department of Labor of a proposed
exemption from certain prohibited
transactions provisions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code
(the Code). The provisions at issue
generally prohibit fiduciaries with
respect to employee benefit plans and
individual retirement accounts (IRAs)
from engaging in self-dealing and
receiving compensation from third
parties in connection with transactions
involving the plans and IRAs. The
exemption proposed in this notice
would allow entities such as brokerdealers and insurance agents that are
fiduciaries by reason of the provision of
investment advice to receive such
compensation when plan participants
and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and
certain small plans purchase, hold or
sell certain investment products in
accordance with the fiduciaries’ advice,
under protective conditions to safeguard
the interests of the plans, participants
SUMMARY:
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and beneficiaries, and IRA owners. The
proposed exemption would affect
participants and beneficiaries of plans,
IRA owners and fiduciaries with respect
to such plans and IRAs.
DATES: Comments: Written comments
concerning the proposed class
exemption must be received by the
Department on or before July 6, 2015.
Applicability: The Department
proposes to make this exemption
available eight months after publication
of the final exemption in the Federal
Register. We request comment below on
whether the applicability date of certain
conditions should be delayed.
ADDRESSES: All written comments
concerning the proposed class
exemption should be sent to the Office
of Exemption Determinations by any of
the following methods, identified by
ZRIN: 1210–ZA25:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket ID
number: EBSA–2014–0016. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Email to: e-OED@dol.gov.
Fax to: (202) 693–8474.
Mail: Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (Attention: D–
11712), U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Suite 400,
Washington DC 20210.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of
Exemption Determinations, Employee
Benefits Security Administration,
(Attention: D–11712), U.S. Department
of Labor, 122 C St. NW., Suite 400,
Washington DC 20001.
Instructions. All comments must be
received by the end of the comment
period. The comments received will be
available for public inspection in the
Public Disclosure Room of the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, Room N–1513, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210.
Comments will also be available online
at www.regulations.gov, at Docket ID
number: EBSA–2014–0016 and
www.dol.gov/ebsa, at no charge.
Warning: All comments will be made
available to the public. Do not include
any personally identifiable information
(such as Social Security number, name,
address, or other contact information) or
confidential business information that
you do not want publicly disclosed. All
comments may be posted on the Internet
and can be retrieved by most Internet
search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Karen E. Lloyd or Brian L. Shiker, Office
of Exemption Determinations, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor (202) 693–8824
(this is not a toll-free number).
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
The
Department is proposing this class
exemption on its own motion, pursuant
to ERISA section 408(a) and Code
section 4975(c)(2), and in accordance
with the procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570 (76 FR 66637 (October 27,
2011)).
Public Hearing: The Department plans
to hold an administrative hearing within
30 days of the close of the comment
period. The Department will ensure
ample opportunity for public comment
by reopening the record following the
hearing and publication of the hearing
transcript. Specific information
regarding the date, location and
submission of requests to testify will be
published in a notice in the Federal
Register.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
The Department is proposing this
exemption in connection with its
proposed regulation under ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B) (Proposed Regulation),
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register. The Proposed
Regulation would amend the definition
of a ‘‘fiduciary’’ under ERISA and the
Code to specify when a person is a
fiduciary by reason of the provision of
investment advice for a fee or other
compensation regarding assets of a plan
or IRA. If adopted, the Proposed
Regulation would replace an existing
regulation dating to 1975. The Proposed
Regulation is intended to take into
account the advent of 401(k) plans and
IRAs, the dramatic increase in rollovers,
and other developments that have
transformed the retirement plan
landscape and the associated
investment market over the four decades
since the existing regulation was issued.
In light of the extensive changes in
retirement investment practices and
relationships, the Proposed Regulation
would update existing rules to
distinguish more appropriately between
the sorts of advice relationships that
should be treated as fiduciary in nature
and those that should not.
The exemption proposed in this
notice (‘‘the Best Interest Contract
Exemption’’) was developed to promote
the provision of investment advice that
is in the best interest of retail investors
such as plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRA owners, and small
plans. ERISA and the Code generally
prohibit fiduciaries from receiving
payments from third parties and from
acting on conflicts of interest, including
using their authority to affect or increase
their own compensation, in connection
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with transactions involving a plan or
IRA. Certain types of fees and
compensation common in the retail
market, such as brokerage or insurance
commissions, 12b-1 fees and revenue
sharing payments, fall within these
prohibitions when received by
fiduciaries as a result of transactions
involving advice to the plan participants
and beneficiaries, IRA owners and small
plan sponsors. To facilitate continued
provision of advice to such retail
investors and under conditions
designed to safeguard the interests of
these investors, the exemption would
allow certain investment advice
fiduciaries, including broker-dealers
and insurance agents, to receive these
various forms of compensation that, in
the absence of an exemption, would not
be permitted under ERISA and the
Code.
Rather than create a set of highly
prescriptive transaction-specific
exemptions, which has generally been
the regulatory approach to date, the
proposed exemption would flexibly
accommodate a wide range of current
business practices, while minimizing
the harmful impact of conflicts of
interest on the quality of advice. The
Department has sought to preserve
beneficial business models by taking a
standards-based approach that will
broadly permit firms to continue to rely
on common fee practices, as long as
they are willing to adhere to basic
standards aimed at ensuring that their
advice is in the best interest of their
customers.
ERISA section 408(a) specifically
authorizes the Secretary of Labor to
grant administrative exemptions from
ERISA’s prohibited transaction
provisions.1 Regulations at 29 CFR
2570.30 to 2570.52 describe the
procedures for applying for an
administrative exemption. Before
granting an exemption, the Department
must find that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the
interests of plans and their participants
and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of plans and IRA
owners. Interested parties are permitted
to submit comments to the Department
through July 6, 2015. The Department
plans to hold an administrative hearing
1 Code section 4975(c)(2) authorizes the Secretary
of the Treasury to grant exemptions from the
parallel prohibited transaction provisions of the
Code. Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978 (5 U.S.C.
app. at 214 (2000)) generally transferred the
authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to grant
administrative exemptions under Code section 4975
to the Secretary of Labor. This proposed exemption
would provide relief from the indicated prohibited
transaction provisions of both ERISA and the Code.
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within 30 days of the close of the
comment period.
Summary of the Major Provisions
The proposed exemption would apply
to compensation received by investment
advice fiduciaries—both individual
‘‘advisers’’ 2 and the ‘‘financial
institutions’’ that employ or otherwise
contract with them—and their affiliates
and related entities that is provided in
connection with the purchase, sale or
holding of certain assets by plans and
IRAs. In particular, the exemption
would apply when prohibited
compensation is received as a result of
advice to retail ‘‘retirement investors’’
including plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRA owners, and plan
sponsors (or their employees, officers or
directors) of plans with fewer than 100
participants making investment
decisions on behalf of the plans and
IRAs.
In order to protect the interests of the
plan participants and beneficiaries, IRA
owners, and small plan sponsors, the
exemption would require the adviser
and financial institution to contractually
acknowledge fiduciary status, commit to
adhere to basic standards of impartial
conduct, warrant that they have adopted
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to mitigate any harmful impact
of conflicts of interest, and disclose
basic information on their conflicts of
interest and on the cost of their advice.
The adviser and firm must commit to
fundamental obligations of fair dealing
and fiduciary conduct—to give advice
that is in the customer’s best interest;
avoid misleading statements; receive no
more than reasonable compensation;
and comply with applicable federal and
state laws governing advice. This
standards-based approach aligns the
adviser’s interests with those of the plan
or IRA customer, while leaving the
adviser and employing firm the
flexibility and discretion necessary to
determine how best to satisfy these
basic standards in light of the unique
attributes of their business. All financial
institutions relying on the exemption
would be required to notify the
Department in advance of doing so.
Finally, all financial institutions making
use of the exemption would have to
maintain certain data, and make it
available to the Department, to help
2 By using the term ‘‘adviser,’’ the Department
does not intend to limit the exemption to
investment advisers registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or under state law.
As explained herein, an adviser is an individual
who can be a representative of a registered
investment adviser, a bank or similar financial
institution, an insurance company, or a brokerdealer.
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evaluate the effectiveness of the
exemption in safeguarding the interests
of the plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRA owners, and small
plans.
Department has undertaken an
assessment of the costs and benefits of
the proposed exemption, and OMB has
reviewed this regulatory action.
Executive Order 12866 and 13563
Statement
Under Executive Orders 12866 and
13563, the Department must determine
whether a regulatory action is
‘‘significant’’ and therefore subject to
the requirements of the Executive Order
and subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess all costs and
benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing and
streamlining rules, and of promoting
flexibility. It also requires federal
agencies to develop a plan under which
they will periodically review their
existing significant regulations to make
regulatory programs more effective or
less burdensome in achieving their
regulatory objectives.
Under Executive Order 12866,
‘‘significant’’ regulatory actions are
subject to the requirements of the
Executive Order and review by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866, defines a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ as an action that is likely to
result in a rule (1) having an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more, or adversely and materially
affecting a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local or tribal governments or
communities (also referred to as an
‘‘economically significant’’ regulatory
action); (2) creating serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfering
with an action taken or planned by
another agency; (3) materially altering
the budgetary impacts of entitlement
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the Executive
Order. Pursuant to the terms of the
Executive Order, OMB has determined
that this action is ‘‘significant’’ within
the meaning of Section 3(f)(4) of the
Executive Order. Accordingly, the
Proposed Regulation Defining a
Fiduciary
As explained more fully in the
preamble to the Department’s Proposed
Regulation under ERISA section
3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B), also published in this
issue of the Federal Register, ERISA is
a comprehensive statute designed to
protect the interests of plan participants
and beneficiaries, the integrity of
employee benefit plans, and the security
of retirement, health, and other critical
benefits. The broad public interest in
ERISA-covered plans is reflected in its
imposition of fiduciary responsibilities
on parties engaging in important plan
activities, as well as in the tax-favored
status of plan assets and investments.
One of the chief ways in which ERISA
protects employee benefit plans is by
requiring that plan fiduciaries comply
with fundamental obligations rooted in
the law of trusts. In particular, plan
fiduciaries must manage plan assets
prudently and with undivided loyalty to
the plans and their participants and
beneficiaries.3 In addition, they must
refrain from engaging in ‘‘prohibited
transactions,’’ which ERISA does not
permit because of the dangers posed by
the fiduciaries’ conflicts of interest with
respect to the transactions.4 When
fiduciaries violate ERISA’s fiduciary
duties or the prohibited transaction
rules, they may be held personally liable
for the breach.5 In addition, violations
of the prohibited transaction rules are
subject to excise taxes under the Code.
The Code also has rules regarding
fiduciary conduct with respect to taxfavored accounts that are not generally
covered by ERISA, such as IRAs.
Although ERISA’s general fiduciary
obligations of prudence and loyalty do
not govern the fiduciaries of IRAs, these
fiduciaries are subject to the prohibited
transaction rules. In this context,
fiduciaries engaging in the prohibited
transactions are subject to an excise tax
enforced by the Internal Revenue
Service. Unlike participants in plans
covered by Title I of ERISA, IRA owners
do not have a statutory right to bring
suit against fiduciaries for violation of
the prohibited transaction rules and
fiduciaries are not personally liable to
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Background
3 ERISA
section 404(a).
section 406. ERISA also prohibits certain
transactions between a plan and a ‘‘party in
interest.’’
5 ERISA section 409; see also ERISA section 405.
4 ERISA
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IRA owners for the losses caused by
their misconduct. Nor can the Secretary
of Labor bring suit to enforce the
prohibited transactions rules on behalf
of IRA owners. The exemption proposed
herein, as well as the Proposed Class
Exemption for Principal Transactions in
Certain Debt Securities between
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs,
published elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, would create
contractual obligations for fiduciaries to
adhere to certain standards (the
Impartial Conduct Standards) if they
want to take advantage of the
exemption. IRA owners would have a
right to enforce these new contractual
rights.
Under the statutory framework, the
determination of who is a ‘‘fiduciary’’ is
of central importance. Many of ERISA’s
and the Code’s protections, duties, and
liabilities hinge on fiduciary status. In
relevant part, ERISA section 3(21)(A)
and Code section 4975(e)(3) provide that
a person is a fiduciary with respect to
a plan or IRA to the extent he or she (i)
exercises any discretionary authority or
discretionary control with respect to
management of such plan or IRA, or
exercises any authority or control with
respect to management or disposition of
its assets; (ii) renders investment advice
for a fee or other compensation, direct
or indirect, with respect to any moneys
or other property of such plan or IRA,
or has any authority or responsibility to
do so; or, (iii) has any discretionary
authority or discretionary responsibility
in the administration of such plan or
IRA.
The statutory definition deliberately
casts a wide net in assigning fiduciary
responsibility with respect to plan and
IRA assets. Thus, ‘‘any authority or
control’’ over plan or IRA assets is
sufficient to confer fiduciary status, and
any persons who render ‘‘investment
advice for a fee or other compensation,
direct or indirect’’ are fiduciaries,
regardless of whether they have direct
control over the plan’s or IRA’s assets
and regardless of their status as an
investment adviser or broker under the
federal securities laws. The statutory
definition and associated
responsibilities were enacted to ensure
that plans, plan participants, and IRA
owners can depend on persons who
provide investment advice for a fee to
provide recommendations that are
untainted by conflicts of interest. In the
absence of fiduciary status, the
providers of investment advice are
neither subject to ERISA’s fundamental
fiduciary standards, nor accountable for
imprudent, disloyal, or tainted advice
under ERISA or the Code, no matter
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how egregious the misconduct or how
substantial the losses. Retirement
investors typically are not financial
experts and consequently must rely on
professional advice to make critical
investment decisions. In the years since
then, the significance of financial advice
has become still greater with increased
reliance on participant directed plans
and IRAs for the provision of retirement
benefits.
In 1975, the Department issued a
regulation, at 29 CFR 2510.3–
21(c)(1975), defining the circumstances
under which a person is treated as
providing ‘‘investment advice’’ to an
employee benefit plan within the
meaning of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii)
(the ‘‘1975 regulation’’).6 The 1975
regulation narrowed the scope of the
statutory definition of fiduciary
investment advice by creating a five-part
test that must be satisfied before a
person can be treated as rendering
investment advice for a fee. Under the
1975 regulation, for advice to constitute
‘‘investment advice,’’ an adviser who
does not have discretionary authority or
control with respect to the purchase or
sale of securities or other property of the
plan must (1) render advice as to the
value of securities or other property, or
make recommendations as to the
advisability of investing in, purchasing
or selling securities or other property (2)
on a regular basis (3) pursuant to a
mutual agreement, arrangement or
understanding, with the plan or a plan
fiduciary that (4) the advice will serve
as a primary basis for investment
decisions with respect to plan assets,
and that (5) the advice will be
individualized based on the particular
needs of the plan. The regulation
provides that an adviser is a fiduciary
with respect to any particular instance
of advice only if he or she meets each
and every element of the five-part test
with respect to the particular advice
recipient or plan at issue. A 1976
Department of Labor Advisory Opinion
further limited the application of the
statutory definition of ‘‘investment
advice’’ by stating that valuations of
employer securities in connection with
employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
purchases would not be considered
fiduciary advice.7
As the marketplace for financial
services has developed in the years
since 1975, the five-part test may now
undermine, rather than promote, the
statutes’ text and purposes. The
narrowness of the 1975 regulation
6 The
Department of Treasury issued a virtually
identical regulation, at 26 CFR 54.4975–9(c), which
interprets Code section 4975(e)(3).
7 Advisory Opinion 76–65A (June 7, 1976).
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allows advisers, brokers, consultants
and valuation firms to play a central
role in shaping plan investments,
without ensuring the accountability that
Congress intended for persons having
such influence and responsibility. Even
when plan sponsors, participants,
beneficiaries and IRA owners clearly
rely on paid consultants for impartial
guidance, the regulation allows many
advisers to avoid fiduciary status and
the accompanying fiduciary obligations
of care and prohibitions on disloyal and
conflicted transactions. As a
consequence, under ERISA and the
Code, these advisers can steer customers
to investments based on their own selfinterest, give imprudent advice, and
engage in transactions that would
otherwise be prohibited by ERISA and
the Code.
In the Department’s Proposed
Regulation defining a fiduciary under
ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code
section 4975(e)(3)(B), the Department
seeks to replace the existing regulation
with one that more appropriately
distinguishes between the sorts of
advice relationships that should be
treated as fiduciary in nature and those
that should not, in light of the legal
framework and financial marketplace in
which IRAs and plans currently
operate.8 Under the Proposed
Regulation, plans include IRAs.
The Proposed Regulation describes
the types of advice that constitute
‘‘investment advice’’ with respect to
plan or IRA assets for purposes of the
definition of a fiduciary at ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B). The proposal provides,
subject to certain carve-outs, that a
person renders investment advice with
respect to assets of a plan or IRA if,
among other things, the person
provides, directly to a plan, a plan
fiduciary, a plan participant or
beneficiary, IRA or IRA owner, one of
the following types of advice:
(1) A recommendation as to the
advisability of acquiring, holding,
disposing or exchanging securities or
other property, including a
recommendation to take a distribution
of benefits or a recommendation as to
the investment of securities or other
property to be rolled over or otherwise
distributed from a plan or IRA;
8 The Department initially proposed an
amendment to its regulation defining a fiduciary
under ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B) on October 22, 2010, at 75 FR 65263.
It subsequently announced its intention to
withdraw the proposal and propose a new rule,
consistent with the President’s Executive Orders
12866 and 13563, in order to give the public a full
opportunity to evaluate and comment on the new
proposal and updated economic analysis.
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21963
(2) A recommendation as to the
management of securities or other
property, including recommendations as
to the management of securities or other
property to be rolled over or otherwise
distributed from the plan or IRA;
(3) An appraisal, fairness opinion or
similar statement, whether verbal or
written, concerning the value of
securities or other property, if provided
in connection with a specific
transaction or transactions involving the
acquisition, disposition or exchange of
such securities or other property by the
plan or IRA; and
(4) a recommendation of a person who
is also going to receive a fee or other
compensation in providing any of the
types of advice described in paragraphs
(1) through (3), above.
In addition, to be a fiduciary, such
person must either (i) represent or
acknowledge that it is acting as a
fiduciary within the meaning of ERISA
(or the Code) with respect to the advice,
or (ii) render the advice pursuant to a
written or verbal agreement,
arrangement or understanding that the
advice is individualized to, or that such
advice is specifically directed to, the
advice recipient for consideration in
making investment or management
decisions with respect to securities or
other property of the plan or IRA.
In the Proposed Regulation, the
Department refers to FINRA guidance
on whether particular communications
should be viewed as
‘‘recommendations’’9 within the
meaning of the fiduciary definition, and
requests comment on whether the
Proposed Regulation should adhere to
or adopt some or all of the standards
developed by FINRA in defining
communications which rise to the level
of a recommendation. For more detailed
information regarding the Proposed
Regulation, see the Notice of the
Proposed Regulation published in this
issue of the Federal Register.
For advisers who do not represent
that they are acting as ERISA or Code
fiduciaries, the Proposed Regulation
provides that advice rendered in
conformance with certain carve-outs
will not cause the adviser to be treated
as a fiduciary under ERISA or the Code.
For example, under the seller’s carveout, counterparties in arm’s length
transactions with plans may make
investment recommendations without
acting as fiduciaries if certain
conditions are met.10 The proposal also
9 See NASD Notice to Members 01–23 and FINRA
Regulatory Notices 11–02, 12–25 and 12–55.
10 Although the preamble adopts the phrase
‘‘seller’s carve-out’’ as a shorthand way of referring
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contains a carve-out from fiduciary
status for providers of appraisals,
fairness opinions, or statements of value
in specified contexts (e.g., with respect
to ESOP transactions). The proposal
additionally includes a carve-out from
fiduciary status for the marketing of
investment alternative platforms to
plans, certain assistance in selecting
investment alternatives and other
activities. Finally, the Proposed
Regulation carves out the provision of
investment education from the
definition of an investment advice
fiduciary.
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Prohibited Transactions
The Department anticipates that the
Proposed Regulation will cover many
investment professionals who do not
currently consider themselves to be
fiduciaries under ERISA or the Code. If
the Proposed Regulation is adopted,
these entities will become subject to the
prohibited transaction restrictions in
ERISA and the Code that apply
specifically to fiduciaries. ERISA
section 406(b)(1) and Code section
4975(c)(1)(E) prohibit a fiduciary from
dealing with the income or assets of a
plan or IRA in his own interest or his
own account. ERISA section 406(b)(2)
provides that a fiduciary shall not ‘‘in
his individual or in any other capacity
act in any transaction involving the plan
on behalf of a party (or represent a
party) whose interests are adverse to the
interests of the plan or the interests of
its participants or beneficiaries.’’ As this
provision is not in the Code, it does not
apply to transactions involving IRAs.
ERISA section 406(b)(3) and Code
section 4975(c)(1)(F) prohibit a fiduciary
from receiving any consideration for his
own personal account from any party
dealing with the plan or IRA in
connection with a transaction involving
assets of the plan or IRA.
Parallel regulations issued by the
Departments of Labor and the Treasury
explain that these provisions impose on
fiduciaries of plans and IRAs a duty not
to act on conflicts of interest that may
affect the fiduciary’s best judgment on
behalf of the plan or IRA.11 The
prohibitions extend to a fiduciary
causing a plan or IRA to pay an
to the carve-out and its terms, the regulatory carveout is not limited to sellers but rather applies more
broadly to counterparties in arm’s length
transactions with plan investors with financial
expertise.
11 Subsequent to the issuance of these regulations,
Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App.
(2010), divided rulemaking and interpretive
authority between the Secretaries of Labor and the
Treasury. The Secretary of Labor was provided
interpretive and rulemaking authority regarding the
definition of fiduciary in both Title I of ERISA and
the Internal Revenue Code.
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additional fee to such fiduciary, or to a
person in which such fiduciary has an
interest that may affect the exercise of
the fiduciary’s best judgment as a
fiduciary. Likewise, a fiduciary is
prohibited from receiving compensation
from third parties in connection with a
transaction involving the plan or IRA, or
from causing a person in which the
fiduciary has an interest which may
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary to
receive such compensation.12 Given
these prohibitions, conferring fiduciary
status on particular investment advice
activities can have important
implications for many investment
professionals.
In particular, investment
professionals typically receive
compensation for services to retirement
investors in the retail market through a
variety of arrangements. These include
commissions paid by the plan,
participant or beneficiary, or IRA, or
commissions, sales loads, 12b–1 fees,
revenue sharing and other payments
from third parties that provide
investment products. The investment
professional or its affiliate may receive
such fees upon the purchase or sale by
a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA of the product, or while
the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, holds the product. In
the Department’s view, receipt by a
fiduciary of such payments would
violate the prohibited transaction
provisions of ERISA section 406(b) and
Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F)
because the amount of the fiduciary’s
compensation is affected by the use of
its authority in providing investment
advice, unless such payments meet the
requirements of an exemption.
Prohibited Transaction Exemptions
ERISA and the Code counterbalance
the broad proscriptive effect of the
prohibited transaction provisions with
numerous statutory exemptions. For
example, ERISA section 408(b)(14) and
Code section 4975(d)(17) specifically
exempt transactions in connection with
the provision of fiduciary investment
advice to a participant or beneficiary of
an individual account plan or IRA
owner where the advice, resulting
transaction, and the adviser’s fees meet
certain conditions. The Secretary of
Labor may grant administrative
exemptions under ERISA and the Code
on an individual or class basis if the
Secretary finds that the exemption is (1)
administratively feasible, (2) in the
interests of plans and their participants
and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
12 29 CFR 2550.408b–2(e); 26 CFR 54.4975–
6(a)(5).
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(3) protective of the rights of the
participants and beneficiaries of such
plans and IRA owners.
Over the years, the Department has
granted several conditional
administrative class exemptions from
the prohibited transactions provisions of
ERISA and the Code. The exemptions
focus on specific types of compensation
arrangements. Fiduciaries relying on
these exemptions must comply with
certain conditions designed to protect
the interests of plans and IRAs. In
connection with the development of the
Proposed Regulation, the Department
has considered comments suggesting the
need for additional prohibited
transaction exemptions for the wide
variety of compensation structures that
exist today in the marketplace for
investments. Some commentators have
suggested that the lack of such relief
may cause financial professionals to cut
back on the provision of investment
advice and the availability of products
to plan participants and beneficiaries,
IRAs, and smaller plans.
After consideration of the issue, the
Department has determined to propose
the new class exemption described
below, which applies to investment
advice fiduciaries providing advice to
plan participants and beneficiaries,
IRAs, and certain employee benefit
plans with fewer than 100 participants
(referred to as ‘‘retirement investors’’).
The exemption would apply broadly to
many common types of otherwise
prohibited compensation that such
investment advice fiduciaries may
receive, provided the protective
conditions of the exemption are
satisfied. The Department is also
seeking public comment on whether it
should issue a separate streamlined
exemption that would allow advisers to
receive otherwise prohibited
compensation in connection with
advice to invest in certain high-quality
low-fee investments, subject to fewer
conditions.
Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, the Department is also
proposing a new class exemption for
‘‘principal transactions’’ for investment
advice fiduciaries selling certain debt
securities out of their own inventories to
plans and IRAs.
Lastly, the Department is also
proposing, elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, amendments to the
following existing class prohibited
exemptions, which are particularly
relevant to broker-dealers and other
investment advice fiduciaries.
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Prohibited Transaction Exemption
(PTE) 86–128 13 currently allows an
investment advice fiduciary to cause a
plan or IRA to pay the investment
advice fiduciary or its affiliate a fee for
effecting or executing securities
transactions as agent. To prevent
churning, the exemption does not apply
if such transactions are excessive in
either amount or frequency. The
exemption also allows the investment
advice fiduciary to act as the agent for
both the plan and the other party to the
transaction (i.e., the buyer and the seller
of securities), and receive a reasonable
fee. To use the exemption, the fiduciary
cannot be a plan administrator or
employer, unless all profits earned by
these parties are returned to the plan.
The conditions of the exemption require
that a plan fiduciary independent of the
investment advice fiduciary receive
certain disclosures and authorize the
transaction. In addition, the
independent fiduciary must receive
confirmations and an annual ‘‘portfolio
turnover ratio’’ demonstrating the
amount of turnover in the account
during that year. These conditions are
not presently applicable to transactions
involving IRAs.
The Department is proposing to
amend PTE 86–128 to require all
fiduciaries relying on the exemption to
adhere to the same impartial conduct
standards required in the Best Interest
Contract Exemption. At the same time,
the proposed amendment would
eliminate relief for investment advice
fiduciaries to IRA owners; instead they
would be required to rely on the Best
Interest Contract Exemption for an
exemption for such compensation. In
the Department’s view, the provisions in
the Best Interest Contract Exemption
better address the interests of IRAs with
respect to transactions otherwise
covered by PTE 86–128 and, unlike plan
participants and beneficiaries, there is
no separate plan fiduciary in the IRA
market to review and authorize the
transaction. Investment advice
fiduciaries to plans would remain
eligible for relief under the exemption,
as would investment managers with full
investment discretion over the
investments of plans and IRA owners,
but they would be required to comply
with all the protective conditions,
described above. Finally, the
Department is proposing that PTE 86–
128 extend to a new covered
transaction, for fiduciaries to sell
mutual fund shares out of their own
13 Class Exemption for Securities Transactions
Involving Employee Benefit Plans and BrokerDealers, 51 FR 41686 (Nov. 18, 1986), amended at
67 FR 64137 (Oct. 17, 2002).
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inventory (i.e. acting as principals,
rather than agents) to plans and IRAs
and to receive commissions for doing
so. This transaction is currently the
subject of another exemption, PTE 75–
1, Part II(2) (discussed below) that the
Department is proposing to revoke.
Several changes are proposed with
respect to PTE 75–1, a multi-part
exemption for securities transactions
involving broker-dealers and banks, and
plans and IRAs.14 Part I(b) and (c)
currently provide relief for certain nonfiduciary services to plans and IRAs.
The Department is proposing to revoke
these provisions, and require persons
seeking to engage in such transactions to
rely instead on the existing statutory
exemptions provided in ERISA section
408(b)(2) and Code section 4975(d)(2),
and the Department’s implementing
regulations at 29 CFR 2550.408b–2. In
the Department’s view, the conditions of
the statutory exemption are more
appropriate for the provision of services.
PTE 75–1, Part II(2), currently
provides relief for fiduciaries to receive
commissions for selling mutual fund
shares to plans and IRAs in a principal
transaction. As described above, the
Department is proposing to provide
relief for these types of transactions in
PTE 86–128, and so is proposing to
revoke PTE 75–1, Part II(2), in its
entirety. As discussed in more detail in
the notice of proposed amendment/
revocation, the Department believes the
conditions of PTE 86–128 are more
appropriate for these transactions.
PTE 75–1, Part V, currently permits
broker-dealers to extend credit to a plan
or IRA in connection with the purchase
or sale of securities. The exemption
does not permit broker-dealers that are
fiduciaries to receive compensation
when doing so. The Department is
proposing to amend PTE 75–1, Part V,
to permit investment advice fiduciaries
to receive compensation for lending
money or otherwise extending credit to
plans and IRAs, but only for the limited
purpose of avoiding a failed securities
transaction.
PTE 84–24 15 covers transactions
involving mutual fund shares, or
insurance or annuity contracts, sold to
plans or IRAs by pension consultants,
insurance agents, brokers, and mutual
fund principal underwriters who are
14 Exemptions from Prohibitions Respecting
Certain Classes of Transactions Involving Employee
Benefit Plans and Certain Broker-Dealers, Reporting
Dealers and Banks, 40 FR 50845 (Oct. 31, 1975), as
amended at 71 FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
15 Class Exemption for Certain Transactions
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension
Consultants, Insurance Companies, Investment
Companies and Investment Company Principal
Underwriters, 49 FR 13208 (Apr. 3, 1984), amended
at 71 FR 5887 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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fiduciaries as a result of advice they give
in connection with these transactions.
The exemption allows these investment
advice fiduciaries to receive a sales
commission with respect to products
purchased by plans or IRAs. The
exemption is limited to sales
commissions that are reasonable under
the circumstances. The investment
advice fiduciary must provide
disclosure of the amount of the
commission and other terms of the
transaction to an independent fiduciary
of the plan or IRA, and obtain approval
for the transaction. To use this
exemption, the investment advice
fiduciary may not have certain roles
with respect to the plan or IRA such as
trustee, plan administrator, or fiduciary
with written authorization to manage
the plan’s assets and employers.
However it is available to investment
advice fiduciaries regardless of whether
they expressly acknowledge their
fiduciary status or are simply functional
or ‘‘inadvertent’’ fiduciaries that have
not expressly agreed to act as fiduciary
advisers, provided there is no written
authorization granting them discretion
to acquire or dispose of the assets of the
plan or IRA.
The Department is proposing to
amend PTE 84–24 to require all
fiduciaries relying on the exemption to
adhere to the same impartial conduct
standards required in the Best Interest
Contract Exemption. At the same time,
the proposed amendment would revoke
PTE 84–24 in part so that investment
advice fiduciaries to IRA owners would
not be able to rely on PTE 84–24 with
respect to (1) transactions involving
variable annuity contracts and other
annuity contracts that constitute
securities under federal securities laws,
and (2) transactions involving the
purchase of mutual fund shares.
Investment advice fiduciaries would
instead be required to rely on the Best
Interest Contract Exemption for
compensation received in connection
with these transactions. The Department
believes that investment advice
transactions involving annuity contracts
that are treated as securities and
transactions involving the purchase of
mutual fund shares should occur under
the conditions of the Best Interest
Contract Exemption due to the
similarity of these investments,
including their distribution channels
and disclosure obligations, to other
investments covered in the Best Interest
Contract Exemption. Investment advice
fiduciaries to ERISA plans would
remain eligible for relief under the
exemption with respect to transactions
involving all insurance and annuity
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contracts and mutual fund shares and
the receipt of commissions allowable
under that exemption. Investment
advice fiduciaries to IRAs could still
receive commissions for transactions
involving non-securities insurance and
annuity contracts, but they would be
required to comply with all the
protective conditions, described above.
Finally, the Department is proposing
amendments to certain other existing
class exemptions to require adherence
to the impartial conduct standards
required in the Best Interest Contract
Exemption. Specifically, PTEs 75–1,
Part III, 75–1, Part IV, 77–4, 80–83, and
83–1, would be amended. Other than
the amendments described above,
however, the existing class exemptions
will remain in place, affording
additional flexibility to fiduciaries who
currently use the exemptions or who
wish to use the exemptions in the
future. The Department seeks comment
on whether additional exemptions are
needed in light of the Proposed
Regulation.
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Proposed Best Interest Contract
Exemption
As noted above, the exemption
proposed in this notice provides relief
for some of the same compensation
payments as the existing exemptions
described above. It is intended,
however, to flexibly accommodate a
wide range of current business
practices, while minimizing the harmful
impact of conflicts of interest on the
quality of advice. The exemption
permits fiduciaries to continue to
receive a wide variety of types of
compensation that would otherwise be
prohibited. It seeks to preserve
beneficial business models by taking a
standards-based approach that will
broadly permit firms to continue to rely
on common fee practices, as long as
they are willing to adhere to basic
standards aimed at ensuring that their
advice is in the best interest of their
customers. This standards-based
approach stands in marked contrast to
existing class exemptions that generally
focus on very specific types of
investments or compensation and take a
highly prescriptive approach to
specifying conditions. The proposed
exemption would provide relief for
common investments 16 of retirement
investors under the umbrella of one
exemption. It is intended that this
updated approach will ease compliance
costs and reduce complexity while
16 See Section VIII(c) of the proposed exemption,
defining the term ‘‘Asset,’’ and the preamble
discussion in the ‘‘Scope of Relief in the Best
Interest Contract Exemption’’ section below.
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promoting the provision of investment
advice that is in the best interest of
retirement investors.
Section I of the proposed exemption
would provide relief for the receipt of
prohibited compensation by ‘‘Advisers,’’
‘‘Financial Institutions,’’ ‘‘Affiliates’’
and ‘‘Related Entities’’ for services
provided in connection with a purchase,
sale or holding of an ‘‘Asset’’ 17 by a
plan or IRA as a result of the Adviser’s
advice. The exemption also uses the
term ‘‘Retirement Investor’’ to describe
the types of persons who can be advice
recipients under the exemption.18 These
terms are defined in Section VIII of this
proposed exemption. The following
sections discuss these key definitional
terms of the exemption as well as the
scope and conditions of the proposed
exemption.
Entities Defined
1. Adviser
The proposed exemption
contemplates that an individual person,
an Adviser, will provide advice to the
Retirement Investor. An Adviser must
be an investment advice fiduciary of a
plan or IRA who is an employee,
independent contractor, agent, or
registered representative of a ‘‘Financial
Institution’’ (discussed in the next
section), and the Adviser must satisfy
the applicable federal and state
regulatory and licensing requirements of
insurance, banking, and securities laws
with respect to the receipt of the
compensation.19 Advisers may be, for
example, registered representatives of
broker-dealers registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or
insurance agents or brokers.
2. Financial Institutions
For purposes of the proposed
exemption, a Financial Institution is the
entity that employs an Adviser or
otherwise retains the Adviser as an
independent contractor, agent or
registered representative.20 Financial
Institutions must be registered
investment advisers, banks, insurance
companies, or registered broker-dealers.
3. Affiliates and Related Entities
Relief is also proposed for the receipt
of otherwise prohibited compensation
by ‘‘Affiliates’’ and ‘‘Related Entities’’
17 See
Section VIII(c) of the proposed exemption.
the Department uses the term
‘‘Retirement Investor’’ throughout this document,
the proposed exemption is not limited only to
investment advice fiduciaries of employee pension
benefit plans and IRAs. Relief would be available
for investment advice fiduciaries of employee
welfare benefit plans as well.
19 See Section VIII(a) of the proposed exemption.
20 See Section VIII(e) of the proposed exemption.
18 While
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with respect to the Adviser or Financial
Institution.21 Affiliates are (i) any
person directly or indirectly through
one or more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with the Adviser or Financial
Institution; (ii) any officer, director,
employee, agent, registered
representative, relative, member of
family, or partner in, the Adviser or
Financial Institution; and (iii) any
corporation or partnership of which the
Adviser or Financial Institution is an
officer, director or employee or in which
the Adviser or Financial Institution is a
partner. For this purpose, ‘‘control’’
means the power to exercise a
controlling influence over the
management or policies of a person
other than an individual. Related
Entities are entities other than Affiliates
in which an Adviser or Financial
Institution has an interest that may
affect their exercise of their best
judgment as fiduciaries.
4. Retirement Investor
The proposed exemption uses the
term ‘‘Retirement Investor’’ to describe
the types of persons who can be
investment advice recipients under the
exemption. The Retirement Investor
may be a plan participant or beneficiary
with authority to direct the investment
of assets in his or her plan account or
to take a distribution; in the case of an
IRA, the beneficial owner of the IRA
(i.e., the IRA owner); or a plan sponsor
(or an employee, officer or director
thereof) of a non-participant-directed
ERISA plan that has fewer than 100
participants.22
Scope of Relief in the Best Interest
Contract Exemption
The Best Interest Contract Exemption
set forth in Section I would provide
prohibited transaction relief for the
receipt by Advisers, Financial
Institutions, Affiliates and Related
Entities of a wide variety of
compensation forms as a result of
investment advice provided to the
Retirement Investors, if the conditions
of the exemption are satisfied.
Specifically, Section I(b) of the
proposed exemption provides that the
exemption would permit an Adviser,
Financial Institution and their Affiliates
and Related Entities to receive
compensation for services provided in
connection with the purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset by a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, as a result of an Adviser’s or
21 See Section VIII(b) and (k) of the proposed
exemption.
22 See Section VIII(l) of the proposed exemption.
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Financial Institution’s investment
advice to a Retirement Investor.
The proposed exemption would apply
to the restrictions of ERISA section
406(b) and the sanctions imposed by
Code section 4975(a) and (b), by reason
of Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F).
These provisions prohibit conflict of
interest transactions and receipt of
third-party payments by investment
advice fiduciaries.23 For relief to be
available under the exemption, the
Adviser and Financial Institution must
comply with the applicable conditions,
including entering into a contract that
acknowledges fiduciary status and
requires adherence to certain Impartial
Conduct Standards.
The types of compensation payments
contemplated by this proposed
exemption include commissions paid
directly by the plan or IRA, as well as
commissions, trailing commissions,
sales loads, 12b–1 fees, and revenue
sharing payments paid by the
investment providers or other third
parties to Advisers and Financial
Institutions. The exemption also would
cover other compensation received by
the Adviser, Financial Institution or
their Affiliates and Related Entities as a
result of an investment by a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, such as investment management
fees or administrative services fees from
an investment vehicle in which the
plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA invests.
As proposed, the exemption is limited
to otherwise prohibited compensation
generated by investments that are
commonly purchased by plans,
participant and beneficiary accounts,
and IRAs. Accordingly, the exemption
defines the ‘‘Assets’’ that can be sold
under the exemption as bank deposits,
CDs, shares or interests in registered
investment companies, bank collective
funds, insurance company separate
accounts, exchange-traded REITs,
exchange-traded funds, corporate bonds
offered pursuant to a registration
statement under the Securities Act of
1933, agency debt securities as defined
in FINRA Rule 6710(l) or its successor,
U.S. Treasury securities as defined in
FINRA Rule 6710(p) or its successor,
insurance and annuity contracts (both
securities and non-securities),
guaranteed investment contracts, and
equity securities within the meaning of
17 CFR 230.405 that are exchangetraded securities within the meaning of
17 CFR 242.600. However, the
23 Relief is also proposed from ERISA section
406(a)(1)(D) and Code section 4975(c)(1)(D), which
prohibit transfer of plan assets to, or use of plan
assets for the benefit of, a party in interest
(including a fiduciary).
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definition does not encompass any
equity security that is a security future
or a put, call, straddle, or any other
option or privilege of buying an equity
security from or selling an equity
security to another without being bound
to do so.24
Prohibited compensation received for
investments that fall outside the
definition of Asset would not be
covered by the exemption. Limiting the
exemption in this manner ensures that
the investments needed to build a basic
diversified portfolio are available to
plans, participant and beneficiary
accounts, and IRAs, while limiting the
exemption to those investments that are
relatively transparent and liquid, many
of which have a ready market price. The
Department also notes that many
investment types and strategies that
would not be covered by the exemption
can be obtained through pooled
investment funds, such as mutual funds,
that are covered by the exemption.
Request for Comment. The
Department requests comment on the
proposed definition of Assets, in
particular:
• Do commenters agree we have
identified all common investments of
retail investors?
• Have we defined individual
investment products with enough
precision that parties will know if they
are complying with this aspect of the
exemption?
• Should additional investments be
included in the scope of the exemption?
Commenters urging addition of other
investment products should fully
describe the characteristics and fee
structures associated with the products,
as well as data supporting their position
that the product is a common
investment for retail investors.
The Department encourages parties to
apply to the Department for individual
or class exemptions for types of
investments not covered by the
exemption to the extent that they
believe the proposed package of
exemptions does not adequately cover
beneficial investment practices for
which appropriate protections could be
crafted in an exemption.
Limitation to Prohibited Compensation
Received As a Result of Advice to
Retirement Investors
The Department proposed this
exemption to promote the provision of
investment advice to retail investors
that is in their best interest and
untainted by conflicts of interest. The
exemption would permit receipt by
Advisers and Financial Institutions of
24 See
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21967
otherwise prohibited compensation
commonly received in the retail market,
such as commissions, 12b–1 fees, and
revenue sharing payments, subject to
conditions designed specifically to
protect the interests of the investors. For
consistency with these objectives, the
exemption would apply to the receipt of
such compensation by Advisers,
Financial Institutions and their
Affiliates and Related Entities only
when advice is provided to retail
Retirement Investors, including plan
participants and beneficiaries, IRA
owners, and plan sponsors (including
the sponsor’s employees, officers, and
directors) acting on behalf of nonparticipant-directed plans that have
fewer than 100 participants. As
discussed in the preamble to the
Proposed Regulation and in the
associated Regulatory Impact Analysis,
these investors are particularly
vulnerable to abuse. The proposed
exemption is designed to protect these
investors from the harmful impact of
conflicts of interest, while minimizing
the potential disruption to a retail
market that relies upon many forms of
compensation that ERISA would
otherwise prohibit.
The Department believes that
investment advice in the institutional
market is best addressed through other
approaches. Accordingly, the proposed
exemption does not extend to
transactions involving certain larger
ERISA plans—those with more than 100
participants. Advice providers to these
plans are already accustomed to
operating in a fiduciary environment
and within the framework of existing
prohibited transaction exemptions,
which tightly constrain the operation of
conflicts of interest. As a result,
including large plans within the
definition of Retirement Investor could
have the undesirable consequence of
reducing protections provided under
existing law to these investors, without
offsetting benefits. In particular, it could
have the undesirable effect of increasing
the number and impact of conflicts of
interest, rather than reducing or
mitigating them.
While the Department believes that
the Best Interest Contract Exemption is
not the appropriate way to address any
potential concerns about the impact of
the expanded fiduciary definition on
large plans, the Department agrees that
an adjustment is necessary to
accommodate arm’s length transactions
with plan investors with financial
expertise. Accordingly, as part of this
regulatory project, the Department has
separately proposed a seller’s carve-out
in the Proposed Conflict of Interest
Regulation. Under the terms of that
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carve-out, persons who provide
recommendations to certain ERISA plan
investors with financial expertise (but
not to plan participants or beneficiaries,
or IRA owners) can avoid fiduciary
status altogether. The seller’s carve-out
was developed to avoid the application
of fiduciary status to a plan’s
counterparty in an arm’s length
commercial transaction in which the
plan’s representative has no reasonable
expectation of impartial advice. When
the carve-out’s terms are satisfied, it is
available for transactions with plans
that have more than 100 participants.
The Department recognizes, however,
that there are smaller non-participantdirected plans for which the plan
sponsor (or an employee, officer or
director thereof) is responsible for
choosing the specific investments and
allocations for their participating
employees. The Department believes
that these small plan fiduciaries are
appropriately categorized with plan
participants and beneficiaries and IRA
owners, as retail investors. For this
reason, the proposed exemption’s
definition of Retirement Investor
includes plan sponsors (or employees,
officers and directors thereof) of plans
with fewer than 100 participants.25 As
a result, the exemption would extend to
advice providers to such smaller plans.
The proposed threshold of fewer than
100 participants is intended to
reasonably identify plans that will most
benefit from both the flexibility
provided by this exemption and the
protections embodied in its conditions.
The threshold also mirrors the Proposed
Regulations’ 100-or-more participant
threshold for the seller’s carve-out. That
threshold recognizes the generally
greater sophistication possessed by
larger plans’ discretionary fiduciaries, as
well as the greater vulnerability of retail
investors, such as small plans. As
explained in more detail in the
preamble to the Proposed Regulation,
investment recommendations to small
plans, IRA owners and plan participants
and beneficiaries do not fit the ‘‘arms
length’’ characteristics that the seller’s
carve-out is designed to preserve.
Recommendations to retail investors are
routinely presented as advice,
consulting, or financial planning
services. In the securities markets,
brokers’ suitability obligations generally
require a significant degree of
individualization, and research has
shown that disclaimers are ineffective in
25 The Department notes that plan participants
and beneficiaries in ERISA plans can be Retirement
Investors regardless of the number of participants
in such plan. Therefore, the 100-participant
limitation does not apply when advice is provided
directly to the participants and beneficiaries.
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alerting typically unsophisticated
investors to the dangers posed by
conflicts of interest, and may even
exacerbate the dangers. Most retail
investors lack financial expertise, are
unaware of the magnitude and impact of
conflicts of interest, and are unable
effectively to assess the quality of the
advice they receive.
The 100 or more threshold is also
consistent with that applicable for
similar purposes under existing rules
and practices. The Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
(RFA) imposes certain requirements
with respect to Federal rules that are
subject to the notice and comment
requirements of section 553(b) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
551 et seq.) and which are likely to have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. For
purposes of the RFA, the Department
considers a small entity to be an
employee benefit plan with fewer than
100 participants. The basis of this
definition is found in section 104(a)(2)
of ERISA that permits the Secretary of
Labor to prescribe simplified annual
reports for pension plans that cover
fewer than 100 participants. Under
current Department rules, such small
plans generally are eligible for
streamlined reporting and relieved of
related audit requirements.
The Department invites comment on
the proposed exemption’s limitation to
prohibited compensation received as a
result of advice to Retirement Investors.
In particular, we ask whether
commenters support the limitation as
currently formulated, whether the
definitions should be revised, or
whether there should not be an
exclusion with respect to such larger
plans at all. Commenters on this subject
are also encouraged to address the
interaction of the exemption’s limitation
with the scope of the seller’s carve-out
in the Proposed Regulation. Finally, we
request comment on whether the
exemption should be expanded to cover
advice to plan sponsors (including the
sponsor’s employees, officers, and
directors) of participant-directed plans
with fewer than 100 participants on the
composition of the menu of investment
options available under such plans, and
if so, whether additional or different
conditions should apply.
Exclusions in Section I(c) of the
Proposed Exemption
Section I(c) of the proposal sets forth
additional exclusions from the
exemption. Section I(c)(1) provides that
the exemption would not apply to the
receipt of prohibited compensation from
a transaction involving an ERISA plan if
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the Adviser, Financial Institution or
Affiliate is the employer of employees
covered by the ERISA plan. The
Department believes that due to the
special nature of the employer/
employee relationship, an exemption
permitting an Adviser and Financial
Institution to profit from investments by
employees in their employer-sponsored
plan would not be in the interest of, or
protective of, the plans and their
participants and beneficiaries. This
restriction does not apply, however, in
the case of an IRA or other similar plan
that is not covered by Title I of ERISA.
Accordingly, an Adviser or Financial
Institution may provide advice to the
beneficial owner of an IRA who is
employed by the Adviser, its Financial
Institution or an Affiliate, and receive
prohibited compensation as a result,
provided the IRA is not covered by Title
I of ERISA.
Section I(c)(1) further provides that
the exemption does not apply if the
Adviser or Financial Institution is a
named fiduciary or plan administrator,
as defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A))
with respect to an ERISA plan, or an
affiliate thereof, that was selected to
provide advice to the plan by a fiduciary
who is not independent of them.26 This
provision is intended to disallow
selection of Advisers and Financial
Institutions by named fiduciaries or
plan administrators that have an interest
in them.
Section I(c)(2) provides that the
exemption does not extend to
prohibited compensation received when
the Adviser engages in a principal
transaction with the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA.27 A
principal transaction is a transaction in
which the Adviser engages in a
transaction with the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, on behalf of
the account of the Financial Institution
or another person directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with the Financial
Institution. Principal transactions
involve conflicts of interest not
addressed by the safeguards of this
proposed exemption. Elsewhere in
today’s Federal Register, the
Department is proposing an exemption
for investment advice fiduciaries to
engage in principal transactions
involving certain debt securities. The
proposed exemption for principal
transactions contains conditions
26 See Section VIII(f), defining the term
‘‘Independent.’’
27 For purposes of this proposed exemption,
however, the Department does not view a riskless
principal transaction involving mutual fund shares
as an excluded principal transaction.
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specific to those transactions but is
designed to align with this proposed
exemption so as to ease parties’ ability
to comply with both exemptions with
respect to the same investor.
Section I(c)(3) provides that the
exemption would not cover prohibited
compensation that is received by an
Adviser or Financial Institution as a
result of investment advice that is
generated solely by an interactive Web
site in which computer software-based
models or applications provide
investment advice to Retirement
Investors based on personal information
each investor supplies through the Web
site without any personal interaction or
advice from an individual Adviser.
Such computer derived advice is often
referred to as ‘‘robo-advice.’’ While the
Department believes that computer
generated advice that is delivered in this
manner may be very useful to
Retirement Investors, relief will not be
included in the proposal. As the
marketplace for such advice is still
evolving in ways that both appear to
avoid conflicts of interest that would
violate the prohibited transaction rules,
and minimize cost, the Department
believes that inclusion of such advice in
this exemption could adversely modify
the incentives currently shaping the
market for robo-advice. Furthermore, a
statutory prohibited transaction
exemption at ERISA section 408(g)
covers computer-generated investment
advice and is available for robo-advice
involving prohibited transactions if its
conditions are satisfied. See 29 CFR
2550.408g–1.
Finally, Section I(c)(4) provides that
the exemption is limited to Advisers
who are fiduciaries by reason of
providing investment advice.28 Advisers
who have full investment discretion
with respect to plan or IRA assets or
who have discretionary authority over
the administration of the plan or IRA,
for example, are not affected by the
Proposed Regulation and are therefore
not the subject of this exemption.
Conditions of the Proposed Exemption
Sections II–V of the proposal list the
conditions applicable to the Best
Interest Contract Exemption described
in Section I. All applicable conditions
must be satisfied in order to avoid
application of the specified prohibited
transaction provisions of ERISA and the
Code. The Department believes that
these conditions are necessary for the
Secretary to find that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the
interests of plans and of their
28 See also Section VIII(a), defining the term
‘‘Adviser.’’
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participants and beneficiaries, and IRA
owners and protective of the rights of
the participants and beneficiaries of
such plans and IRA owners. Under
ERISA section 408(a)(2), and Code
section 4975(c)(2), the Secretary may
not grant an exemption without making
such findings. The proposed conditions
of the exemption are described below.
Contractual Obligations Applicable to
the Best Interest Contract Exemption
(Section II)
Section II(a) of the proposal requires
that an Adviser and Financial
Institution enter into a written contract
with the Retirement Investor prior to
recommending that the plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or IRA,
purchase, sell or hold an Asset. The
contract must be executed by both the
Adviser and the Financial Institution as
well as the Retirement Investor. In the
case of advice provided to a plan
participant or beneficiary in a
participant-directed individual account
plan, the participant or beneficiary
should be the Retirement Investor that
is the party to the contract, on behalf of
his or her individual account.
The contract may be part of a master
agreement with the Retirement Investor
and does not require execution prior to
each additional recommendation to
purchase, sell or hold an Asset. The
exemption, in particular the
requirement to adhere to a best interest
standard, does not mandate an ongoing
or long-term advisory relationship, but
rather leaves that to the parties. The
terms of the contract, along with other
representations, agreements, or
understandings between the Adviser,
Financial Institution and Retirement
Investor, will govern whether the nature
of the relationship between the parties
is ongoing or not.
The contract is the cornerstone of the
proposed exemption, and the
Department believes that by requiring a
contract as a condition of the proposed
exemption, it creates a mechanism by
which a Retirement Investor can be
alerted to the Adviser’s and Financial
Institution’s obligations and be provided
with a basis upon which its rights can
be enforced. In order to comply with the
exemption, the contract must contain
every required element set forth in
Section II(b)–(e) and also must not
include any of the prohibited provisions
described in Section II(f). It is intended
that the contract creates actionable
obligations with respect to both the
Impartial Conduct Standards and the
warranties, described below. In
addition, failure to satisfy the Impartial
Conduct Standards will result in loss of
the exemption.
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It should be noted, however, that
compliance with the exemption’s
conditions is necessary only with
respect to transactions that otherwise
would constitute prohibited
transactions under ERISA and the Code.
The exemption does not purport to
impose conditions on the management
of investments held outside of ERISAcovered plans and IRAs. Accordingly,
the contract and its conditions are
mandatory only with respect to
investments held by plans and IRAs.
1. Fiduciary Status
The proposal sets forth multiple
contractual requirements. The first and
most fundamental contractual
requirement, which is set out in Section
II(b) of proposal, is that that both the
Adviser and Financial Institution must
acknowledge fiduciary status under
ERISA or the Code, or both, with respect
to any recommendations to the
Retirement Investor to purchase, sell or
hold an Asset. If this acknowledgment
of fiduciary status does not appear in a
contract with a Retirement Investor, the
exemption is not satisfied with respect
to transactions involving that
Retirement Investor. This fiduciary
acknowledgment is critical to ensuring
that there is no uncertainty—before or
after investment advice is given with
regard to the Asset—that both the
Adviser and Financial Institution are
acting as fiduciaries under ERISA and
the Code with respect to that advice.
The acknowledgment of fiduciary
status in the contract is nonetheless
limited to the advice to the Retirement
Investor to purchase, sell or hold the
Asset. The Adviser and Financial
Institution do not become fiduciaries
with respect to any other conduct by
virtue of this contractual requirement.
2. Standards of Impartial Conduct
Building upon the required
acknowledgment of fiduciary status, the
proposal additionally requires that both
the Adviser and the Financial
Institution contractually commit to
adhering to certain specifically
delineated Impartial Conduct Standards
when providing investment advice to
the Retirement Investor regarding
Assets, and that they in fact do adhere
to such standards. Therefore, if an
Adviser and/or Financial Institution fail
to comply with the Impartial Conduct
Standards, relief under the exemption is
no longer available and the contract is
violated.
Specifically, Section II(c)(1) of the
proposal requires that under the
contract the Adviser and Financial
Institution provide advice regarding
Assets that is in the ‘‘best interest’’ of
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the Retirement Investor. Best interest is
defined to mean that the Adviser and
Financial Institution act with the care,
skill, prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a
prudent person would exercise based on
the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and
the needs of the Retirement Investor,
when providing investment advice to
them. Further, under the best interest
standard, the Adviser and Financial
Institution must act without regard to
the financial or other interests of the
Adviser, Financial Institution or their
Affiliates or any other party. Under this
standard, the Adviser and Financial
Institution must put the interests of the
Retirement Investor ahead of the
financial interests of the Adviser,
Financial Institution or their Affiliates,
Related Entities or any other party.
The best interest standard set forth in
this exemption is based on longstanding
concepts derived from ERISA and the
law of trusts. For example, ERISA
section 404 requires a fiduciary to act
‘‘solely in the interest of the participants
. . . with the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then
prevailing that a prudent man acting in
a like capacity and familiar with such
matters would use in the conduct of an
enterprise of a like character and with
like aims.’’ Similarly, both ERISA
section 404(a)(1)(A) and the trust-law
duty of loyalty require fiduciaries to put
the interests of trust beneficiaries first,
without regard to the fiduciaries’ own
self-interest. Accordingly, the
Department would expect the standard
to be interpreted in light of forty years
of judicial experience with ERISA’s
fiduciary standards and hundreds more
with the duties imposed on trustees
under the common law of trusts. In
general, courts focus on the process the
fiduciary used to reach its
determination or recommendation—
whether the fiduciaries, ‘‘at the time
they engaged in the challenged
transactions, employed the proper
procedures to investigate the merits of
the investment and to structure the
investment.’’ Donovan v. Mazzola, 716
F.2d 1226, 1232 (9th Cir. 1983).
Moreover, a fiduciary’s investment
recommendation is measured based on
the circumstances prevailing at the time
of the transaction, not on how the
investment turned out with the benefit
of hindsight.
In this regard, the Department notes
that while fiduciaries of plans covered
by ERISA are subject to the ERISA
section 404 standards of prudence and
loyalty, the Code contains no provisions
that hold IRA fiduciaries to these
standards. However, as a condition of
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relief under the proposed exemption,
both IRA and plan fiduciaries would
have to agree to, and uphold, the best
interest and Impartial Conduct
Standards, as set forth in Section II(c).
The best interest standard is defined to
effectively mirror the ERISA section 404
duties of prudence and loyalty, as
applied in the context of fiduciary
investment advice.
In addition to the best interest
standard, the exemption imposes other
important standards of impartial
conduct in Section II(c) of the proposal.
Section II(c)(2) requires that the Adviser
and Financial Institution agree that they
will not recommend an Asset if the total
amount of compensation anticipated to
be received by the Adviser, Financial
Institution, and their Affiliates and
Related Entities in connection with the
purchase, sale or holding of the Asset by
the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, will exceed reasonable
compensation in relation to the total
services they provide to the applicable
Retirement Investor. The obligation to
pay no more than reasonable
compensation to service providers is
long recognized under ERISA. See
ERISA section 408(b)(2), 29 CFR
2550.408b–2(a)(3), and 29 CFR
2550.408c–2. The reasonableness of the
fees depends on the particular facts and
circumstances. Finally, Section II(c)(3)
requires that the Adviser’s and
Financial Institution’s statements about
Assets, fees, material conflicts of
interest, and any other matters relevant
to a Retirement Investor’s investment
decisions, not be misleading.
Under ERISA section 408(a) and Code
section 4975(c), the Department cannot
grant an exemption unless it first finds
that the exemption is administratively
feasible, in the interests of plans and
their participants and beneficiaries and
IRA owners, and protective of the rights
of participants and beneficiaries of
plans and IRA owners. An exemption
permitting transactions that violate the
requirements of Section II(c) would be
unlikely to meet these standards.
3. Warranty—Compliance With
Applicable Law
Section II(d) of the proposal requires
that the contract include certain
warranties intended to be protective of
the rights of Retirement Investors. In
particular, to satisfy the exemption, the
Adviser, and Financial Institution must
warrant that they and their Affiliates
will comply with all applicable federal
and state laws regarding the rendering
of the investment advice, the purchase,
sale or holding of the Asset and the
payment of compensation related to the
purchase, sale and holding. Although
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this warranty must be included in the
contract, the exemption is not
conditioned on compliance with the
warranty. Accordingly, the failure to
comply with applicable federal or state
law could result in contractual liability
for breach of warranty, but it would not
result in loss of the exemption, as long
as the breach did not involve a violation
of one of the exemption’s other
conditions (e.g., the best interest
standard). De minimis violations of state
or federal law would be unlikely to
violate the exemption’s other
conditions, such as the best interest
standard, and would not typically result
in the loss of the exemption.
4. Warranty—Policies and Procedures
The Financial Institution must also
contractually warrant that it has
adopted written policies and procedures
that are reasonably designed to mitigate
the impact of material conflicts of
interest that exist with respect to the
provision of investment advice to
Retirement Investors and ensure that
individual Advisers adhere to the
Impartial Conduct Standards described
above. For purposes of the exemption, a
material conflict of interest is deemed to
exist when an Adviser or Financial
Institution has a financial interest that
could affect the exercise of its best
judgment as a fiduciary in rendering
advice to a Retirement Investor
regarding an Asset.29 Like the warranty
on compliance with applicable law,
discussed above, this warranty must be
in the contract but the exemption is not
conditioned on compliance with the
warranty. Failure to comply with the
warranty could result in contractual
liability for breach of warranty.
As part of the contractual warranty on
policies and procedures, the Financial
Institution must state that in
formulating its policies and procedures,
it specifically identified material
conflicts of interest and adopted
measures to prevent those material
conflicts of interest from causing
violations of the Impartial Conduct
Standards. Further, the Financial
Institution must state that neither it nor
(to the best of its knowledge) its
Affiliates or Related Entities will use
quotas, appraisals, performance or
personnel actions, bonuses, contests,
special awards, differentiated
compensation or other actions or
incentives to the extent they would tend
to encourage individual Advisers to
make recommendations that are not in
the best interest of Retirement Investors.
While these warranties must be part
of the contract between the Adviser and
29 See
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Financial Institution and the Retirement
Investor, the proposal does not mandate
the specific content of the policies and
procedures. This flexibility is intended
to allow Financial Institutions to
develop policies and procedures that are
effective for their particular business
models, within the constraints of their
fiduciary obligations and the Impartial
Conduct Standards.
Under the proposal, a Financial
Institution’s policies and procedures
must not authorize compensation or
incentive systems that would tend to
encourage individual Advisers to make
recommendations that are not in the
best interest of Retirement Investors.
Consistent with the general approach in
the proposal to the Financial
Institution’s policies and procedures,
however, there are no particular
required compensation or employment
structures. Certainly, one way for a
Financial Institution to comply is to
adopt a ‘‘level-fee’’ structure, in which
compensation for Advisers does not
vary based on the particular investment
product recommended. But the
exemption does not mandate such a
structure. The Department believes that
the specific implementation of this
requirement is best determined by the
Financial Institution in light of its
particular circumstances and business
models.
For further clarification, the
Department sets forth the following
examples of broad approaches to
compensation structures that could help
satisfy the contractual warranty
regarding the policies and procedures.
In connection with all these examples,
it is important that the Financial
Institution carefully monitor whether
the policies and procedures are, in fact,
working to prevent the provision of
biased advice. The Financial Institution
must correct isolated or systemic
violations of the Impartial Conduct
Standards and reasonably revise
policies and procedures when failures
are identified.
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Example 1: Independently certified
computer models.30 The Adviser provides
30 These examples should not be read as
retracting views the Department expressed in prior
Advisory Opinions regarding how an investment
advice fiduciary could avoid prohibited
transactions that might result from differential
compensation arrangements. Specifically, in
Advisory Opinion 2001–09A, the Department
concluded that the provision of fiduciary
investment advice would not result in prohibited
transactions under circumstances where the advice
provided by the fiduciary with respect to
investment funds that pay additional fees to the
fiduciary is the result of the application of
methodologies developed, maintained and overseen
by a party independent of the fiduciary in
accordance with the conditions set forth in the
Advisory Opinion. A computer model also can be
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investment advice that is in accordance with
an unbiased computer model created by an
independent third party. Under this example,
the Adviser can receive any form or amount
of compensation so long as the advice is
rendered in strict accordance with the
model.31
Example 2: Asset-based compensation. The
Financial Institution pays the Adviser a
percentage, which does not vary based on the
types of investments, of the dollar amount of
assets invested by the plans, participant and
beneficiary accounts, and IRAs with the
Adviser. Under this example, assume the
Financial Institution established the
percentage as 0.1% on a quarterly basis. If a
plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, invested a total of $10,000 with the
Adviser, divided 25% in equity securities,
50% in proprietary mutual funds, and 25%
in bonds underwritten by non-Related
Entities, and did not withdraw any of the
money within the quarter, the Adviser would
receive 0.1% of the $10,000.
Example 3: Fee offset. The Financial
Institution establishes a fee schedule for its
services. It accepts transaction-based
payments directly from the plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or IRA, and/or from
third party investment providers. To the
extent the payments from third party
investment providers exceed the established
fee for a particular service, such amounts are
rebated to the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA. To the extent third party
payments do not satisfy the established fee,
the plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA is charged directly for the remaining
amount due.32
Example 4: Differential Payments Based
on Neutral Factors. The Financial Institution
establishes payment structures under which
transactions involving different investment
products result in differential compensation
to the Adviser based on a reasonable
assessment of the time and expertise
necessary to provide prudent advice on the
product or other reasonable and objective
neutral factors. For example, a Financial
Institution could compensate an Adviser
differently for advisory work relating to
annuities, as opposed to shares in a mutual
fund, if it reasonably determined that the
time to research and explain the products
differed. However, the payment structure
used as part of an advice arrangement that satisfies
the conditions under the prohibited transaction
exemption in ERISA section 408(b)(14) and (g),
described above.
31 As previously noted, this exemption is not
available for advice generated solely by a computer
model and provided to the Retirement Investor
electronically without live advice. Nevertheless,
this exemption remains available in the
hypothetical because the advice is delivered by a
live Adviser.
32 See footnote 31 supra. Certain types of feeoffset arrangements may result in avoidance of
prohibited transactions altogether. In Advisory
Opinion Nos. 97–15A and 2005–10A, the
Department explained that a fiduciary investment
adviser could provide investment advice to a plan
with respect to investment funds that pay it or an
affiliate additional fees without engaging in a
prohibited transaction if those fees are offset against
fees that the plan otherwise is obligated to pay to
the fiduciary.
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must be reasonably designed to avoid
incentives to Advisers to recommend
investment transactions that are not in
Retirement Investors’ best interest.
Example 5: Alignment of Interests. The
Financial Institution’s policies and
procedures establish a compensation
structure that is reasonably designed to align
the interests of the Adviser with the interests
of the Retirement Investor. For example, this
might include compensation that is primarily
asset-based, as discussed in Example 2, with
the addition of bonuses and other incentives
paid to promote advice that is in the Best
Interest of the Retirement Investor. While the
compensation would be variable, it would
align with the customer’s best interest.
These examples are not exhaustive,
and many other compensation and
employment arrangements may satisfy
the contractual warranties. The
exemption imposes a broad standard for
the warranty and policies and
procedures requirement, not an
inflexible and highly-prescriptive set of
rules. The Financial Institution retains
the latitude necessary to design its
compensation and employment
arrangements, provided that those
arrangements promote, rather than
undermine, the best interest and
Impartial Conduct Standards.
Whether a Financial Institution
adopts one of the specific approaches
taken in the examples above or a
different approach, the Department
expects that it will engage in a good
faith process to prudently establish and
oversee policies and procedures that
will effectively mitigate conflicts of
interest and ensure adherence to the
Impartial Conduct Standards. To this
end, Financial Institutions may also
want to consider designating an
individual or group responsible for
addressing material conflicts of interest
issues. An internal compliance officer or
a committee could monitor adherence to
the Impartial Conduct Standards and
consider ways to ensure compliance.
The individual or group could also
develop procedures for reporting
material conflicts of interest and for
handling external and internal
complaints within the Financial
Institution, and disciplinary measures
for non-compliance with the Impartial
Conduct Standards. Additionally,
Financial Institutions should consider
how best to inform and train individual
Advisers on the Impartial Conduct
Standards and other requirements of the
exemption.
Additionally, Financial Institutions
could consider the following
components of effective policies and
procedures relating to an Adviser’s
compensation: (i) Avoiding creating
compensation thresholds that enable an
Adviser to increase his or her
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compensation disproportionately
through an incremental increase in
sales; (ii) monitoring activity of
Advisers approaching compensation
thresholds such as higher payout
percentages, back-end bonuses, or
participation in a recognition club, such
as a President’s Club; (iii) maintaining
neutral compensation grids that pay the
Adviser a flat payout percentage
regardless of product type sold (so long
as they do not merely transmit the
Financial Institution’s conflicts to the
Adviser); (iv) refraining from providing
higher compensation or other rewards
for the sale of proprietary products or
products for which the firm has entered
into revenue sharing arrangements; (v)
stringently monitoring
recommendations around key liquidity
events in the investor’s lifecycle where
the recommendation is particularly
significant (e.g. when an investor rolls
over his pension or 401(k) account); and
(vi) developing metrics for good and bad
behavior (red flag processes) and using
clawbacks of deferred compensation to
adjust compensation for employees who
do not properly manage conflicts of
interest.33
The Department seeks comments on
all aspects of its discussion of the sorts
of policies and procedures that will
satisfy the required contractual
warranties of Section II(d)(2)–(4). In
particular, the Department requests
comments on whether the exemption
should be more prescriptive about the
terms of policies and procedures, or
provide more detailed examples of
acceptable policies and procedures. In
addition, the Department requests
comments on whether commenters
believe the examples describe policies
and procedures that would achieve the
investor-protective objectives of the
exemption.
5. Contractual Disclosures
Finally, Section II(e) of the proposal
requires certain disclosures in the
written contract. If the disclosures do
not appear in a contract with a
Retirement Investor, the exemption is
not satisfied with respect to transactions
involving that Retirement Investor.
First, Section II(e)(1) provides that the
Financial Institution and the Adviser
must identify in the written contract any
material conflicts of interest. This
disclosure may be a general description
of the types of material conflicts of
interest applicable to the Financial
Institution and Adviser, provided the
disclosure also informs the Retirement
Investor that a more specific description
33 See FINRA Report on Conflicts of Interest,
October 2013.
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that is kept current is available on the
Financial Institution’s Web site (web
address provided) and by mail, upon
request of the Retirement Investor.
Second, Section II(e)(2) requires that
the written contract must inform the
Retirement Investor of the right to
obtain complete information about all of
the fees currently associated with the
Assets in which it is invested, including
all of the fees payable to the Adviser,
Financial Institution, and any Affiliates
and Related Entities in connection with
such investments. The fee information
must be complete, and it must include
both the direct and the indirect fees
paid by the plan or IRA.34 Section
II(e)(3) provides that the written
contract also must disclose to the
Retirement Investor whether the
Financial Institution offers proprietary
products or receives third party
payments with respect to the purchase,
sale or holding of any Asset. Third party
payments, for purposes of this
exemption, are defined as sales charges
(when not paid directly by the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA), 12b–1 fees, and other payments
paid to the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate or Related
Entity by a third party as a result of the
purchase, sale or holding of an Asset by
a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA. A proprietary product
is defined for purposes of this
exemption as a product that is managed
by the Financial Institution or any of its
Affiliates. In conjunction with this
disclosure, the contract must provide
the address of a Web page that discloses
the compensation arrangements entered
into by the Adviser and the Financial
Institution, as required by Section III(c)
of the proposal and discussed below.
Enforcement of the Contractual
Obligations
The contractual requirements set forth
in Section II of the proposal are
enforceable. Plans, plan participants
and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and the
Department may use the contract as a
tool to ensure compliance with the
exemption. The Department notes,
however, that this contractual tool
creates different rights with respect to
34 To
the extent compliance with this information
request requires Advisers and Financial Institutions
to obtain such information from entities that are not
closely affiliated with them, the Adviser or
Financial Institution may supply such information
to the Retirement Investor in compliance with the
exemption provided the Adviser and Financial
Institution act in good faith and do not know that
the materials are incomplete or inaccurate. For
purposes of the proposed exemption, Affiliates
within the meaning of Section VIII(b)(1) and (2) are
considered closely affiliated such that the good
faith reliance would not apply.
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plans, participants and beneficiaries,
IRA owners and the Department.
1. IRA Owners
The contract between the IRA owner
and the Adviser and Financial
Institution forms the basis of the IRA
owner’s enforcement rights. As outlined
above, the contract embodies obligations
on the part of the Adviser and Financial
Institution. The Department intends that
all the contractual obligations (the
Impartial Conduct Standards and the
warranties) will be actionable by IRA
owners. The most important of these
contractual obligations for enforcement
purposes is the obligation imposed on
both the Adviser and the Financial
Institution to comply with the Impartial
Conduct Standards. Because these
standards are contractually imposed, the
IRA owner has a contract claim if, for
example, the Adviser recommends an
investment product that is not in the
best interest of the IRA owner.
2. Plans, Plan Participants and
Beneficiaries
The protections of the exemption and
contractual terms will also be
enforceable by plans, plan participants
and beneficiaries. Specifically, if an
Adviser or Financial Institution
received compensation in a prohibited
transaction but failed to satisfy any of
the Impartial Conduct Standards or any
other condition of the exemption, the
Adviser and Financial Institution would
be unable to qualify for relief under the
exemption, and, as a result, could be
liable under ERISA section 502(a)(2)
and (3). An Adviser’s failure to comply
with the exemption or the Impartial
Conduct Standards would result in a
non-exempt prohibited transaction and
would likely constitute a fiduciary
breach. As a result, a plan, plan
participant or beneficiary would be able
to sue under ERISA section 502(a)(2) or
(3) to recover any loss in value to the
plan (including the loss in value to an
individual account), or to obtain
disgorgement of any wrongful profits or
unjust enrichment. Additionally, plans,
participants and beneficiaries could
enforce their obligations in an action
based on breach of the agreement.
3. The Department
In addition, the Department would be
able to enforce ERISA’s prohibited
transaction and fiduciary duty
provisions with respect to employee
benefit plans, but not IRAs, in the event
that the Adviser or Financial Institution
received compensation in a prohibited
transaction but failed to comply with
the exemption or the Impartial Conduct
Standards. If, for example, any of the
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specific conditions of the exemption are
not met, the Adviser and Financial
Institution will have engaged in a nonexempt prohibited transaction, and the
Department will be entitled to seek
relief under ERISA section 502(a)(2) and
(5).
4. Excise Taxes Under the Code
In addition to the claims described
above that may be brought by IRA
owners, plans, plan participants and
beneficiaries, and the Department, to
enforce the contract and ERISA,
Advisers and Financial Institutions that
engage in prohibited transactions under
the Code are subject to an excise tax.
The excise tax is generally equal to 15%
of the amount involved. Parties who
have participated in a prohibited
transaction for which an exemption is
not available must pay the excise tax
and file Form 5330 with the Internal
Revenue Service.
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Prohibited Provisions
Finally, in order to preserve these
various enforcement rights, Section II(f)
of the proposal provides that certain
provisions may not be part of the
contract. If these provisions appear in a
contract with a Retirement Investor, the
exemption is not satisfied with respect
to transactions involving that
Retirement Investor. First, the proposal
requires that the contract may not
contain exculpatory provisions that
disclaim or otherwise limit liability for
an Adviser’s or Financial Institution’s
violations of the contract’s terms.
Second, the contract may not require the
Retirement Investor to agree to waive or
qualify its right to bring or participate in
a class action or other representative
action in court in a contract dispute
with the Adviser or Financial
Institution. The right of a Retirement
Investor to bring a class-action claim in
court (and the corresponding limitation
on fiduciaries’ ability to mandate classaction arbitration) is consistent with
FINRA’s position that its arbitral forum
is not the correct venue for class-action
claims. As proposed, this section would
not affect the ability of a Financial
Institution or Adviser, and a Retirement
Investor, to enter into a pre-dispute
binding arbitration agreement with
respect to individual contract claims.
The Department expects that most
individual arbitration claims under this
exemption will be subject to FINRA’s
arbitration procedures and consumer
protections. The Department seeks
comments on whether there are certain
procedures and/or consumer protections
that it should adopt or mandate for
those disputes not covered by FINRA.
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Disclosure Requirements for Best
Interest Contract Exemption (Section III)
In order to facilitate access to
information on Financial Institution and
Adviser compensation, the proposal
requires both public disclosure and
disclosure to Retirement Investors.
1. Web Page
Section III(c) of the proposal requires
that the Financial Institution maintain a
public Web page that provides several
different types of information. The Web
page must show the direct and indirect
material compensation payable to the
Adviser, Financial Institution and any
Affiliate for services provided in
connection with each Asset (or, if
uniform across a class of Assets, the
class of Assets) that a plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or an IRA, is able
to purchase, hold, or sell through the
Adviser or Financial Institution, and
that a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or an IRA has purchased, held,
or sold within the last 365 days, the
source of the compensation, and how
the compensation varies within and
among Asset classes. The Web page
must be updated at reasonable intervals,
not less than quarterly. The
compensation may be expressed as a
monetary amount, formula or
percentage of the assets involved in the
purchase, sale or holding.
The information provided by the Web
page will provide a broad base of
information about the various pricing
and compensation structures adopted by
Financial Institutions and Advisers. The
Department believes that the data
provided on the Web page will provide
information that can be used by
financial information companies to
analyze and provide information
comparing the practices of different
Advisers and Financial Institutions.
Such information will allow a
Retirement Investor to evaluate costs
and Advisers’ and Financial
Institutions’ compensation practices.
The Web page information must be
provided in a manner that is easily
accessible to a Retirement Investor and
the general public. Appendix I to this
notice is an exemplar of a possible web
disclosure. In addition, the Web page
must also contain a version of the same
information that is formatted in a
machine-readable manner. The
Department recognizes that machine
readable data can be formatted in many
ways. Therefore, the Department
requests comment on the format and
data fields that should be required
under such a condition.
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2. Individual Transactional Disclosure
In Section III(a), the exemption
requires point of sale disclosure to the
Retirement Investor, prior to the
execution of the investment transaction,
regarding the all-in cost and anticipated
future costs of recommended Assets.
The disclosure is designed to make as
clear and salient as possible the total
cost that the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA will incur
when following the Adviser’s
recommendation, and to provide cost
information that can be compared across
different Assets that are recommended
for investment. In addition, the
projection of the costs over various
holding periods would inform the
Retirement Investor of the cumulative
impact of the costs over time and of
potential costs when the investment is
sold.
As proposed, the disclosure
requirement of Section III(a) would be
provided in a summary chart designed
to direct the Retirement Investor’s
attention to a few important data points
regarding fees, in a time frame that
would enable the Retirement Investor to
discuss other (possibly less costly)
alternatives with the Adviser prior to
executing the transaction. The
disclosure chart does not have to be
provided again with respect to a
subsequent recommendation to
purchase the same investment product,
so long as the chart was previously
provided to the Retirement Investor
within the past 12 months and the total
cost has not materially changed.
To the extent compliance with the
point of sale disclosure requires
Advisers and Financial Institutions to
obtain cost information from entities
that are not closely affiliated with them,
they may rely in good faith on
information and assurances from the
other entities, as long as they do not
know that the materials are incomplete
or inaccurate. This good faith reliance
applies unless the entity providing the
information to the Adviser and
Financial Institution is (1) a person
directly or indirectly through one or
more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with the Adviser or Financial
Institution; or (2) any officer, director,
employee, agent, registered
representative, relative (as defined in
ERISA section 3(15)), member of family
(as defined in Code section 4975(e)(6))
of, or partner in, the Adviser or
Financial Institution.35
The required chart would disclose
with respect to each Asset
35 See proposed definition of Affiliate, Section
VIII(b)(1) and (b)(2).
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recommended, the ‘‘total cost’’ to the
plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, of the investment for 1-, 5- and
10-year periods expressed as a dollar
amount, assuming an investment of the
dollar amount recommended by the
Adviser, and reasonable assumptions
about investment performance, which
must be disclosed.
As defined in the proposal, the ‘‘total
cost’’ of investing in an asset means the
sum of the following, as applicable:
Acquisition costs, ongoing costs,
disposition costs, and any other costs
that reduce the asset’s rate of return, are
paid by direct charge to the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, or reduce the amounts received by
the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA (e.g., contingent fees,
such as back-end loads, including those
that phase out over time, with such
terms explained beneath the table). The
terms ‘‘acquisition costs,’’ ‘‘ongoing
costs,’’ and ‘‘disposition costs,’’ are
defined in the proposal. Appendix II to
this proposal contains a model chart
that may be used to provide the
information required under this section.
Use of the model chart is not
mandatory. However, use of an
appropriately completed model chart
will be deemed to satisfy the
requirement of Section III(a).
Request for comment. The
Department requests comment on the
design of this proposed point of sale
disclosure, as well as issues related to
the ability of the Adviser to provide the
disclosure and whether it will provide
information that is meaningful to
Retirement Investors. In general,
commenters are asked to address the
anticipated cost of compliance with the
point of sale disclosure and whether the
disclosure as we have described it will
provide information that is more useful
to Retirement Investors than other
similar disclosures that are required
under existing law. As discussed below
in more detail, the Department requests
comment on whether the disclosure can
be designed to provide information that
would result in a useful comparison
among Assets; whether it is feasible for
Advisers and Financial Institutions to
obtain reliable information to complete
the chart at the time it would be
required to be provided to the
Retirement Investor; and whether the
disclosure, without information on
other characteristics of the investment,
would improve Retirement Investors’
ability to make informed investment
decisions.
Design. As explained above, the
proposal contemplates a chart with the
following information: All-in cost of the
Asset, and the cost if held for 1-, 5-, and
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10 years. The all-in cost would be
calculated with the following
components: ‘‘acquisition costs,’’
‘‘ongoing costs,’’ ‘‘disposition costs,’’
and ‘‘other.’’ The Department seeks
comment on all aspects of this
approach. In particular, we ask:
• Are the all-in costs of the
investments permitted under the
proposal capable of being reflected
accurately in the chart?
• Are all-in costs already reflected in
the summary prospectuses for certain
investments?
• Have we correctly identified the
possible various costs associated with
the permitted investments?
• Should the point of sale disclosure
requirement be limited to certain events,
such as opening a new account or
rolling over existing investments? If so,
what changes would be needed to the
model chart?
• Are our proposed definitions of the
various costs clear enough to result in
information that is reasonably
comparable across different Financial
Institutions?
• Is it possible to attribute all the
costs to the account of a particular plan,
participant or beneficiary, or IRA?
• How should long-term costs be
measured?
Feasibility. The point of sale
disclosure is proposed to be an
individualized disclosure provided
prior to the execution of the transaction.
The Department seeks comment on
whether there are practical impediments
to the creation and disclosure of the
chart in the time frame proposed.
Therefore, we ask:
• Will Advisers and Financial
Institutions have access to the
information required to be disclosed in
the chart?
• Are there existing systems at
Financial Institutions that could
produce the disclosure required in this
proposal? If not, what is the cost of
developing a system to comply?
• What are the costs associated with
providing the disclosure?
• Would the costs be reduced if the
Adviser and Financial Institution could
provide the disclosure for full portfolios
of investments, rather than for each
investment recommendation separately?
• Would the costs be reduced if the
timing of the disclosure was more
closely aligned with the SEC’s
disclosure requirements applicable to
broker-dealers (i.e. at or before the
completion of the transaction), rather
than point of sale?
• Are there particular asset classes for
which this kind of point of sale
disclosure is more feasible or less
feasible? What share of assets held by
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Retirement Investors or share of
transactions executed by Advisers and
Financial Institutions fall within the
asset classes for which the point of sale
disclosure is more feasible and less
feasible?
• Are there particular asset classes for
which all the information that would be
required to be disclosed in the chart is
currently required in a similar format
under existing law?
• Would the required disclosure be
more feasible or less costly if a narrative
statement were required instead of a
summary chart?
Impact. The point of sale disclosure
would be intended to inform the
Retirement Investor of the costs
associated with the investment. Would
such a disclosure in this simple format
provide information that is meaningful
and likely to improve a Retirement
Investor’s decision making? We ask for
input on the following:
• Would the simplified format result
in the communication of information
that is accurate, and contribute to
informed investment decisions?
• Do commenters recommend an
alternative format or alternative
disclosures?
• Would the relative fees associated
with different types of investment
products, without a required disclosure
of the relative risks of the product (i.e.,
mutual fund ongoing fees versus a onetime brokerage commission for a stock
transaction) contribute to informed
investment decisions?
• In the absence of a required
benchmark, is the disclosure of the allin fees of a particular investment
helpful to the Retirement Investor? If
not, how could a benchmark be crafted
for the various Assets permitted to be
sold under the proposal?
Alternative. Instead of the point of
sale disclosure as proposed, would a
‘‘cigarette warning’’-style disclosure be
as effective and less costly? For
example, the disclosure could read:
Investors are urged to check loads,
management fees, revenue-sharing,
commissions, and other charges before
investing in any financial product. These fees
may significantly reduce the amount you are
able to invest over time and may also
determine your adviser’s take-home pay. If
these fees are not reported in marketing
materials or made apparent by your
investment adviser, do not forget to ask about
them.
3. Individual Annual Disclosure
Section III(b) of the proposal requires
individual disclosure in the form of an
annual disclosure. Specifically, the
proposal requires the Adviser or
Financial Institution to provide each
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Retirement Investor with an annual
written disclosure within 45 days of the
end of the applicable year. The annual
disclosure must include: (i) A list
identifying each Asset purchased or
sold during the applicable period and
the price at which the Asset was
purchased or sold; (ii) a statement of the
total dollar amount of all fees and
expenses paid by the plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or IRA, both
directly and indirectly, with respect to
each Asset purchased, held or sold
during the applicable period; and (iii) a
statement of the total dollar amount of
all compensation received by the
Adviser and Financial Institution,
directly or indirectly, from any party, as
a result of each Asset sold, purchased or
held by the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, during the
applicable period. This disclosure is
intended to show the Retirement
Investor the impact of the cost of the
Adviser’s advice on the investments by
the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA.
The Department requests comment on
this disclosure, in light of the potential
point of sale disclosure. We are
particularly interested in comments
discussing whether both disclosures
would be helpful and, if not, which
would be more useful to Retirement
Investors?
4. Non-Security Insurance and Annuity
Contracts.
Section III(a) and (b) will apply to all
Assets as defined in the proposal. This
includes insurance and annuity
contracts that are securities under
federal securities law, such as variable
annuities, and insurance and annuity
contracts that are not, such as fixed
annuities. The Department requests
comment on whether the types of
information required in the Section
III(a) and (b) disclosures are applicable
and available with respect to insurance
and annuity contracts that are not
securities.
In this regard, we note that PTE 84–
24 36 is an existing exemption under
which certain investment advice
fiduciaries can receive commissions on
insurance and annuity contracts and
mutual fund shares that are purchased
by plans and IRAs. Elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, the
Department has proposed to revoke
relief under PTE 84–24 as it applies to
IRA transactions involving annuity
36 Class Exemption for Certain Transactions
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension
Consultants, Insurance Companies, Investment
Companies and Investment Company Principal
Underwriters, 49 FR 13208 (Apr. 3, 1984), amended
at 71 FR 5887 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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contracts that are securities (including
variable annuity contracts) and mutual
fund shares. The fact that IRA owners
generally do not benefit from the
protections afforded by the fiduciary
duties owed by plan sponsors to their
employee benefit plans makes it critical
that their interests are protected by
appropriate conditions in the
Department exemptions. In our view,
this proposed Best Interest Contract
Exemption contains conditions that are
uniquely protective of IRA owners.
The Department has determined
however that PTE 84–24 should remain
available for investment advice
fiduciaries to receive commissions for
IRA (and plan) purchases of insurance
and annuity contracts that are not
securities. This distinction is due in part
to uncertainty as to whether the
disclosure requirements proposed
herein are readily applicable to
insurance and annuity contracts that are
not securities, and whether the
distribution methods and channels of
insurance products that are not
securities fit within this exemption’s
framework.
The Department requests comment on
this approach. In particular, we ask
whether we have drawn the correct
lines between insurance and annuity
products that are securities and those
that are not, in terms of our decision to
continue to allow IRA transactions
involving non-security insurance and
annuity contracts to occur under the
conditions of PTE 84–24 while requiring
IRA transactions involving securities to
occur under the conditions of this
proposed Best Interest Contract
Exemption.
In order for us to evaluate our
approach, we request public comment
the current disclosure requirements
applicable to insurance and annuity
contracts that are not securities. Can
Section III(a) and (b) can be revised with
respect to such non-securities insurance
and annuity contracts to provide
meaningful information to investors as
to the costs of such investments and the
overall compensation received by
Advisers and Financial Institutions in
connection with the transactions? In
addition, the Department requests
information on the distribution methods
and channels applicable to insurance
and annuity products that are not
securities. What are common structures
of insurance agencies?
Finally, we request public input as to
whether any conditions of this proposed
Best Interest Contract Exemption, other
than the disclosure conditions
discussed above, would be inapplicable
to non-security insurance and annuity
products? Are any aspects of this
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21975
exemption particularly difficult for
insurance companies to comply with?
Range of Investment Options (Section
IV)
Section IV(a) of the proposal requires
a Financial Institution to offer for
purchase, sale, or holding and the
Adviser to make available to the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, for purchase, sale or holding a
broad range of investment options.
These investment options should enable
an Adviser to make recommendations to
the Retirement Investor with respect to
all of the asset classes reasonably
necessary to serve the best interests of
the Retirement Investor in light of the
Retirement Investor’s objectives, risk
tolerance and specific financial
circumstances. The Department believes
that ensuring that an Adviser has a wide
range of investment options at his or her
disposal is the most likely method by
which a Retirement Investor can be
assured of developing a balanced
investment portfolio.
The Department recognizes, however,
that some Financial Institutions limit
the investment products that a
Retirement Investor may purchase, sell
or hold based on whether the products
generate third-party payments or are
proprietary products, or for other
reasons (e.g., the firms specialize in
particular asset classes or product
types). Both Financial Institutions and
Advisers often rely on the ability to sell
proprietary products or the ability to
generate additional revenue through
third-party payments to support their
business models. The proposal permits
Financial Institutions with such
business models to rely on the
exemption provided additional
conditions are satisfied.
The additional conditions are set forth
in Section IV(b) of the proposal. First,
before limiting the investment products
a Retirement Investor may purchase, sell
or hold, the Financial Institution must
make a specific written finding that the
limitations do not prevent the Adviser
from providing advice that is in the best
interest of the Retirement Investors (i.e.,
advice that reflects the care, skill,
prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a
prudent person would exercise based on
the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and
needs of the Retirement Investor,
without regard to the financial or other
interests of the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate, Related
Entity, or other party) or from otherwise
adhering to the Impartial Conduct
Standards.
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Second, the proposal provides that
the payments received in connection
with these limited menus be reasonable
in relation to the value of specific
services provided to Retirement
Investors in exchange for the payments
and not in excess of the services’ fair
market value. This is more specific than
the reasonable compensation
requirement set forth in the contract
under Section II because of the
limitation placed by the Financial
Institution on the investments available
for Adviser recommendation. The
Department intends to ensure that such
additional payments received in
connection with the advice are for
specific services to Retirement
Investors.
The proposal additionally provides
that the Financial Institution or Adviser,
before giving any recommendations to a
Retirement Investor, must give clear
written notice to the Retirement Investor
of any limitations placed by the
Financial Institution on the investment
products offered by the Adviser. In this
regard, it is insufficient for the notice
merely to state that the Financial
Institution ‘‘may’’ limit investment
recommendations, without specifically
disclosing the extent to which the
Financial Institution in fact does so.
Finally, the proposal would require
an Adviser or Financial Institution to
notify the Retirement Investor if the
Adviser does not recommend a
sufficiently broad range of investment
options to meet the Retirement
Investor’s needs. For example, the
Department envisions the provision of
such a notice when the Adviser and
Financial Institution provide advice
with respect to a limited class of
investment products, but those products
do not meet a particular investor’s
needs. The Department requests
comment on whether it is possible to
state this standard with more
specificity, or whether more detailed
guidance is needed for parties to
determine when compliance with the
condition would be necessary. The
Department also requests comment on
whether any specific disclosure is
necessary to inform the Retirement
Investor about the particular conflicts of
interest associated with Advisers that
recommend only proprietary products,
and, if so, what the disclosure should
say.
The conditions of Section IV do not
apply to an Adviser or Financial
Institution with respect to the provision
of investment advice to a participant or
beneficiary of a participant directed
individual account plan concerning the
participant’s or beneficiary’s selection of
designated investment options available
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under the plan, provided the Adviser
and Financial Institution did not
provide advice to the responsible plan
fiduciary regarding the menu of
designated investment options. In such
circumstances, the Adviser and
Financial Institution are not responsible
for the limitations on the investment
options.
EBSA Disclosure and Recordkeeping
(Section V)
1. Notification to the Department of
Reliance on the Exemption
Before receiving prohibited
compensation in reliance on Section I of
this exemption, Section V(a) of the
proposal requires that the Financial
Institution notify the Employee Benefits
Security Administration of the intention
to rely on this exemption. The notice
need not identify any specific plan or
IRA. The notice will remain in effect
until it is revoked in writing. The
Department envisions accepting the
notice via email and regular mail.
This is a notice provision only and
does not require any approval or finding
by the Department that the Financial
Institution is eligible for the exemption.
Once a Financial Institution has sent the
notice, it can immediately begin to rely
on the exemption provided the
conditions are satisfied.
2. Data Request
Section V(b) of the proposed
exemption also would require Financial
Institutions to maintain certain data,
which is specified in Section IX, for six
years from the date of the applicable
transaction. The data request would
require Financial Institutions to
maintain and disclose to the Department
upon request specific information
regarding purchases, sales, and holdings
by Retirement Investors made pursuant
to advice provided by Advisers and
Financial Institutions relying on the
proposed exemption. Financial
Institutions may maintain this
information in any form that may be
readily analyzed by the Department or
simply as raw data. Receipt of this
additional data will assist the
Department in assessing the
effectiveness of the exemption.
No party, other than the Financial
Institution responsible for compliance,
will be subject to the taxes imposed by
Code section 4975(a) and (b), if
applicable, if the Financial Institution
fails to maintain the data or the data are
not available for examination.
Request for Comment. The proposed
data request covers certain information
with respect to investment inflows,
outflows and holdings, and returns, by
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plans, participant and beneficiary
accounts, and IRAs and is intended to
assist the Department in evaluating the
effectiveness of the exemption. We
request comment on whether these are
the appropriate data points for the
covered Assets. Are the terms used clear
enough to result in information that is
reasonably comparable across different
Financial Institutions? Or should we
include precise definitions of inflows,
outflows, holdings, returns, etc.? If so,
please suggest specifically how these
terms should be defined. Are different
terms needed to request comparable
information regarding insurance and
annuity contracts that are not securities?
3. General Recordkeeping
Finally, Section V(c) and (d) of the
proposal contains a general
recordkeeping requirement applicable to
the Financial Institution. The general
recordkeeping requirement relates to the
records necessary for the Department
and certain other entities to determine
whether the conditions of this
exemption have been satisfied.
Effect of Failure To Comply With
Conditions
If the exemption is granted, relief
under the Best Interest Contract
Exemption will be available only if all
applicable conditions described above
are satisfied. Satisfaction of the
conditions is determined on a
transaction by transaction basis,
however. Thus, the effect of
noncompliance with a condition
depends on whether the condition
applies to a single transaction or
multiple transactions. For example, if an
Adviser fails to provide a transaction
disclosure in accordance with Section
III(a) with respect to an Asset purchased
by a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or an IRA, the relief provided
by the Best Interest Contract Exemption
would be unavailable to the Adviser and
Financial Institution only for the
otherwise prohibited compensation
received in connection with the
investment in that specific Asset by the
plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA. More broadly, if an Adviser and
Financial Institution fail to enter into a
contract with a Retirement Investor in
accordance with Section II, relief under
the Best Interest Contract Exemption
would be unavailable solely with
respect to the investments by that
Retirement Investor, not all Retirement
Investors to which the Adviser and
Financial Institution provide advice.
However, if a Financial Institution fails
to comply with a condition that is
necessary for all transactions involving
investment advice to Retirement
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Investors, such as the maintenance of
the Web page required by Section III(c),
the Financial Institution will not be
eligible for the relief under the Best
Interest Contract Exemption for all
prohibited transactions entered into
during the period in which the failure
to comply existed.
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Supplemental Exemptions
1. Proposed Insurance and Annuity
Exemption (Section VI)
The Best Interest Contract Exemption,
as set forth above, permits Advisers and
Financial Institutions to receive
compensation that would otherwise be
prohibited by the self-dealing and
conflicts of interest provisions of ERISA
and the Code. ERISA and the Code
contain additional prohibitions on
certain specific transactions between
plans and IRAs and ‘‘parties in interest’’
and ‘‘disqualified persons,’’ including
service providers. These additional
prohibited transactions include: (i) The
purchase or sale of an asset between a
plan/IRA and a party in interest/
disqualified person, and (ii) the transfer
of plan/IRA assets to a party in interest/
disqualified person. These prohibited
transactions are subject to excise tax and
personal liability for the fiduciary.
A plan’s or IRA’s purchase of an
insurance or annuity product would be
a prohibited transaction if the insurance
company has a pre-existing relationship
with the plan/IRA as a service provider,
or is otherwise a party in interest/
disqualified person. In the Department’s
view, this circumstance is common
enough in connection with
recommendations by Advisers and
Financial Institutions to warrant
proposal of an exemption for these types
of transactions in conjunction with the
Best Interest Contract Exemption. The
Department anticipates that the
fiduciary that causes a plan’s or IRA’s
purchase of an insurance or annuity
product would not be the Adviser or
Financial Institution but would instead
be another fiduciary, such as a plan
sponsor or IRA owner, acting on the
Adviser’s or Financial Institution’s
advice. Because the party requiring
relief for this prohibited transaction is
separate and independent of the Adviser
and Financial Institution, the
Department is proposing this exemption
subject to discrete conditions described
below.
Although there is an existing
exemption which would often cover
these transactions, PTE 84–24, the
Department is proposing elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register to
revoke that exemption to the extent it
provides relief for transactions
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involving IRAs’ purchase of variable
annuity contracts and other annuity
contracts that are securities under
federal securities law. We have therefore
decided to provide an exemption for
these transactions as part of this
document, both to ensure that relief is
available for transactions involving IRAs
but also for ease of compliance for
transactions involving other Retirement
Investors (i.e., plan participants,
beneficiaries and small plan sponsors).
As with the Best Interest Contract
Exemption, relief under the proposed
insurance and annuity exemption in
Section VI would not extend to a plan
covered by Title I of ERISA where (i) the
Adviser, Financial Institution or any
Affiliate is the employer of employees
covered by the plan, or (ii) the Adviser
or Financial Institution is a named
fiduciary or plan administrator (as
defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A)) with
respect to the plan, or an affiliate
thereof, that has not been selected by a
fiduciary that is Independent. The
conditions proposed for the insurance
and annuity exemption are that the
transaction must be effected by the
insurance company in the ordinary
course of its business as an insurance
company, the combined total of all fees
and compensation received by the
insurance company is not in excess of
reasonable compensation under the
circumstances, the purchase is for cash
only, and that the terms of the purchase
are at least as favorable to the plan as
the terms generally available in an arm’s
length transaction with an unrelated
party.37
2. Exemption for Pre-Existing
Transactions (Section VII)
Section VII of the proposal would
provide an exemption for Advisers,
Financial Institutions, and their
Affiliates and Related Entities in
connection with transactions that
occurred prior to the applicability date
of the Proposed Regulation, if adopted.
Specifically, the exemption would
provide relief from ERISA sections
406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) for the receipt of
prohibited compensation, after the
applicability date of the regulation, by
an Adviser, Financial Institution and
any Affiliate or Related Entity for
services provided in connection with
37 The
condition requiring the purchase to be
made for cash only is not intended to preclude
purchases with plan or IRA contributions, but
rather to preclude transactions effected in-kind
through an exchange of securities or other assets.
In-kind exchanges would not be permitted as part
of this class exemption due to the potential need
for conditions relating to valuation of the assets to
be exchanged.
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21977
the purchase, sale or holding of an Asset
before the applicability date. The
Department is proposing this exemption
to provide relief for investment
professionals that may have provided
advice prior to the applicability date of
the regulation but did not consider
themselves fiduciaries. Their receipt
after the applicability date of ongoing
periodic payments of compensation
attributable to a purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset by a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, prior to the applicability date of
the regulation might otherwise raise
prohibited transaction concerns.
The Department is also proposing this
exemption for Advisers and Financial
Institutions who were considered
fiduciaries before the applicability date,
but who entered into transactions
involving plans and IRAs before the
applicability date in accordance with
the terms of a prohibited transaction
exemption that has since been amended.
Section VII would permit Advisers,
Financial Institutions, and their
Affiliates and Related Entities, to
receive compensation such as 12b–1
fees, after the applicability date, that is
attributable to a purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset by a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an
IRA, that occurred prior to the
applicability date.
In order to take advantage of this
relief, the exemption would require that
the compensation must be received
pursuant to an agreement, arrangement
or understanding that was entered into
prior to the applicability date of the
regulation, and that the Adviser and
Financial Institution not provide
additional advice to the plan or IRA,
regarding the purchase, sale or holding
of the Asset after the applicability date
of the regulation. Relief would not be
extended to compensation that is
excluded pursuant to Section I(c) of the
proposal or to compensation received in
connection with a purchase or sale
transaction that, at the time it was
entered into, was a non-exempt
prohibited transaction. The Department
requests comment on whether there are
other areas in which exemptions would
be desirable to avoid unforeseen
consequences in connection with the
timing of the finalization of the
Proposed Regulation.
3. Low Fee Streamlined Exemption
While the flexibility of the Best
Interest Contract Exemption is designed
to accommodate a wide range of current
business practices and avoid the need
for highly prescriptive regulation, the
Department acknowledges that there
may be actors in the industry that would
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prefer a more prescriptive approach.
The Department believes that both
approaches could be desirable and
could, if designed properly, minimize
the harmful impact of conflicts of
interest on the quality of advice.
Accordingly, in addition to the Best
Interest Contract Exemption, the
Department is also considering issuing a
separate streamlined exemption that
would allow Advisers and Financial
Institutions (and their Affiliates and
Related Entities) to receive otherwise
prohibited compensation in connection
with plan, participant and beneficiary
accounts, and IRA investments in
certain high-quality low-fee
investments, subject to fewer
conditions. However, at this point, the
Department has been unable to
operationalize this concept and
therefore has not proposed text for such
a streamlined exemption. Instead, we
seek public input to assist our
consideration and design of the
exemption.
A low-fee streamlined exemption is
an attractive idea that, if properly
crafted, could achieve important goals.
It could minimize the compliance
burdens for Advisers offering highquality low-fee investment products
with minimal potential for material
conflicts of interest, as discussed further
below. Products that met the conditions
of the streamlined exemption could be
recommended to plans, participants and
beneficiaries, and IRA owners, and the
Adviser could receive variable and
third-party compensation as a result of
those recommendations, without
satisfying some or all of the conditions
of the Best Interest Contract Exemption.
The streamlined exemption could
reward and encourage best practices
with respect to optimizing the quality,
amount, and combined, all-in cost of
recommended financial products,
financial advice, and other related
services. In particular, a streamlined
exemption could be useful in enhancing
access to quality, affordable financial
products and advice by savers with
smaller account balances. Additionally,
because it would be premised on a fee
comparison, it would apply only to
investments with relatively simple and
transparent fee structures.
In this regard, the Department
believes that certain high-quality
investments are provided pursuant to
fee structures in which the payments are
sufficiently low that they do not present
serious potential material conflicts of
interest. In theory, a streamlined
exemption with relatively few
conditions could be constructed around
such investments. Facilitating
investments in such high-quality low-
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fee products would be consistent with
the prevailing (though by no means
universal) view in the academic
literature that posits that the optimal
investment strategy is often to buy and
hold a diversified portfolio of assets
calibrated to track the overall
performance of financial markets. Under
this view, for example, a long-term
recommendation to buy and hold a lowpriced (often passively managed) target
date fund that is consistent with the
investor’s future risk appetite trajectory
is likely to be sound. As another
example, under this view, a mediumterm recommendation to buy and hold
(for 5 or perhaps 10 years) an
inexpensive, risk-matched balanced
fund or combination of funds, and
afterward to review the investor’s
circumstances and formulate a new
recommendation also is likely to be
sound.
If it could be constructed
appropriately, a streamlined exemption
for high-quality low-fee investments
could be subject to relatively few
conditions, because the investments
present minimal risk of abuse to plans,
participants and beneficiaries, and IRA
owners. The aim would be to design
conditions with sufficient objectivity
that Advisers and Financial Institutions
could proceed with certainty in their
business operations when
recommending the investments. The
Department does not anticipate that
such a streamlined exemption would
require Advisers and Financial
Institutions to undertake the contractual
commitments to adhere to the Impartial
Conduct Standards or adopt anticonflict policies and procedures with
respect to advice given on such
products, as is proposed in the Best
Interest Contract Exemption. However,
some of the required disclosures
proposed in the Best Interest Contract
Exemption would likely be imposed in
the streamlined exemption.
The Department has initially focused
on mutual funds as the only type of
investment widely held by Retirement
Investors that would be readily
susceptible to the type of expense
calculations necessary to implement the
low-fee streamlined exemption. This is
due to the transparency associated with
mutual fund investments and, in
particular, the requirement that the
mutual fund disclose its fees and
operating expenses in its prospectus.
Accordingly, data on mutual fund fees
and expenses is widely available.
Within the category of mutual fund
investments, the Department is
considering whether the streamlined
exemption would be available to funds
with all-in fees below a certain amount.
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However, the Department lacks data
regarding the characteristics of mutual
funds with low all-in fees.
Consequently, we are exploring whether
the streamlined exemption should
contain additional conditions to
safeguard the interests of plans,
participants and beneficiaries, and IRA
owners. For example, the streamlined
exemption could require that the
investment product be ‘‘broadly
diversified to minimize risk for targeted
return,’’ or ‘‘calibrated to provide a
balance of risk and return appropriate to
the investor’s circumstances and
preferences for the duration of the
recommended holding period.’’
However, we recognize that adding
conditions might undercut the
usefulness of the streamlined
exemption.
Request for Comment. The
Department requests comment on these
possible initial terms of a streamlined
exemption and other questions relating
to the technical design of such an
exemption and its likely utility to
Advisers and Financial Institutions.
Additionally, the Department requests
public input on the likely consequences
of the establishment of a low-fee
streamlined exemption.
Design. The Department requests
public input on the technical design
challenges in defining high-quality lowfee investment products that would
satisfy the policy goals of the
streamlined exemption. We are
concerned that there may be no single,
objective way to evaluate fees and
expenses associated with mutual funds
(or other investments) and no single cutoff to determine when fees are
sufficiently low. One cut-off could be
too low for some investors’ needs and
too high for others’. A very low cut-off
would strongly favor passively managed
funds. A high cut-off would permit
recommendations that may not be
sound and free from bias. Multiple cutoffs for different product categories
would be complex and would risk
introducing bias between the categories.
In addition, it is unclear whether
mutual funds with the lowest fees
necessarily represent the highest quality
investments for Retirement Investors. As
noted above, the streamlined exemption
would not expressly contain a ‘‘best
interest’’ standard.
To further aid in the design of the
streamlined exemption, the Department
requests comments on the questions
below. The Regulatory Impact Analysis
for the Proposed Regulation, published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, describes additional questions
the Department is considering regarding
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the development of a low-fee
streamlined exemption.
• Should the streamlined exemption
cover investment products other than
mutual funds? The streamlined
exemption would be based on the
premise that low-cost investment
products distributed pursuant to
relatively unconflicted fee structures
present minimal risk of abuse to plans,
participants and beneficiaries, and IRA
owners. In order to design a streamlined
exemption for the sale of such products,
the products must have fee structures
that are transparent, publicly available,
and capable of being compared reliably.
Are there other investments commonly
held by Retirement Investors that meet
these criteria?
• How should the fee calculation be
performed? How should fees be defined
for the fee calculation to ensure a useful
metric? Should the fee calculation
include both ongoing management/
administrative fees and one-time
distribution/transactional costs? What
time period should the fee calculation
cover? Should it cover fees as projected
over future time periods (e.g., one, five
and ten year periods) to lower the
impact of one-time transactional costs
such as sales loads? If so, what discount
rate should be used to determine the
present value of future fees?
• How should the Department
determine the fee cut-off? If the
Department established a streamlined
exemption for low-fee mutual funds and
other products, how would the precise
fee cut-off be determined? How often
should it be updated? What are
characteristics of mutual funds with
very low fees? Should the cut-off be
based on a percentage of the assets
invested (i.e., a specified number of
basis points) or as a percentile of the
market? If a percentile, how should
reliable data be obtained to determine
fund percentiles? Are there available
and appropriate sources of industry
benchmarking data? Should the
Department collect data for this
purpose? Is the range of fees in the
market known? Are there data that
would suggest that mutual funds with
relatively low fees are (or are not) high
quality investments for a wide variety of
Retirement Investors?
• Should the low-fee cutoff be
applied differently to different types of
funds? Should a single fee cut-off apply
broadly to all mutual funds, or would
that exclude entire categories of funds
with certain investment strategies?
Would it be appropriate to develop subcategories of funds for the fee cut-offs?
If so, how should the sub-categories be
defined?
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• Should ETFs be covered? Within
the category of mutual funds, should
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) be
covered under the streamlined
exemption? If so, how would the
commission associated with an ETF
transaction be incorporated into the
low-fee calculation?
• What, if any, conditions other than
low fees should be required as part of
the streamlined exemption? If the
streamlined exemption covers only
mutual funds, are conditions relating to
their availability and transparent pricing
unnecessary? Are conditions relating to
liquidity necessary? Should funds
covered by the streamlined exemption
be required to be broadly diversified to
minimize risk for targeted return?
Should the streamlined exemption
contain a requirement that the
investment be calibrated to provide a
balance of risk and return appropriate to
the investor’s circumstances and
preferences for the duration of the
recommended holding period? Should
the funds be required to meet the
requirements of a ‘‘qualified default
investment alternative,’’ as described in
29 CFR 2550.404c–5?
• How should the low-fee cut-off be
communicated to Advisers and
Financial Institutions? Should the
initial cut-off and subsequent updates
be written as a condition of the
exemption, or publicized through other
formats? How would Advisers and
Financial Institutions be sure that
certain funds meet the low-fee cut-off?
By what means and how frequently
should Advisers and Financial
Institutions be required to confirm that
mutual funds that they recommend (or
recommended in the past) continue to
meet the low-fee cut-off?
• How could consumers police the
low-fee cut-off? What enforcement
mechanism could be used to assure that
the Advisers taking advantage of such a
safe harbor are correctly analyzing
whether their products meet the cut-off?
Utility. In addition to seeking
comment on the technical design of the
streamlined exemption, the Department
asks for information on whether the
low-fee streamlined exemption would
effectively reduce the compliance
burden for a significant number of
Advisers and Financial Institutions.
Because of its design, the low-fee
streamlined exemption would generally
apply on a product-by-product basis
rather than at the Financial Institution
level, unless the Financial Institution
and its Advisers exclusively advise
retail customers to invest in the low-fee
products. Therefore, the Department
asks:
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21979
• Would Advisers and Financial
Institutions restrict their business
models to offer only the low-fee mutual
funds that the Department envisions
covering in the streamlined exemption?
Or, would Advisers that offer products
outside the streamlined exemption
(higher-fee mutual funds as well as
other investment products such as
stocks and bonds) rely on the
streamlined exemption for the low-fee
mutual fund investments and the Best
Interest Contract Exemption for the
other investments? If Advisers and
Financial Institutions had to implement
the safeguards required by the Best
Interest Contract Exemption for many of
their Retirement Investor customers,
would the availability of the
streamlined exemption result in
material cost savings to them?
• How do low-fee investment
products compensate Advisers for
distribution? Do low-fee funds tend to
pay sales loads, revenue sharing and
12b–1 fees? If not, how would Advisers
and Financial Institutions be
compensated within the low-fee
confines of the streamlined exemption?
• What design features would be most
likely to enhance the utility of the lowfee streamlined exemption?
Consequences. The Department seeks
the public’s views on the potential
consequences of granting a streamlined
exemption for certain types of
investments.
• Would a streamlined exemption
limited to low-fee mutual fund
investments or other categories of
investments be in the interests of plans
and their participants and beneficiaries?
Would the availability of the
streamlined exemption discourage
Advisers and Financial Institutions from
offering other types of investments,
including higher-cost mutual funds,
even if the offering of such other
investments would be in the best
interest of the plan, participant or
beneficiary, or IRA owner? Would the
streamlined exemption have the
beneficial effect of reducing investment
costs? On the other hand, could the
streamlined exemption result in some of
the lowest-cost investment products
increasing their fees to the cut-off
threshold? Would it expand the number
of Financial Institutions that developed
low-fee options, making them more
widely available?
• How would the streamlined
exemption affect the marketplace for
investment products? Would a low-fee
streamlined exemption have the
unintended effect of unduly promoting
certain investment styles? Which types
of Advisers and Financial Institutions
would be most affected and would they
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be likely to revise their business models
in response? Would there be increased
competition among Advisers and
Financial Institutions to offer
investment products with lower fees?
Would Retirement Investors have more
choices to diversify while paying less in
fees? Would Financial Institutions and
Advisers offer other incentives to
Retirement Investors in order to sell
specific products?
Availability of Other Prohibited
Transaction Exemptions
Certain existing exemptions,
including amendments thereto and
superseding exemptions, provide relief
for specific types of transactions that are
outside of the scope of this proposed
exemption. A person seeking relief for a
transaction covered by one of those
existing exemptions would need to
comply with its requirements and
conditions. Those exemptions are as
follows:
(1) PTE 75–1 (Part III),38 which
provides relief for a plan’s acquisition of
securities during an underwriting or
selling syndicate from any person other
than a fiduciary who is a member of the
syndicate.
(2) PTE 75–1 (Part V),39 which
exempts an extension of credit to a plan
from a party in interest.
(3) PTE 83–1,40 which provides relief
for certain transactions involving
mortgage pool investment trusts and
pass-through certificates evidencing
interests therein.
(4) PTE 2004–16,41 which provides
relief for a fiduciary of the plan who is
the employer of employees covered
under the plan to establish individual
retirement plans for certain mandatory
distributions on behalf of separated
employees at a financial institution that
is itself or an affiliate, and also select a
proprietary investment product as the
initial investment for the plan.
(5) PTE 2006–16,42 which exempts
certain loans of securities by plans to
broker-dealers and banks and provides
relief for the receipt of compensation by
a fiduciary for services rendered in
connection with the securities loans.
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Applicability Date
The Department is proposing that
compliance with the final regulation
defining a fiduciary under ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B) will begin eight months
after publication of the final regulation
38 40
FR 50845 (Oct. 31, 1975).
as amended at 71 FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
40 48 FR 895 (Jan. 7, 1983).
41 69 FR 57964 (Sept. 28, 2004).
42 71 FR 63786 (Oct. 31, 2006).
39 Id.,
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in the Federal Register (Applicability
Date). The Department proposes to make
this exemption, if granted, available on
the Applicability Date. Further, the
Department is proposing to revoke relief
for transactions involving IRAs from
two existing exemptions, PTEs 86–128
and 84–24, as of the Applicability
Date.43 As a result, Advisers and
Financial Institutions, including those
newly defined as fiduciaries, will
generally have to comply with this
exemption to receive many common
forms of compensation in transactions
involving IRAs.
The Department recognizes that
complying with the requirements of the
exemption may represent a significant
adjustment for many Advisers and
Financial Institutions, particularly in
their dealings with IRA owners. At the
same time, in the Department’s view, it
is essential that Advisers and Financial
Institutions wishing to receive
compensation under the exemption
institute certain conditions for the
protection of IRA customers as of the
Applicability Date. These safeguards
include: Acknowledging fiduciary
status,44 complying with the Impartial
Conduct Standards,45 adopting anticonflict policies and procedures,46
notifying EBSA of the use of the
exemption,47 and recordkeeping.48 The
Department requests comment on
whether Financial Institutions
anticipate that there will be existing
contractual obligations or other barriers
that would prevent them from
implementing the exemption’s policies
and procedures requirement in this time
frame.
The Department also specifically
requests comment on whether it should
delay certain other conditions of the
exemption as applicable to IRA
transactions for an additional period
(e.g., three months) following the
Applicability Date. For example, one
possibility would be to delay the
requirement that Advisers and Financial
Institutions execute a contract with their
IRA customers for an additional threemonth period, as well as the disclosure
requirements in Sections III and the data
collection requirements described in
Section IX. This phased approach
would give Financial Institutions
additional time to review and refine
their policies and procedures and to put
new compliance systems in place,
43 See the notices with respect to these proposals,
published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register.
44 See Section II(b).
45 See Section II(c).
46 See Section II(d)(2)–(4).
47 See Section V(a).
48 See Section V(c).
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without exposure to contractual liability
to the IRA owners.
The Department does not believe that
such additional delay would be
warranted for Advisers and Financial
Institutions with respect to transactions
involving ERISA plan sponsors and
ERISA plan participants and
beneficiaries. Advisers and Financial
Institutions to ERISA plans and their
participants and beneficiaries are
accustomed to working within the
existing exemptions, such as PTEs 86–
128 and 84–24, and such exemptions
would remain available to them while
they develop systems for complying
with this exemption.49 Nevertheless, the
Department also requests comments on
the appropriate period for phasing in
some or all of the exemption’s
conditions with respect to ERISA plans
as well as IRAs.
The Department additionally notes
that, elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, it has proposed to
revoke another existing exemption, PTE
75–1, Part II(2), in its entirety in
connection with a proposed amendment
to PTE 86–128. The Department
requests comment on whether this
exemption is widely used and whether
it should delay revocation for some
period after the Applicability Date while
Advisers and Financial Institutions
develop systems for complying with
PTE 86–128.
No Relief Proposed From ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(C) or Code Section
4975(c)(1)(C) for the Provision of
Services
If granted, this proposed exemption
will not provide relief from a
transaction prohibited by ERISA section
406(a)(1)(C), or from the taxes imposed
by Code section 4975(a) and (b) by
reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(C),
regarding the furnishing of goods,
services or facilities between a plan and
a party in interest. The provision of
investment advice to a plan under a
contract with a plan fiduciary is a
service to the plan and compliance with
this exemption will not relieve an
Adviser or Financial Institution of the
need to comply with ERISA section
408(b)(2), Code section 4975(d)(2), and
applicable regulations thereunder.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
As part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department conducts a
preclearance consultation program to
provide the general public and Federal
49 In this regard, the Department anticipates
making the Impartial Conduct Standards
amendments to PTEs 86–128 and 84–24 effective as
of the Applicability Date.
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agencies with an opportunity to
comment on proposed and continuing
collections of information in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)).
This helps to ensure that the public
understands the Department’s collection
instructions, respondents can provide
the requested data in the desired format,
reporting burden (time and financial
resources) is minimized, collection
instruments are clearly understood, and
the Department can properly assess the
impact of collection requirements on
respondents.
Currently, the Department is soliciting
comments concerning the proposed
information collection request (ICR)
included in the Best Interest Contract
Exemption (PTE) as part of its proposal
to amend its 1975 rule that defines
when a person who provides investment
advice to an employee benefit plan or
IRA becomes a fiduciary. A copy of the
ICR may be obtained by contacting the
PRA addressee shown below or at
https://www.RegInfo.gov.
The Department has submitted a copy
of the PTE to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) in accordance with
44 U.S.C. 3507(d) for review of its
information collections. The
Department and OMB are particularly
interested in comments that:
• Evaluate whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
• Evaluate the accuracy of the
agency’s estimate of the burden of the
collection of information, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
• Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
• Minimize the burden of the
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses.
Comments should be sent to the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget, Room 10235, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503;
Attention: Desk Officer for the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration. OMB requests that
comments be received within 30 days of
publication of the proposed PTE to
ensure their consideration.
PRA Addressee: Address requests for
copies of the ICR to G. Christopher
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Cosby, Office of Policy and Research,
U.S. Department of Labor, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Room N–
5718, Washington, DC 20210.
Telephone (202) 693–8410; Fax: (202)
219–5333. These are not toll-free
numbers. ICRs submitted to OMB also
are available at https://www.RegInfo.gov.
As discussed in detail below, the PTE
would require financial institutions and
their advisers to enter into a contractual
arrangement with retirement investors
making investment decisions on behalf
of the plan or IRA (i.e., plan participants
or beneficiaries, IRA owners, or small
plan sponsors (or employees, officers or
directors thereof)), and make certain
disclosures to the retirement investors
and the Department in order to receive
relief from ERISA’s prohibited
transaction rules for the receipt of
compensation as a result of a financial
institution’s and its adviser’s advice
(i.e., prohibited compensation).
Financial institutions would be required
to maintain records necessary to prove
that the conditions of the exemption
have been met. These requirements are
ICRs subject to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
The Department has made the
following assumptions in order to
establish a reasonable estimate of the
paperwork burden associated with these
ICRs:
• Disclosures distributed
electronically will be distributed via
means already used by respondents in
the normal course of business and the
costs arising from electronic distribution
will be negligible;
• Financial institutions will use
existing in-house resources to prepare
the contracts and disclosures, adjust
their IT systems, and maintain the
recordkeeping systems necessary to
meet the requirements of the exemption;
• A combination of personnel will
perform the tasks associated with the
ICRs at an hourly wage rate of $125.95
for a financial manager, $30.42 for
clerical personnel, $79.67 for an IT
professional, and $129.94 for a legal
professional; 50
50 The Department’s estimated 2015 hourly labor
rates include wages, other benefits, and overhead,
and are calculated as follows: mean wage from the
2013 National Occupational Employment Survey
(April 2014, Bureau of Labor Statistics https://
www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ocwage.pdf); wages
as a percent of total compensation from the
Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (June
2014, Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/
news.release/ecec.t02.htm); overhead as a multiple
of compensation is assumed to be 25 percent of
total compensation for paraprofessionals, 20
percent of compensation for clerical, and 35 percent
of compensation for professional; annual inflation
assumed to be 2.3 percent annual growth of total
labor cost since 2013 (Employment Costs Index data
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21981
• Approximately 2,800 financial
institutions 51 will take advantage of this
exemption and they will use this
exemption in conjunction with
transactions involving nearly all of their
clients that are small defined benefit
and defined plans, participant directed
defined contribution plans, and IRA
holders.52 53 Eight percent of financial
institutions (approximately 224) will be
new firms beginning use of this
exemption each year.
Contract, Disclosures, and Notices
In order to receive prohibited
compensation under this PTE, Section II
requires financial institutions and
advisers to enter into a written contract
with retirement investors affirmatively
stating that they are fiduciaries under
ERISA or the Code with respect to any
recommendations to the retirement
investor to purchase, sell or hold
specified assets, and that the financial
institution and adviser will give advice
that is in the best interest of the
retirement investor.
Section III(a) requires the adviser to
furnish the retirement investor with a
disclosure prior to the execution of the
purchase of the asset stating the total
cost of investing in the asset. Section
III(b) requires the adviser or financial
institution to furnish the retirement
investor with an annual statement
listing all assets purchased or sold
during the year, as well as the
associated fees and expenses paid by the
plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, and the compensation received
by the financial institution and the
adviser. Section III(c) requires the
financial institution to maintain a
publicly available Web page displaying
the compensation (including its source
and how it varies within asset classes)
that would be received by the adviser,
the financial institution and any affiliate
for private industry, September 2014 https://
www.bls.gov/news.release/eci.nr0.htm).
51 As described in the regulatory impact analysis
for the accompanying rule, the Department
estimates that approximately 2,619 broker dealers
service the retirement market. The Department
anticipates that the exemption will be used
primarily, but not exclusively, by broker-dealers.
Further, the Department assumes that all brokerdealers servicing the retirement market will use the
exemption. Beyond the 2,619 broker-dealers, the
Department estimates that almost 200 other
financial institutions will use the exemption.
52 The Department welcomes comment on this
estimate.
53 For purposes of this analysis, ‘‘IRA holders’’
include rollovers from ERISA plans.
54 The Department assumes that nearly all
financial institutions already maintain Web sites
and that updates to the disclosure required by
Section III(c) could be automated. Therefore, the IT
costs required by Section III(c) would be almost
exclusively start-up costs. The Department invites
comment on these assumptions.
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with respect to any asset that a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA could purchase through the adviser.
If the financial institution limits the
assets available for sale, Section IV
requires the financial institution to
furnish the retirement investor with a
written description of the limitations
placed on the menu. The adviser must
also notify the retirement investor if it
does not recommend a sufficiently
broad range of assets to meet the
retirement investor’s needs.
Finally, before the financial
institution begins engaging in
transactions covered under this PTE,
Section V(a) requires the financial
institution to provide notice to the
Department of its intent to rely on this
proposed PTE.
Legal Costs
The Department estimates that
drafting the PTE’s contractual
provisions, the notice to the
Department, and the limited menu
disclosure will require 60 hours of legal
time for financial institutions during the
first year that the financial institution
uses the PTE. This legal work results in
approximately 168,000 hours of burden
during the first year and approximately
13,000 hours of burden during
subsequent years at an equivalent cost
of $21.8 million and $1.7 million
respectively.
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IT Costs
The Department estimates that
updating computer systems to create the
required disclosures, insert the contract
provisions into existing contracts,
maintain the required records, and
publish information on the Web site
will require 100 hours of IT staff time
for financial institutions during the first
year that the financial institution uses
the PTE.54 This IT work results in
approximately 280,000 hours of burden
during the first year and approximately
22,000 hours of burden during
subsequent years at an equivalent cost
of $22.3 million and $1.8 million
respectively.
Production and Distribution of Required
Contract, Disclosures, and Notices
The Department estimates that
approximately 21.3 million plans and
IRAs have relationships with financial
institutions and are likely to engage in
transactions covered under this PTE.
54 The Department assumes that nearly all
financial institutions already maintain Web sites
and that updates to the disclosure required by
Section III(c) could be automated. Therefore, the IT
costs required by Section III(c) would be almost
exclusively start-up costs. The Department invites
comment on these assumptions.
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The Department assumes that
financial institutions already maintain
contracts with their clients. Therefore,
the required contractual provisions will
be inserted into existing contracts with
no additional cost for production or
distribution.
The Department assumes that
financial institutions will send
approximately 24 point-of-sale
transaction disclosures each year to
37,000 small defined benefit plans and
small defined contribution plans that do
not allow participants to direct
investments. All of these disclosures
will be sent electronically at de minimis
cost. Financial institutions will send
two point-of-sale transaction disclosures
each year to 1.1 million defined
contribution plans participants and 20.2
million IRA holders. These disclosures
will be distributed electronically to 75
percent of defined contribution plan
participants and IRA holders. Paper
copies of the disclosure will be given to
25 percent of defined contribution plan
participants and IRA holders. Further,
15 percent of the paper copies will be
mailed, while the other 85 percent will
be hand-delivered during in-person
meetings. The Department estimates
that electronic distribution will result in
de minimis cost, while paper
distribution will cost approximately
$1.3 million. Paper distribution will
also require one minute of clerical time
to print the disclosure and one minute
of clerical time to mail the disclosure,
resulting in 204,000 hours at an
equivalent cost of $6.2 million annually.
The Department estimates that 21.3
million plans and IRAs will receive an
annual statement. Small defined benefit
and defined contribution plans that do
not allow participants to direct
investments will receive a ten page
statement electronically at de minimis
cost. Defined contribution plan
participants and IRA holders will
receive a two page statement. This
statement will be distributed
electronically to 38 percent of defined
contribution plan participants and 50
percent of IRA holders. Paper
statements will be mailed to 62 percent
of defined contribution plan
participants and 50 percent of IRA
holders. The Department estimates that
electronic distribution will result in de
minimis cost, while paper distribution
will cost approximately $6.3 million.
Paper distribution will also require two
minutes of clerical time to print and
mail the disclosure, resulting in 359,000
hours at an equivalent cost of $10.9
million annually.
For purposes of this estimate, the
Department assumes that nearly all
financial institutions using the PTE will
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limit their investment menus in some
way and provide the limited menu
disclosure. Accordingly, during the first
year of the exemption the Department
estimates that all of the 21.3 million
plans and IRAs would receive the onepage limited menu disclosure. In
subsequent years, approximately 1.7
million plans and IRAs would receive
the one-page limited menu disclosure.
Small defined benefit and defined
contribution plans that do not allow
participants to direct investments would
receive the disclosure electronically at
de minimis cost. The disclosure would
be distributed electronically to 75
percent of defined contribution plan
participants and IRA holders. Paper
copies of the disclosure would be given
to 25 percent of defined contribution
plan participants and IRA holders.
Further, 15 percent of the paper copies
would be mailed, while the other 85
percent would be hand-delivered during
in-person meetings. The Department
estimates that electronic distribution
would result in de minimis cost, while
paper distribution would cost
approximately $922,000 during the first
year and approximately $74,000 in
subsequent years. Paper distribution
would also require one minute of
clerical time to print the disclosure and
one minute of clerical time to mail the
disclosure, resulting in 244,000 hours in
the first year and 20,000 hours in
subsequent years at an equivalent cost
of $7.4 million and $595,000
respectively. If, as seems likely, many
financial institutions choose not to limit
the universe of investment
recommendations, we would expect the
actual costs to be substantially smaller.
Finally, the Department estimates that
all of the 2,800 financial institutions
would mail the required one-page notice
to the Department during the first year
and approximately 224 new financial
institutions would mail the required
one-page notice to the Department in
subsequent years. Producing and
distributing this notice would cost
approximately $1,500 during the first
year and approximately $100 in
subsequent years. Producing and
distributing this notice would also
require 2 minutes of clerical time
resulting in a burden of approximately
93 hours during the first year and
approximately 7 hours in subsequent
years at an equivalent cost of $2,800 and
$200 respectively.
Recordkeeping Requirement
Section V(b) requires financial
institutions to maintain investment
return data in a manner accessible for
examination by the Department for six
years. Section V(c) and (d) requires
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financial institutions to maintain or
cause to be maintained for six years and
disclosed upon request the records
necessary for the Department, Internal
Revenue Service, plan fiduciary,
contributing employer or employee
organization whose members are
covered by the plan, and participants,
beneficiaries and IRA owners to
determine whether the conditions of
this exemption have been met in a
manner that is accessible for audit and
examination.
Most of the data retention
requirements in Section V(b) are
consistent with data retention
requirements made by the SEC and
FINRA. In addition, the data retention
requirements correspond to the six year
statute of limitations in Section 413 of
ERISA. Insofar as the data retention time
requirements in Section V(b) are
lengthier than those required by the SEC
and FINRA, the Department assumes
that retaining data for an additional time
period is a de minimis additional
burden.
The records required in Section V(c)
and Section V(d) are generally kept as
regular and customary business
practices. Therefore, the Department has
estimated that the additional time
needed to maintain records consistent
with the exemption will only require
about one-half hour, on average,
annually for a financial manager to
organize and collate the documents or
else draft a notice explaining that the
information is exempt from disclosure,
and an additional 15 minutes of clerical
time to make the documents available
for inspection during normal business
hours or prepare the paper notice
explaining that the information is
exempt from disclosure. Thus, the
Department estimates that a total of 45
minutes of professional time per
Financial Institution would be required
for a total hour burden of 2,100 hours
at an equivalent cost of $198,000.
In connection with this recordkeeping
and disclosure requirements discussed
above, Section V(d)(2) and (3) provide
that financial institutions relying on the
exemption do not have to disclose trade
secrets or other confidential information
to members of the public (i.e., plan
fiduciaries, contributing employers or
employee organizations whose members
are covered by the plan, participants
and beneficiaries and IRA owners), but
that in the event a financial institution
refuses to disclose information on this
basis, it must provide a written notice
to the requester advising of the reasons
for the refusal and advising that the
Department may request such
information. The Department’s
experience indicates that this provision
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is not commonly invoked, and therefore,
the written notice is rarely, if ever,
generated. Therefore, the Department
believes the cost burden associated with
this clause is de minimis. No other cost
burden exists with respect to
recordkeeping.
Overall Summary
Overall, the Department estimates that
in order to meet the conditions of this
PTE, 2,800 financial institutions will
produce 86 million disclosures and
notices during the first year of this PTE
and 66.4 million disclosures and notices
during subsequent years. These
disclosures and notices will result in 1.3
million burden hours during the first
year and 620,000 burden hours in
subsequent years, at an equivalent cost
of $68.9 million and $21.4 million
respectively. The disclosures and
notices in this exemption will also
result in a total cost burden for materials
and postage of $8.6 million during the
first year and $7.7 million during
subsequent years.
These paperwork burden estimates
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection
(Request for new OMB Control
Number).
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Titles: (1) Proposed Best Interest
Contract Exemption.
OMB Control Number: 1210–NEW.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
2,800.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 85,985,156 in the first year
and 66,394,985 in subsequent years.
Frequency of Response: Initially,
Annually, and When engaging in
exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 1,256,862 during the first year
and 619,766 in subsequent years.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$8,582,764 during the first year and
$7,733,247 in subsequent years.
21983
require, among other things, that a
fiduciary discharge his or her duties
respecting the plan solely in the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan. Additionally,
the fact that a transaction is the subject
of an exemption does not affect the
requirement of Code section 401(a) that
the plan must operate for the exclusive
benefit of the employees of the
employer maintaining the plan and their
beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under ERISA section 408(a) and
Code section 4975(c)(2), the Department
must find that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the
interests of plans and their participants
and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan and IRA
owners;
(3) If granted, the proposed exemption
is applicable to a particular transaction
only if the transaction satisfies the
conditions specified in the exemption;
and
(4) The proposed exemption, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of ERISA and the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction.
Written Comments
The Department invites all interested
persons to submit written comments on
the proposed exemption to the address
and within the time period set forth
above. All comments received will be
made a part of the record. Comments
should state the reasons for the writer’s
interest in the proposed exemption.
Comments received will be available for
public inspection at the above address.
Proposed Exemption
General Information
Section I—Best Interest Contract
Exemption
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under ERISA
section 408(a) and Code section
4975(c)(2) does not relieve a fiduciary or
other party in interest or disqualified
person with respect to a plan or IRA
from certain other provisions of ERISA
and the Code, including any prohibited
transaction provisions to which the
exemption does not apply and the
general fiduciary responsibility
provisions of ERISA section 404 which
(a) In general. ERISA and the Internal
Revenue Code prohibit fiduciary
advisers to employee benefit plans
(Plans) and individual retirement plans
(IRAs) from receiving compensation that
varies based on their investment
recommendations. Similarly, fiduciary
advisers are prohibited from receiving
compensation from third parties in
connection with their advice. This
exemption permits certain persons who
provide investment advice to
Retirement Investors, and their
associated financial institutions,
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affiliates and other related entities, to
receive such otherwise prohibited
compensation as described below.
(b) Covered transactions. This
exemption permits Advisers, Financial
Institutions, and their Affiliates and
Related Entities to receive compensation
for services provided in connection with
a purchase, sale or holding of an Asset
by a Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, as a result of the
Adviser’s and Financial Institution’s
advice to any of the following
‘‘Retirement Investors:’’
(1) A participant or beneficiary of a
Plan subject to Title I of ERISA with
authority to direct the investment of
assets in his or her Plan account or to
take a distribution;
(2) The beneficial owner of an IRA
acting on behalf of the IRA; or
(3) A plan sponsor as described in
ERISA section 3(16)(B) (or any
employee, officer or director thereof) of
a non-participant-directed Plan subject
to Title I of ERISA with fewer than 100
participants, to the extent it acts as a
fiduciary who has authority to make
investment decisions for the Plan.
As detailed below, parties seeking to
rely on the exemption must
contractually agree to adhere to
Impartial Conduct Standards in
rendering advice regarding Assets;
warrant that they have adopted policies
and procedures designed to mitigate the
dangers posed by Material Conflicts of
Interest; disclose important information
relating to fees, compensation, and
Material Conflicts of Interest; and retain
documents and data relating to
investment recommendations regarding
Assets. The exemption provides relief
from the restrictions of ERISA section
406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) and the
sanctions imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code
section 4975(c)(1)(D), (E) and (F). The
Adviser and Financial Institution must
comply with the conditions of Sections
II–V to rely on this exemption.
(c) Exclusions. This exemption does
not apply if:
(1) The Plan is covered by Title I of
ERISA, and (i) the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate is the
employer of employees covered by the
Plan, or (ii) the Adviser or Financial
Institution is a named fiduciary or plan
administrator (as defined in ERISA
section 3(16)(A)) with respect to the
Plan, or an affiliate thereof, that was
selected to provide advice to the Plan by
a fiduciary who is not Independent;
(2) The compensation is received as a
result of a transaction in which the
Adviser is acting on behalf of its own
account or the account of the Financial
Institution, or the account of a person
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directly or indirectly, through one or
more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with the Financial Institution (i.e., a
principal transaction);
(3) The compensation is received as a
result of investment advice to a
Retirement Investor generated solely by
an interactive Web site in which
computer software-based models or
applications provide investment advice
based on personal information each
investor supplies through the Web site
without any personal interaction or
advice from an individual Adviser (i.e.,
‘‘robo advice’’); or
(4) The Adviser (i) exercises any
discretionary authority or discretionary
control respecting management of the
Plan or IRA assets involved in the
transaction or exercises any authority or
control respecting management or
disposition of the assets, or (ii) has any
discretionary authority or discretionary
responsibility in the administration of
the Plan or IRA.
Section II—Contract, Impartial
Conduct, and Other Requirements
(a) Contract. Prior to recommending
that the Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA purchase, sell or hold
the Asset, the Adviser and Financial
Institution enter into a written contract
with the Retirement Investor that
incorporates the terms required by
Section II(b)–(e).
(b) Fiduciary. The written contract
affirmatively states that the Adviser and
Financial Institution are fiduciaries
under ERISA or the Code, or both, with
respect to any investment
recommendations to the Retirement
Investor.
(c) Impartial Conduct Standards. The
Adviser and the Financial Institution
affirmatively agree to, and comply with,
the following:
(1) When providing investment advice
to the Retirement Investor regarding the
Asset, the Adviser and Financial
Institution will provide investment
advice that is in the Best Interest of the
Retirement Investor (i.e., advice that
reflects the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then
prevailing that a prudent person would
exercise based on the investment
objectives, risk tolerance, financial
circumstances, and needs of the
Retirement Investor, without regard to
the financial or other interests of the
Adviser, Financial Institution or any
Affiliate, Related Entity, or other party);
(2) When providing investment advice
to the Retirement Investor regarding the
Asset, the Adviser and Financial
Institution will not recommend an Asset
if the total amount of compensation
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anticipated to be received by the
Adviser, Financial Institution, Affiliates
and Related Entities in connection with
the purchase, sale or holding of the
Asset by the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, will exceed
reasonable compensation in relation to
the total services they provide to the
Retirement Investor; and
(3) The Adviser’s and Financial
Institution’s statements about the Asset,
fees, Material Conflicts of Interest, and
any other matters relevant to a
Retirement Investor’s investment
decisions, will not be misleading.
(d) Warranties. The Adviser and
Financial Institution affirmatively
warrant the following:
(1) The Adviser, Financial Institution,
and Affiliates will comply with all
applicable federal and state laws
regarding the rendering of the
investment advice, the purchase, sale
and holding of the Asset, and the
payment of compensation related to the
purchase, sale and holding of the Asset;
(2) The Financial Institution has
adopted written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to mitigate the
impact of Material Conflicts of Interest
and ensure that its individual Advisers
adhere to the Impartial Conduct
Standards set forth in Section II(c);
(3) In formulating its policies and
procedures, the Financial Institution has
specifically identified Material Conflicts
of Interest and adopted measures to
prevent the Material Conflicts of Interest
from causing violations of the Impartial
Conduct Standards set forth in Section
II(c); and
(4) Neither the Financial Institution
nor (to the best of its knowledge) any
Affiliate or Related Entity uses quotas,
appraisals, performance or personnel
actions, bonuses, contests, special
awards, differential compensation or
other actions or incentives to the extent
they would tend to encourage
individual Advisers to make
recommendations that are not in the
Best Interest of the Retirement Investor.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
contractual warranty set forth in this
Section II(d)(4) does not prevent the
Financial Institution or its Affiliates and
Related Entities from providing
Advisers with differential compensation
based on investments by Plans,
participant or beneficiary accounts, or
IRAs, to the extent such compensation
would not encourage advice that runs
counter to the Best Interest of the
Retirement Investor (e.g., differential
compensation based on such neutral
factors as the difference in time and
analysis necessary to provide prudent
advice with respect to different types of
investments would be permissible).
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(e) Disclosures. The written contract
must specifically:
(1) Identify and disclose any Material
Conflicts of Interest;
(2) Inform the Retirement Investor
that the Retirement Investor has the
right to obtain complete information
about all the fees currently associated
with the Assets in which it is invested,
including all of the direct and indirect
fees paid payable to the Adviser,
Financial Institution, and any Affiliates;
and
(3) Disclose to the Retirement Investor
whether the Financial Institution offers
Proprietary Products or receives Third
Party Payments with respect to the
purchase, sale or holding of any Asset,
and of the address of the Web site
required by Section III(c) that discloses
the compensation arrangements entered
into by Advisers and the Financial
Institution.
(f) Prohibited Contractual Provisions.
The written contract shall not contain
the following:
(1) Exculpatory provisions
disclaiming or otherwise limiting
liability of the Adviser or Financial
Institution for a violation of the
contract’s terms; and
(2) A provision under which the Plan,
IRA or Retirement Investor waives or
qualifies its right to bring or participate
in a class action or other representative
action in court in a dispute with the
Adviser or Financial Institution.
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Section III—Disclosure Requirements
(a) Transaction Disclosure.
(1) Disclosure. Prior to the execution
of the purchase of the Asset by the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, the Adviser furnishes to the
Retirement Investor a chart that
provides, with respect to each Asset
recommended, the Total Cost to the
Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, of investing in the Asset for
1-, 5- and 10-year periods expressed as
a dollar amount, assuming an
investment of the dollar amount
recommended by the Adviser and
reasonable assumptions about
investment performance that are
disclosed.
The disclosure chart required by this
section need not be provided with
respect to a subsequent
recommendation to purchase the same
investment product if the chart was
previously provided to the Retirement
Investor within the past twelve months
and the Total Cost has not materially
changed.
(2) Total Cost. The ‘‘Total Cost’’ of
investing in an Asset means the sum of
the following, as applicable:
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(A) Acquisition costs. Any costs of
acquiring the Asset that are paid by
direct charge to the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, or that
reduce the amount invested in the Asset
(e.g., any loads, commissions, or markups on Assets bought from dealers, and
account opening fees, if applicable).
(B) Ongoing costs. Any ongoing (e.g.,
annual) costs attributable to fees and
expenses charged for the operation of an
Asset that is a pooled investment fund
(e.g., mutual fund, bank collective
investment fund, insurance company
pooled separate account) that reduces
the Asset’s rate of return (e.g., amounts
attributable to a mutual fund expense
ratio and account fees). This includes
amounts paid by the pooled investment
fund to intermediaries, such as sub-TA
fees, sub-accounting fees, etc.
(C) Disposition costs. Any costs of
disposing of or redeeming an interest in
the Asset that are paid by direct charge
to the Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, or that reduce the
amounts received by the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA (e.g., surrender fees, back-end
loads, etc., that are always applicable
(i.e., do not sunset), mark-downs on
assets sold to dealers, and account
closing fees, if applicable).
(D) Others. Any costs not described in
(A)–(C) that reduce the Asset’s rate of
return, are paid by direct charge to the
Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, or reduce the amounts received
by the Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA (e.g., contingent fees,
such as back-end loads that phase out
over time (with such terms explained
beneath the table)).
(3) Model Chart. Appendix II to this
exemption contains a model chart that
may be used to provide the information
required under this Section III(a). Use of
the model chart is not mandatory.
However, use of an appropriately
completed model chart will be deemed
to satisfy the requirements of this
Section III(a).
(b) Annual Disclosure. The Adviser or
Financial Institution provides the
following written information to the
Retirement Investor, annually, within 45
days of the end of the applicable year,
in a succinct single disclosure:
(1) A list identifying each Asset
purchased or sold during the applicable
period and the price at which the Asset
was purchased or sold;
(2) A statement of the total dollar
amount of all fees and expenses paid by
the Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA (directly and indirectly)
with respect to each Asset purchased,
held or sold during the applicable
period; and
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(3) A statement of the total dollar
amount of all compensation received by
the Adviser and Financial Institution,
directly or indirectly, from any party, as
a result of each Asset sold, purchased or
held by the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA during the
applicable period.
(c) Web page.
(1) The Financial Institution
maintains a Web page, freely accessible
to the public, which shows the
following information:
(A) The direct and indirect material
compensation payable to the Adviser,
Financial Institution and any Affiliate
for services provided in connection with
each Asset (or, if uniform across a class
of Assets, the class of Assets) that a
Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or an IRA is able to purchase, hold, or
sell through the Adviser or Financial
Institution, and that a Plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or an IRA has
purchased, held, or sold within the last
365 days. The compensation may be
expressed as a monetary amount,
formula or percentage of the assets
involved in the purchase, sale or
holding; and
(B) The source of the compensation,
and how the compensation varies
within and among Assets.
(2) The Financial Institution’s Web
page provides access to the information
in (1)(A) and (B) in a machine readable
format.
Section IV—Range of Investment
Options
(a) General. The Financial Institution
offers for purchase, sale or holding, and
the Adviser makes available to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA for purchase, sale or holding, a
range of Assets that is broad enough to
enable the Adviser to make
recommendations with respect to all of
the asset classes reasonably necessary to
serve the Best Interests of the
Retirement Investor in light of its
investment objectives, risk tolerance,
and specific financial circumstances.
(b) Limited Range of Investment
Options. Section (a) notwithstanding, a
Financial Institution may limit the
Assets available for purchase, sale or
holding based on whether the Assets are
Proprietary Products, generate Third
Party Payments, or for other reasons,
and still rely on the exemption,
provided that:
(1) The Financial Institution makes a
specific written finding that the
limitations it has placed on the Assets
made available to an Adviser for
purchase, sale or holding by Plans,
participant and beneficiary accounts,
and IRAs do not prevent the Adviser
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from providing advice that is in the Best
Interest of the Retirement Investor (i.e.,
advice that reflects the care, skill,
prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a
prudent person would exercise based on
the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and
needs of the Retirement Investor,
without regard to the financial or other
interests of the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate, Related
Entity, or other party) or otherwise
adhering to the Impartial Conduct
Standards;
(2) Any compensation received in
connection with a purchase, sale or
holding of the Asset by a Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an
IRA, is reasonable in relation to the
value of the specific services provided
to the Retirement Investor in exchange
for the payments and not in excess of
the services’ fair market value;
(3) Before giving investment
recommendations to Retirement
Investors, the Adviser or Financial
Institution gives the Retirement Investor
clear written notice of the limitations
placed on the Assets that the Adviser
may offer for purchase, sale or holding
by a Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or an IRA. Notice is
insufficient if it merely states that the
Financial Institution or Adviser ‘‘may’’
limit investment recommendations
based on whether the Assets are
Proprietary Products or generate Third
Party Payments, or for other reasons,
without specific disclosure of the extent
to which recommendations are, in fact,
limited on that basis; and
(4) The Adviser notifies the
Retirement Investor if the Adviser does
not recommend a sufficiently broad
range of Assets to meet the Retirement
Investor’s needs.
(c) ERISA plan participants and
beneficiaries. Some Advisers and
Financial Institutions provide advice to
participants in ERISA-covered
participant directed individual account
Plans in which the menu of investment
options is selected by an Independent
Plan fiduciary. In such cases, provided
the Adviser and Financial Institution
did not provide investment advice to
the Plan fiduciary regarding the
composition of the menu, the Adviser
and Financial Institution do not have to
comply with Section IV(a)–(c) in
connection with their advice to
individual participants and
beneficiaries on the selection of Assets
from the menu provided. This exception
is not available for advice with respect
to investments within open brokerage
windows or otherwise outside the Plan’s
designated investment options.
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Section V—Disclosure to the
Department and Recordkeeping
(a) EBSA Disclosure. Before receiving
compensation in reliance on the
exemption in Section I, the Financial
Institution notifies the Department of
Labor of the intention to rely on this
class exemption. The notice will remain
in effect until revoked in writing by the
Financial Institution. The notice need
not identify any Plan or IRA.
(b) Data Request. The Financial
Institution maintains the data that is
subject to request pursuant to Section IX
in a manner that is accessible for
examination by the Department for six
(6) years from the date of the transaction
subject to relief hereunder. No party,
other than the Financial Institution
responsible for complying with this
paragraph (b), will be subject to the
taxes imposed by Code section 4975(a)
and (b), if applicable, if the data is not
maintained or not available for
examination as required by paragraph
(b).
(c) Recordkeeping. The Financial
Institution maintains for a period of six
(6) years, in a manner that is accessible
for examination, the records necessary
to enable the persons described in
paragraph (d) of this Section to
determine whether the conditions of
this exemption have been met, except
that:
(1) If such records are lost or
destroyed, due to circumstances beyond
the control of the Financial Institution,
then no prohibited transaction will be
considered to have occurred solely on
the basis of the unavailability of those
records; and
(2) No party, other than the Financial
Institution responsible for complying
with this paragraph (c), will be subject
to the civil penalty that may be assessed
under ERISA section 502(i) or the taxes
imposed by Code section 4975(a) and
(b), if applicable, if the records are not
maintained or are not available for
examination as required by paragraph
(d), below.
(d) (1) Except as provided in
paragraph (d)(2) of this Section, and
notwithstanding any provisions of
ERISA section 504(a)(2) and (b), the
records referred to in paragraph (c) of
this Section are unconditionally
available at their customary location for
examination during normal business
hours by:
(A) Any authorized employee or
representative of the Department or the
Internal Revenue Service;
(B) Any fiduciary of a Plan that
engaged in a purchase, sale or holding
of an Asset described in this exemption,
or any authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary;
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(C) Any contributing employer and
any employee organization whose
members are covered by a Plan
described in paragraph (d)(1)(B), or any
authorized employee or representative
of these entities; or
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of
a Plan described in paragraph (B), IRA
owner, or the authorized representative
of such participant, beneficiary or
owner; and
(2) None of the persons described in
paragraph (d)(1)(B)–(D) of this Section
are authorized to examine privileged
trade secrets or privileged commercial
or financial information, of the
Financial Institution, or information
identifying other individuals.
(3) Should the Financial Institution
refuse to disclose information on the
basis that the information is exempt
from disclosure, the Financial
Institution must, by the close of the
thirtieth (30th) day following the
request, provide a written notice
advising the requestor of the reasons for
the refusal and that the Department may
request such information.
Section VI—Insurance and Annuity
Contract Exemption
(a) In general. In addition to
prohibiting fiduciaries from receiving
compensation from third parties and
compensation that varies on the basis of
the fiduciaries’ investment advice,
ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code
prohibit the purchase by a Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA of an insurance or annuity product
from an insurance company that is a
service provider to the Plan or IRA. This
exemption permits a Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA to purchase
an Asset that is an insurance or annuity
contract in accordance with an
Adviser’s advice, from a Financial
Institution that is an insurance company
and that is a service provider to the Plan
or IRA. This exemption is provided
because purchases of insurance and
annuity products are often prohibited
purchases and sales involving insurance
companies that have a pre-existing party
in interest relationship to the Plan or
IRA.
(b) Covered transaction. The
restrictions of ERISA section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D), and the sanctions
imposed by Code section 4975(a) and
(b), by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), shall not apply to
a fiduciary’s causing the purchase of an
Asset that is an insurance or annuity
contract by a non-participant-directed
Plan subject to Title I of ERISA that has
fewer than 100 participants, participant
or beneficiary account, or IRA, from a
Financial Institution that is an
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insurance company and that is a party
in interest or disqualified person, if:
(1) The transaction is effected by the
insurance company in the ordinary
course of its business as an insurance
company;
(2) The combined total of all fees and
compensation received by the insurance
company and any Affiliate is not in
excess of reasonable compensation
under the circumstances;
(3) The purchase is for cash only; and
(4) The terms of the purchase are at
least as favorable to the Plan, participant
or beneficiary account, or IRA as the
terms generally available in an arm’s
length transaction with an unrelated
party.
(c) Exclusion: The exemption in this
Section VI does not apply if the Plan is
covered by Title I of ERISA, and (i) the
Adviser, Financial Institution or any
Affiliate is the employer of employees
covered by the Plan, or (ii) the Adviser
and Financial Institution is a named
fiduciary or plan administrator (as
defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A)) with
respect to the Plan, or an affiliate
thereof, that was selected to provide
advice to the plan by a fiduciary who is
not Independent.
406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) and the
sanctions imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code
section 4975(c)(1)(D), (E) and (F), shall
not apply to the receipt of compensation
by an Adviser, Financial Institution, and
any Affiliate and Related Entity, for
services provided in connection with
the purchase, holding or sale of an
Asset, as a result of the Adviser’s and
Financial Institution’s advice, that was
purchased, sold, or held by a Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an
IRA before the Applicability Date if:
(1) The compensation is not excluded
pursuant to Section I(c) of the Best
Interest Contract Exemption;
(2) The compensation is received
pursuant to an agreement, arrangement
or understanding that was entered into
prior to the Applicability Date;
(3) The Adviser and Financial
Institution do not provide additional
advice to the Plan regarding the
purchase, sale or holding of the Asset
after the Applicability Date; and
(4) The purchase or sale of the Asset
was not a non-exempt prohibited
transaction pursuant to ERISA section
406 and Code section 4975 on the date
it occurred.
Section VII—Exemption for PreExisting Transactions
(a) In general. ERISA and the Internal
Revenue Code prohibit Advisers,
Financial Institutions and their
Affiliates and Related Entities from
receiving variable or third-party
compensation as a result of the
Adviser’s and Financial Institution’s
advice to a Plan, participant or
beneficiary, or IRA owner. Some
Advisers and Financial Institutions did
not consider themselves fiduciaries
within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510–
3.21 before the applicability date of the
amendment to 29 CFR 2510–3.21 (the
Applicability Date). Other Advisers and
Financial Institutions entered into
transactions involving Plans, participant
or beneficiary accounts, or IRAs before
the Applicability Date, in accordance
with the terms of a prohibited
transaction exemption that has since
been amended. This exemption permits
Advisers, Financial Institutions, and
their Affiliates and Related Entities, to
receive compensation, such as 12b–1
fees, in connection with the purchase,
sale or holding of an Asset by a Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an
IRA, as a result of the Adviser’s and
Financial Institution’s advice, that
occurred prior to the Applicability Date,
as described and limited below.
(b) Covered transaction. Subject to the
applicable conditions described below,
the restrictions of ERISA section
Section VIII—Definitions
For purposes of these exemptions:
(a) ‘‘Adviser’’ means an individual
who:
(1) Is a fiduciary of a Plan or IRA
solely by reason of the provision of
investment advice described in ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii) or Code section
4975(e)(3)(B), or both, and the
applicable regulations, with respect to
the Assets involved in the transaction;
(2) Is an employee, independent
contractor, agent, or registered
representative of a Financial Institution;
and
(3) Satisfies the applicable federal and
state regulatory and licensing
requirements of insurance, banking, and
securities laws with respect to the
covered transaction.
(b) ‘‘Affiliate’’ of an Adviser or
Financial Institution means—
(1) Any person directly or indirectly
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with the Adviser or
Financial Institution. For this purpose,
‘‘control’’ means the power to exercise
a controlling influence over the
management or policies of a person
other than an individual;
(2) Any officer, director, employee,
agent, registered representative, relative
(as defined in ERISA section 3(15)),
member of family (as defined in Code
section 4975(e)(6)) of, or partner in, the
Adviser or Financial Institution; and
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(3) Any corporation or partnership of
which the Adviser or Financial
Institution is an officer, director or
employee or in which the Adviser or
Financial Institution is a partner.
(c) An ‘‘Asset,’’ for purposes of this
exemption, includes only the following
investment products: Bank deposits,
certificates of deposit (CDs), shares or
interests in registered investment
companies, bank collective funds,
insurance company separate accounts,
exchange-traded REITs, exchange-traded
funds, corporate bonds offered pursuant
to a registration statement under the
Securities Act of 1933, agency debt
securities as defined in FINRA Rule
6710(l) or its successor, U.S. Treasury
securities as defined in FINRA Rule
6710(p) or its successor, insurance and
annuity contracts, guaranteed
investment contracts, and equity
securities within the meaning of 17 CFR
230.405 that are exchange-traded
securities within the meaning of 17 CFR
242.600. Excluded from this definition
is any equity security that is a security
future or a put, call, straddle, or other
option or privilege of buying an equity
security from or selling an equity
security to another without being bound
to do so.
(d) Investment advice is in the ‘‘Best
Interest’’ of the Retirement Investor
when the Adviser and Financial
Institution providing the advice act with
the care, skill, prudence, and diligence
under the circumstances then prevailing
that a prudent person would exercise
based on the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and
needs of the Retirement Investor,
without regard to the financial or other
interests of the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate, Related
Entity, or other party.
(e) ‘‘Financial Institution’’ means the
entity that employs the Adviser or
otherwise retains such individual as an
independent contractor, agent or
registered representative and that is:
(1) Registered as an investment
adviser under the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b–1 et seq.) or
under the laws of the state in which the
adviser maintains its principal office
and place of business;
(2) A bank or similar financial
institution supervised by the United
States or state, or a savings association
(as defined in section 3(b)(1) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(b)(1)), but only if the advice
resulting in the compensation is
provided through a trust department of
the bank or similar financial institution
or savings association which is subject
to periodic examination and review by
federal or state banking authorities;
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(3) An insurance company qualified
to do business under the laws of a state,
provided that such insurance company:
(A) Has obtained a Certificate of
Authority from the insurance
commissioner of its domiciliary state
which has neither been revoked nor
suspended,
(B) Has undergone and shall continue
to undergo an examination by an
Independent certified public accountant
for its last completed taxable year or has
undergone a financial examination
(within the meaning of the law of its
domiciliary state) by the state’s
insurance commissioner within the
preceding 5 years, and
(C) Is domiciled in a state whose law
requires that actuarial review of reserves
be conducted annually by an
Independent firm of actuaries and
reported to the appropriate regulatory
authority; or
(4) A broker or dealer registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78a et seq.).
(f) ‘‘Independent’’ means a person
that:
(1) Is not the Adviser, the Financial
Institution or any Affiliate relying on
the exemption,
(2) Does not receive compensation or
other consideration for his or her own
account from the Adviser, the Financial
Institution or Affiliate; and
(3) Does not have a relationship to or
an interest in the Adviser, the Financial
Institution or Affiliate that might affect
the exercise of the person’s best
judgment in connection with
transactions described in this
exemption.
(g) ‘‘Individual Retirement Account’’
or ‘‘IRA’’ means any trust, account or
annuity described in Code section
4975(e)(1)(B) through (F), including, for
example, an individual retirement
account described in section 408(a) of
the Code and a health savings account
described in section 223(d) of the Code.
(h) A ‘‘Material Conflict of Interest’’
exists when an Adviser or Financial
Institution has a financial interest that
could affect the exercise of its best
judgment as a fiduciary in rendering
advice to a Retirement Investor
regarding an Asset.
(i) ‘‘Plan’’ means any employee
benefit plan described in section 3(3) of
the Act and any plan described in
section 4975(e)(1)(A) of the Code.
(j) ‘‘Proprietary Product’’ means a
product that is managed by the
Financial Institution or any of its
Affiliates.
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Jkt 235001
(k) ‘‘Related Entity’’ means any entity
other than an Affiliate in which the
Adviser or Financial Institution has an
interest which may affect the exercise of
its best judgment as a fiduciary.
(l) ‘‘Retirement Investor’’ means—
(1) A participant or beneficiary of a
Plan subject to Title I of ERISA with
authority to direct the investment of
assets in his or her Plan account or to
take a distribution,
(2) The beneficial owner of an IRA
acting on behalf of the IRA, or
(3) A plan sponsor as described in
ERISA section 3(16)(B) (or any
employee, officer or director thereof), of
a non-participant-directed Plan subject
to Title I of ERISA that has fewer than
100 participants, to the extent it acts as
a fiduciary with authority to make
investment decisions for the Plan.
(m) ‘‘Third-Party Payments’’ mean
sales charges when not paid directly by
the Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, 12b–1 fees and other
payments paid to the Financial
Institution or an Affiliate or Related
Entity by a third party as a result of the
purchase, sale or holding of an Asset by
a Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA.
Section IX—Data Request
Upon request by the Department, a
Financial Institution that relies on the
exemption in Section I shall provide,
within a reasonable time, but in no
event longer than six (6) months, after
receipt of the request, the following
information for the preceding six (6)
year period:
(a) Inflows. At the Financial
Institution level, for each Asset
purchased, for each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number and identity
of shares/units bought;
(2) The aggregate dollar amount
invested and the cost to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA associated with the purchase;
(3) The revenue received by the
Financial Institution and any Affiliate in
connection with the purchase of each
Asset disaggregated by source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue
source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual fund
adviser) and the reason the
compensation was paid.
(b) Outflows. At the Financial
Institution level for each Asset sold, for
each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number of and
identity of shares/units sold;
(2) The aggregate dollar amount
received and the cost to the Plan,
PO 00000
Frm 00062
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, associated with the sale;
(3) The revenue received by the
Financial Institution and any Affiliate in
connection with the sale of each Asset
disaggregated by source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue
source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual fund
adviser) and the reason the
compensation was paid.
(c) Holdings. At the Financial
Institution level for each Asset held at
any time during each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number and identity
of shares/units held at the end of such
quarter;
(2) The aggregate cost incurred by the
Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, during such quarter in
connection with the holdings;
(3) The revenue received by the
Financial Institution and any Affiliate in
connection with the holding of each
Asset during such quarter for each Asset
disaggregated by source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue
source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual fund
adviser) and the reason the
compensation was paid.
(d) Returns. At the Retirement
Investor level:
(1) The identity of the Adviser;
(2) The beginning-of-quarter value of
the Retirement Investor’s Portfolio;
(3) The end-of-quarter value of the
Retirement Investor’s Portfolio; and
(4) Each external cash flow to or from
the Retirement Investor’s Portfolio
during the quarter and the date on
which it occurred.
For purposes of this subparagraph (d),
‘‘Portfolio’’ means the Retirement
Investor’s combined holding of assets
held in a Plan account or IRA advised
by the Adviser.
(e) Public Disclosure. The Department
reserves the right to publicly disclose
information provided by the Financial
Institution pursuant to subparagraph
(d). If publicly disclosed, such
information would be aggregated at the
Adviser level, and the Department
would not disclose any individually
identifiable financial information
regarding Retirement Investor accounts.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 14th day of
April, 2015.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
E:\FR\FM\20APP2.SGM
20APP2
21989
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
APPENDIX I FINANCIAL INSTITUTION ABC—WEB SITE DISCLOSURE MODEL FORM
Type of investment
Provider,
name,
sub-type
Non-Proprietary
Mutual
Fund
(Load
Fund).
Transactional
Ongoing
Charges to
investor
Compensation
to firm
Compensation
to adviser
Charges to
investor
Compensation
to firm
Compensation
to adviser
Affiliate
Special rules
XYZ MF
Large
Cap
Fund,
Class A
Class B
Class C.
[ • ]% sales
load as applicable.
[ • ]% dealer
concession.
[ • ]% of transactional fee
Extent considered in
annual
bonus.
[ • ]% expense
ratio.
[ • ]% 12b–1
fee, revenue
sharing (paid
by fund/affiliate).
[ • ]% of ongoing fees.
Extent considered in annual bonus.
N/A .................
Proprietary
Mutual
Fund
(No
load).
ABC MF
Large
Cap
Fund.
No upfront
charge.
N/A .................
N/A .................
[ • ]% expense
ratio.
[ • ]% asset[ • ]% of ongobased aning fees Exnual fee for
tent considshareholder
ered in anservicing
nual bonus.
(paid by
fund/affiliate).
Equities,
ETFs,
Fixed
Income.
.................
$[ • ] commission per
transaction.
$[ • ] commission per
transaction.
N/A .................
N/A .................
N/A Extent
considered
in annual
bonus.
Annuities
(Fixed
and
Variable).
Insurance
Company A.
No upfront
charge on
amount invested.
$[ • ] commission (paid by
insurer).
[ • ]% of commission Extent considered in annual bonus.
[ • ]% of commission Extent considered in annual bonus.
[ • ]% assetbased investment advisory fee
paid by fund
to affiliate of
Financial Institution.
N/A .................
Breakpoints
(as applicable)
Contingent deferred
shares
charge (as
applicable)
N/A
[ • ]% M&E fee
[ • ]% underlying expense ratio.
$[ • ] Ongoing
trailing commission
(paid by underlying investment
providers).
[ • ]% of ongoing fees Extent considered in annual bonus.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Class
APPENDIX II FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
XZY—TRANSACTION
DISCLOSURE Exemption.
MODEL CHART
SUMMARY: This document contains a
Your
investment
Total cost of your investment if held for:
1
year
5
years
10
years
Asset 1
Asset 2
Asset 3
Account
fees
Total
[FR Doc. 2015–08832 Filed 4–15–15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D–11713]
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
ZRIN 1210–ZA25
Proposed Class Exemption for
Principal Transactions in Certain Debt
Securities between Investment Advice
Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit
Plans and IRAs
Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), U.S.
Department of Labor.
AGENCY:
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20:05 Apr 17, 2015
Jkt 235001
notice of pendency before the U.S.
Department of Labor of a proposed
exemption from certain prohibited
transactions provisions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code
(the Code). The provisions at issue
generally prohibit fiduciaries with
respect to employee benefit plans and
individual retirement accounts (IRAs)
from purchasing and selling securities
when the fiduciaries are acting on
behalf of their own accounts (principal
transactions). The exemption proposed
in this notice would permit principal
transactions in certain debt securities
between a plan, plan participant or
beneficiary account, or an IRA, and a
fiduciary that provides investment
advice to the plan or IRA, under
conditions to safeguard the interests of
these investors. The proposed
exemption would affect participants and
beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners, and
fiduciaries with respect to such plans
and IRAs.
DATES: Comments: Written comments
concerning the proposed class
exemption must be received by the
Department on or before July 6, 2015.
Applicability: The Department
proposes to make this exemption
available eight months after publication
of the final exemption in the Federal
Register.
PO 00000
Frm 00063
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
N/A .................
N/A
Surrender
charge
All written comments
concerning the proposed class
exemption should be sent to the Office
of Exemption Determinations by any of
the following methods, identified by
ZRIN: 1210–ZA25:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket ID
number: EBSA–EBSA–2014–0016.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
Email to: e-OED@dol.gov.
Fax to: (202) 693–8474.
Mail: Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (Attention: D–
11713), U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Suite 400,
Washington, DC 20210.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of
Exemption Determinations, Employee
Benefits Security Administration,
(Attention: D–11713), U.S. Department
of Labor, 122 C St. NW., Suite 400,
Washington, DC 20001.
Instructions. All comments must be
received by the end of the comment
period. The comments received will be
available for public inspection in the
Public Disclosure Room of the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of
Labor, Room N–1513, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210.
Comments will also be available online
at www.regulations.gov, at Docket ID
number: EBSA–2014–0016 and
www.dol.gov/ebsa, at no charge.
ADDRESSES:
E:\FR\FM\20APP2.SGM
20APP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 75 (Monday, April 20, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 21960-21989]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-08832]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application No. D-11712]
ZRIN 1210-ZA25
Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), U.S.
Department of Labor.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Class Exemption.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains a notice of pendency before the U.S.
Department of Labor of a proposed exemption from certain prohibited
transactions provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974 (ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code (the Code). The
provisions at issue generally prohibit fiduciaries with respect to
employee benefit plans and individual retirement accounts (IRAs) from
engaging in self-dealing and receiving compensation from third parties
in connection with transactions involving the plans and IRAs. The
exemption proposed in this notice would allow entities such as broker-
dealers and insurance agents that are fiduciaries by reason of the
provision of investment advice to receive such compensation when plan
participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and certain small plans
purchase, hold or sell certain investment products in accordance with
the fiduciaries' advice, under protective conditions to safeguard the
interests of the plans, participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners.
The proposed exemption would affect participants and beneficiaries of
plans, IRA owners and fiduciaries with respect to such plans and IRAs.
DATES: Comments: Written comments concerning the proposed class
exemption must be received by the Department on or before July 6, 2015.
Applicability: The Department proposes to make this exemption
available eight months after publication of the final exemption in the
Federal Register. We request comment below on whether the applicability
date of certain conditions should be delayed.
ADDRESSES: All written comments concerning the proposed class exemption
should be sent to the Office of Exemption Determinations by any of the
following methods, identified by ZRIN: 1210-ZA25:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov at Docket ID
number: EBSA-2014-0016. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
Email to: e-OED@dol.gov.
Fax to: (202) 693-8474.
Mail: Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (Attention: D-11712), U.S. Department of
Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., Suite 400, Washington DC 20210.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee
Benefits Security Administration, (Attention: D-11712), U.S. Department
of Labor, 122 C St. NW., Suite 400, Washington DC 20001.
Instructions. All comments must be received by the end of the
comment period. The comments received will be available for public
inspection in the Public Disclosure Room of the Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, Room N-1513, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210. Comments will also be
available online at www.regulations.gov, at Docket ID number: EBSA-
2014-0016 and www.dol.gov/ebsa, at no charge.
Warning: All comments will be made available to the public. Do not
include any personally identifiable information (such as Social
Security number, name, address, or other contact information) or
confidential business information that you do not want publicly
disclosed. All comments may be posted on the Internet and can be
retrieved by most Internet search engines.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Karen E. Lloyd or Brian L. Shiker,
Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor (202) 693-8824 (this is not a
toll-free number).
[[Page 21961]]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Department is proposing this class
exemption on its own motion, pursuant to ERISA section 408(a) and Code
section 4975(c)(2), and in accordance with the procedures set forth in
29 CFR part 2570 (76 FR 66637 (October 27, 2011)).
Public Hearing: The Department plans to hold an administrative
hearing within 30 days of the close of the comment period. The
Department will ensure ample opportunity for public comment by
reopening the record following the hearing and publication of the
hearing transcript. Specific information regarding the date, location
and submission of requests to testify will be published in a notice in
the Federal Register.
Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
The Department is proposing this exemption in connection with its
proposed regulation under ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B) (Proposed Regulation), published elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register. The Proposed Regulation would amend the
definition of a ``fiduciary'' under ERISA and the Code to specify when
a person is a fiduciary by reason of the provision of investment advice
for a fee or other compensation regarding assets of a plan or IRA. If
adopted, the Proposed Regulation would replace an existing regulation
dating to 1975. The Proposed Regulation is intended to take into
account the advent of 401(k) plans and IRAs, the dramatic increase in
rollovers, and other developments that have transformed the retirement
plan landscape and the associated investment market over the four
decades since the existing regulation was issued. In light of the
extensive changes in retirement investment practices and relationships,
the Proposed Regulation would update existing rules to distinguish more
appropriately between the sorts of advice relationships that should be
treated as fiduciary in nature and those that should not.
The exemption proposed in this notice (``the Best Interest Contract
Exemption'') was developed to promote the provision of investment
advice that is in the best interest of retail investors such as plan
participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and small plans. ERISA and
the Code generally prohibit fiduciaries from receiving payments from
third parties and from acting on conflicts of interest, including using
their authority to affect or increase their own compensation, in
connection with transactions involving a plan or IRA. Certain types of
fees and compensation common in the retail market, such as brokerage or
insurance commissions, 12b-1 fees and revenue sharing payments, fall
within these prohibitions when received by fiduciaries as a result of
transactions involving advice to the plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRA owners and small plan sponsors. To facilitate
continued provision of advice to such retail investors and under
conditions designed to safeguard the interests of these investors, the
exemption would allow certain investment advice fiduciaries, including
broker-dealers and insurance agents, to receive these various forms of
compensation that, in the absence of an exemption, would not be
permitted under ERISA and the Code.
Rather than create a set of highly prescriptive transaction-
specific exemptions, which has generally been the regulatory approach
to date, the proposed exemption would flexibly accommodate a wide range
of current business practices, while minimizing the harmful impact of
conflicts of interest on the quality of advice. The Department has
sought to preserve beneficial business models by taking a standards-
based approach that will broadly permit firms to continue to rely on
common fee practices, as long as they are willing to adhere to basic
standards aimed at ensuring that their advice is in the best interest
of their customers.
ERISA section 408(a) specifically authorizes the Secretary of Labor
to grant administrative exemptions from ERISA's prohibited transaction
provisions.\1\ Regulations at 29 CFR 2570.30 to 2570.52 describe the
procedures for applying for an administrative exemption. Before
granting an exemption, the Department must find that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interests of plans and their
participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and protective of the
rights of participants and beneficiaries of plans and IRA owners.
Interested parties are permitted to submit comments to the Department
through July 6, 2015. The Department plans to hold an administrative
hearing within 30 days of the close of the comment period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Code section 4975(c)(2) authorizes the Secretary of the
Treasury to grant exemptions from the parallel prohibited
transaction provisions of the Code. Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978 (5 U.S.C. app. at 214 (2000)) generally transferred the
authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to grant administrative
exemptions under Code section 4975 to the Secretary of Labor. This
proposed exemption would provide relief from the indicated
prohibited transaction provisions of both ERISA and the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary of the Major Provisions
The proposed exemption would apply to compensation received by
investment advice fiduciaries--both individual ``advisers'' \2\ and the
``financial institutions'' that employ or otherwise contract with
them--and their affiliates and related entities that is provided in
connection with the purchase, sale or holding of certain assets by
plans and IRAs. In particular, the exemption would apply when
prohibited compensation is received as a result of advice to retail
``retirement investors'' including plan participants and beneficiaries,
IRA owners, and plan sponsors (or their employees, officers or
directors) of plans with fewer than 100 participants making investment
decisions on behalf of the plans and IRAs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ By using the term ``adviser,'' the Department does not
intend to limit the exemption to investment advisers registered
under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or under state law. As
explained herein, an adviser is an individual who can be a
representative of a registered investment adviser, a bank or similar
financial institution, an insurance company, or a broker-dealer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In order to protect the interests of the plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRA owners, and small plan sponsors, the exemption would
require the adviser and financial institution to contractually
acknowledge fiduciary status, commit to adhere to basic standards of
impartial conduct, warrant that they have adopted policies and
procedures reasonably designed to mitigate any harmful impact of
conflicts of interest, and disclose basic information on their
conflicts of interest and on the cost of their advice. The adviser and
firm must commit to fundamental obligations of fair dealing and
fiduciary conduct--to give advice that is in the customer's best
interest; avoid misleading statements; receive no more than reasonable
compensation; and comply with applicable federal and state laws
governing advice. This standards-based approach aligns the adviser's
interests with those of the plan or IRA customer, while leaving the
adviser and employing firm the flexibility and discretion necessary to
determine how best to satisfy these basic standards in light of the
unique attributes of their business. All financial institutions relying
on the exemption would be required to notify the Department in advance
of doing so. Finally, all financial institutions making use of the
exemption would have to maintain certain data, and make it available to
the Department, to help
[[Page 21962]]
evaluate the effectiveness of the exemption in safeguarding the
interests of the plan participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and
small plans.
Executive Order 12866 and 13563 Statement
Under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563, the Department must
determine whether a regulatory action is ``significant'' and therefore
subject to the requirements of the Executive Order and subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Executive Orders
13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess all costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives and, if regulation is necessary, to
select regulatory approaches that maximize net benefits (including
potential economic, environmental, public health and safety effects,
distributive impacts, and equity). Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the
importance of quantifying both costs and benefits, of reducing costs,
of harmonizing and streamlining rules, and of promoting flexibility. It
also requires federal agencies to develop a plan under which they will
periodically review their existing significant regulations to make
regulatory programs more effective or less burdensome in achieving
their regulatory objectives.
Under Executive Order 12866, ``significant'' regulatory actions are
subject to the requirements of the Executive Order and review by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of Executive Order
12866, defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is
likely to result in a rule (1) having an annual effect on the economy
of $100 million or more, or adversely and materially affecting a sector
of the economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or State, local or tribal governments or
communities (also referred to as an ``economically significant''
regulatory action); (2) creating serious inconsistency or otherwise
interfering with an action taken or planned by another agency; (3)
materially altering the budgetary impacts of entitlement grants, user
fees, or loan programs or the rights and obligations of recipients
thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or policy issues arising out of
legal mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth
in the Executive Order. Pursuant to the terms of the Executive Order,
OMB has determined that this action is ``significant'' within the
meaning of Section 3(f)(4) of the Executive Order. Accordingly, the
Department has undertaken an assessment of the costs and benefits of
the proposed exemption, and OMB has reviewed this regulatory action.
Background
Proposed Regulation Defining a Fiduciary
As explained more fully in the preamble to the Department's
Proposed Regulation under ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section
4975(e)(3)(B), also published in this issue of the Federal Register,
ERISA is a comprehensive statute designed to protect the interests of
plan participants and beneficiaries, the integrity of employee benefit
plans, and the security of retirement, health, and other critical
benefits. The broad public interest in ERISA-covered plans is reflected
in its imposition of fiduciary responsibilities on parties engaging in
important plan activities, as well as in the tax-favored status of plan
assets and investments. One of the chief ways in which ERISA protects
employee benefit plans is by requiring that plan fiduciaries comply
with fundamental obligations rooted in the law of trusts. In
particular, plan fiduciaries must manage plan assets prudently and with
undivided loyalty to the plans and their participants and
beneficiaries.\3\ In addition, they must refrain from engaging in
``prohibited transactions,'' which ERISA does not permit because of the
dangers posed by the fiduciaries' conflicts of interest with respect to
the transactions.\4\ When fiduciaries violate ERISA's fiduciary duties
or the prohibited transaction rules, they may be held personally liable
for the breach.\5\ In addition, violations of the prohibited
transaction rules are subject to excise taxes under the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ ERISA section 404(a).
\4\ ERISA section 406. ERISA also prohibits certain transactions
between a plan and a ``party in interest.''
\5\ ERISA section 409; see also ERISA section 405.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Code also has rules regarding fiduciary conduct with respect to
tax-favored accounts that are not generally covered by ERISA, such as
IRAs. Although ERISA's general fiduciary obligations of prudence and
loyalty do not govern the fiduciaries of IRAs, these fiduciaries are
subject to the prohibited transaction rules. In this context,
fiduciaries engaging in the prohibited transactions are subject to an
excise tax enforced by the Internal Revenue Service. Unlike
participants in plans covered by Title I of ERISA, IRA owners do not
have a statutory right to bring suit against fiduciaries for violation
of the prohibited transaction rules and fiduciaries are not personally
liable to IRA owners for the losses caused by their misconduct. Nor can
the Secretary of Labor bring suit to enforce the prohibited
transactions rules on behalf of IRA owners. The exemption proposed
herein, as well as the Proposed Class Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Debt Securities between Investment Advice
Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs, published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register, would create contractual
obligations for fiduciaries to adhere to certain standards (the
Impartial Conduct Standards) if they want to take advantage of the
exemption. IRA owners would have a right to enforce these new
contractual rights.
Under the statutory framework, the determination of who is a
``fiduciary'' is of central importance. Many of ERISA's and the Code's
protections, duties, and liabilities hinge on fiduciary status. In
relevant part, ERISA section 3(21)(A) and Code section 4975(e)(3)
provide that a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan or IRA to
the extent he or she (i) exercises any discretionary authority or
discretionary control with respect to management of such plan or IRA,
or exercises any authority or control with respect to management or
disposition of its assets; (ii) renders investment advice for a fee or
other compensation, direct or indirect, with respect to any moneys or
other property of such plan or IRA, or has any authority or
responsibility to do so; or, (iii) has any discretionary authority or
discretionary responsibility in the administration of such plan or IRA.
The statutory definition deliberately casts a wide net in assigning
fiduciary responsibility with respect to plan and IRA assets. Thus,
``any authority or control'' over plan or IRA assets is sufficient to
confer fiduciary status, and any persons who render ``investment advice
for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect'' are fiduciaries,
regardless of whether they have direct control over the plan's or IRA's
assets and regardless of their status as an investment adviser or
broker under the federal securities laws. The statutory definition and
associated responsibilities were enacted to ensure that plans, plan
participants, and IRA owners can depend on persons who provide
investment advice for a fee to provide recommendations that are
untainted by conflicts of interest. In the absence of fiduciary status,
the providers of investment advice are neither subject to ERISA's
fundamental fiduciary standards, nor accountable for imprudent,
disloyal, or tainted advice under ERISA or the Code, no matter
[[Page 21963]]
how egregious the misconduct or how substantial the losses. Retirement
investors typically are not financial experts and consequently must
rely on professional advice to make critical investment decisions. In
the years since then, the significance of financial advice has become
still greater with increased reliance on participant directed plans and
IRAs for the provision of retirement benefits.
In 1975, the Department issued a regulation, at 29 CFR 2510.3-
21(c)(1975), defining the circumstances under which a person is treated
as providing ``investment advice'' to an employee benefit plan within
the meaning of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) (the ``1975 regulation'').\6\
The 1975 regulation narrowed the scope of the statutory definition of
fiduciary investment advice by creating a five-part test that must be
satisfied before a person can be treated as rendering investment advice
for a fee. Under the 1975 regulation, for advice to constitute
``investment advice,'' an adviser who does not have discretionary
authority or control with respect to the purchase or sale of securities
or other property of the plan must (1) render advice as to the value of
securities or other property, or make recommendations as to the
advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities or other
property (2) on a regular basis (3) pursuant to a mutual agreement,
arrangement or understanding, with the plan or a plan fiduciary that
(4) the advice will serve as a primary basis for investment decisions
with respect to plan assets, and that (5) the advice will be
individualized based on the particular needs of the plan. The
regulation provides that an adviser is a fiduciary with respect to any
particular instance of advice only if he or she meets each and every
element of the five-part test with respect to the particular advice
recipient or plan at issue. A 1976 Department of Labor Advisory Opinion
further limited the application of the statutory definition of
``investment advice'' by stating that valuations of employer securities
in connection with employee stock ownership plan (ESOP) purchases would
not be considered fiduciary advice.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The Department of Treasury issued a virtually identical
regulation, at 26 CFR 54.4975-9(c), which interprets Code section
4975(e)(3).
\7\ Advisory Opinion 76-65A (June 7, 1976).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the marketplace for financial services has developed in the
years since 1975, the five-part test may now undermine, rather than
promote, the statutes' text and purposes. The narrowness of the 1975
regulation allows advisers, brokers, consultants and valuation firms to
play a central role in shaping plan investments, without ensuring the
accountability that Congress intended for persons having such influence
and responsibility. Even when plan sponsors, participants,
beneficiaries and IRA owners clearly rely on paid consultants for
impartial guidance, the regulation allows many advisers to avoid
fiduciary status and the accompanying fiduciary obligations of care and
prohibitions on disloyal and conflicted transactions. As a consequence,
under ERISA and the Code, these advisers can steer customers to
investments based on their own self-interest, give imprudent advice,
and engage in transactions that would otherwise be prohibited by ERISA
and the Code.
In the Department's Proposed Regulation defining a fiduciary under
ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and Code section 4975(e)(3)(B), the
Department seeks to replace the existing regulation with one that more
appropriately distinguishes between the sorts of advice relationships
that should be treated as fiduciary in nature and those that should
not, in light of the legal framework and financial marketplace in which
IRAs and plans currently operate.\8\ Under the Proposed Regulation,
plans include IRAs.
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\8\ The Department initially proposed an amendment to its
regulation defining a fiduciary under ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and
Code section 4975(e)(3)(B) on October 22, 2010, at 75 FR 65263. It
subsequently announced its intention to withdraw the proposal and
propose a new rule, consistent with the President's Executive Orders
12866 and 13563, in order to give the public a full opportunity to
evaluate and comment on the new proposal and updated economic
analysis.
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The Proposed Regulation describes the types of advice that
constitute ``investment advice'' with respect to plan or IRA assets for
purposes of the definition of a fiduciary at ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii)
and Code section 4975(e)(3)(B). The proposal provides, subject to
certain carve-outs, that a person renders investment advice with
respect to assets of a plan or IRA if, among other things, the person
provides, directly to a plan, a plan fiduciary, a plan participant or
beneficiary, IRA or IRA owner, one of the following types of advice:
(1) A recommendation as to the advisability of acquiring, holding,
disposing or exchanging securities or other property, including a
recommendation to take a distribution of benefits or a recommendation
as to the investment of securities or other property to be rolled over
or otherwise distributed from a plan or IRA;
(2) A recommendation as to the management of securities or other
property, including recommendations as to the management of securities
or other property to be rolled over or otherwise distributed from the
plan or IRA;
(3) An appraisal, fairness opinion or similar statement, whether
verbal or written, concerning the value of securities or other
property, if provided in connection with a specific transaction or
transactions involving the acquisition, disposition or exchange of such
securities or other property by the plan or IRA; and
(4) a recommendation of a person who is also going to receive a fee
or other compensation in providing any of the types of advice described
in paragraphs (1) through (3), above.
In addition, to be a fiduciary, such person must either (i)
represent or acknowledge that it is acting as a fiduciary within the
meaning of ERISA (or the Code) with respect to the advice, or (ii)
render the advice pursuant to a written or verbal agreement,
arrangement or understanding that the advice is individualized to, or
that such advice is specifically directed to, the advice recipient for
consideration in making investment or management decisions with respect
to securities or other property of the plan or IRA.
In the Proposed Regulation, the Department refers to FINRA guidance
on whether particular communications should be viewed as
``recommendations''\9\ within the meaning of the fiduciary definition,
and requests comment on whether the Proposed Regulation should adhere
to or adopt some or all of the standards developed by FINRA in defining
communications which rise to the level of a recommendation. For more
detailed information regarding the Proposed Regulation, see the Notice
of the Proposed Regulation published in this issue of the Federal
Register.
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\9\ See NASD Notice to Members 01-23 and FINRA Regulatory
Notices 11-02, 12-25 and 12-55.
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For advisers who do not represent that they are acting as ERISA or
Code fiduciaries, the Proposed Regulation provides that advice rendered
in conformance with certain carve-outs will not cause the adviser to be
treated as a fiduciary under ERISA or the Code. For example, under the
seller's carve-out, counterparties in arm's length transactions with
plans may make investment recommendations without acting as fiduciaries
if certain conditions are met.\10\ The proposal also
[[Page 21964]]
contains a carve-out from fiduciary status for providers of appraisals,
fairness opinions, or statements of value in specified contexts (e.g.,
with respect to ESOP transactions). The proposal additionally includes
a carve-out from fiduciary status for the marketing of investment
alternative platforms to plans, certain assistance in selecting
investment alternatives and other activities. Finally, the Proposed
Regulation carves out the provision of investment education from the
definition of an investment advice fiduciary.
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\10\ Although the preamble adopts the phrase ``seller's carve-
out'' as a shorthand way of referring to the carve-out and its
terms, the regulatory carve-out is not limited to sellers but rather
applies more broadly to counterparties in arm's length transactions
with plan investors with financial expertise.
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Prohibited Transactions
The Department anticipates that the Proposed Regulation will cover
many investment professionals who do not currently consider themselves
to be fiduciaries under ERISA or the Code. If the Proposed Regulation
is adopted, these entities will become subject to the prohibited
transaction restrictions in ERISA and the Code that apply specifically
to fiduciaries. ERISA section 406(b)(1) and Code section 4975(c)(1)(E)
prohibit a fiduciary from dealing with the income or assets of a plan
or IRA in his own interest or his own account. ERISA section 406(b)(2)
provides that a fiduciary shall not ``in his individual or in any other
capacity act in any transaction involving the plan on behalf of a party
(or represent a party) whose interests are adverse to the interests of
the plan or the interests of its participants or beneficiaries.'' As
this provision is not in the Code, it does not apply to transactions
involving IRAs. ERISA section 406(b)(3) and Code section 4975(c)(1)(F)
prohibit a fiduciary from receiving any consideration for his own
personal account from any party dealing with the plan or IRA in
connection with a transaction involving assets of the plan or IRA.
Parallel regulations issued by the Departments of Labor and the
Treasury explain that these provisions impose on fiduciaries of plans
and IRAs a duty not to act on conflicts of interest that may affect the
fiduciary's best judgment on behalf of the plan or IRA.\11\ The
prohibitions extend to a fiduciary causing a plan or IRA to pay an
additional fee to such fiduciary, or to a person in which such
fiduciary has an interest that may affect the exercise of the
fiduciary's best judgment as a fiduciary. Likewise, a fiduciary is
prohibited from receiving compensation from third parties in connection
with a transaction involving the plan or IRA, or from causing a person
in which the fiduciary has an interest which may affect its best
judgment as a fiduciary to receive such compensation.\12\ Given these
prohibitions, conferring fiduciary status on particular investment
advice activities can have important implications for many investment
professionals.
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\11\ Subsequent to the issuance of these regulations,
Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. (2010), divided
rulemaking and interpretive authority between the Secretaries of
Labor and the Treasury. The Secretary of Labor was provided
interpretive and rulemaking authority regarding the definition of
fiduciary in both Title I of ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code.
\12\ 29 CFR 2550.408b-2(e); 26 CFR 54.4975-6(a)(5).
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In particular, investment professionals typically receive
compensation for services to retirement investors in the retail market
through a variety of arrangements. These include commissions paid by
the plan, participant or beneficiary, or IRA, or commissions, sales
loads, 12b-1 fees, revenue sharing and other payments from third
parties that provide investment products. The investment professional
or its affiliate may receive such fees upon the purchase or sale by a
plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA of the product, or
while the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, holds the
product. In the Department's view, receipt by a fiduciary of such
payments would violate the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA
section 406(b) and Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F) because the
amount of the fiduciary's compensation is affected by the use of its
authority in providing investment advice, unless such payments meet the
requirements of an exemption.
Prohibited Transaction Exemptions
ERISA and the Code counterbalance the broad proscriptive effect of
the prohibited transaction provisions with numerous statutory
exemptions. For example, ERISA section 408(b)(14) and Code section
4975(d)(17) specifically exempt transactions in connection with the
provision of fiduciary investment advice to a participant or
beneficiary of an individual account plan or IRA owner where the
advice, resulting transaction, and the adviser's fees meet certain
conditions. The Secretary of Labor may grant administrative exemptions
under ERISA and the Code on an individual or class basis if the
Secretary finds that the exemption is (1) administratively feasible,
(2) in the interests of plans and their participants and beneficiaries
and IRA owners, and (3) protective of the rights of the participants
and beneficiaries of such plans and IRA owners.
Over the years, the Department has granted several conditional
administrative class exemptions from the prohibited transactions
provisions of ERISA and the Code. The exemptions focus on specific
types of compensation arrangements. Fiduciaries relying on these
exemptions must comply with certain conditions designed to protect the
interests of plans and IRAs. In connection with the development of the
Proposed Regulation, the Department has considered comments suggesting
the need for additional prohibited transaction exemptions for the wide
variety of compensation structures that exist today in the marketplace
for investments. Some commentators have suggested that the lack of such
relief may cause financial professionals to cut back on the provision
of investment advice and the availability of products to plan
participants and beneficiaries, IRAs, and smaller plans.
After consideration of the issue, the Department has determined to
propose the new class exemption described below, which applies to
investment advice fiduciaries providing advice to plan participants and
beneficiaries, IRAs, and certain employee benefit plans with fewer than
100 participants (referred to as ``retirement investors''). The
exemption would apply broadly to many common types of otherwise
prohibited compensation that such investment advice fiduciaries may
receive, provided the protective conditions of the exemption are
satisfied. The Department is also seeking public comment on whether it
should issue a separate streamlined exemption that would allow advisers
to receive otherwise prohibited compensation in connection with advice
to invest in certain high-quality low-fee investments, subject to fewer
conditions.
Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the Department is
also proposing a new class exemption for ``principal transactions'' for
investment advice fiduciaries selling certain debt securities out of
their own inventories to plans and IRAs.
Lastly, the Department is also proposing, elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register, amendments to the following existing class
prohibited exemptions, which are particularly relevant to broker-
dealers and other investment advice fiduciaries.
[[Page 21965]]
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 86-128 \13\ currently allows
an investment advice fiduciary to cause a plan or IRA to pay the
investment advice fiduciary or its affiliate a fee for effecting or
executing securities transactions as agent. To prevent churning, the
exemption does not apply if such transactions are excessive in either
amount or frequency. The exemption also allows the investment advice
fiduciary to act as the agent for both the plan and the other party to
the transaction (i.e., the buyer and the seller of securities), and
receive a reasonable fee. To use the exemption, the fiduciary cannot be
a plan administrator or employer, unless all profits earned by these
parties are returned to the plan. The conditions of the exemption
require that a plan fiduciary independent of the investment advice
fiduciary receive certain disclosures and authorize the transaction. In
addition, the independent fiduciary must receive confirmations and an
annual ``portfolio turnover ratio'' demonstrating the amount of
turnover in the account during that year. These conditions are not
presently applicable to transactions involving IRAs.
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\13\ Class Exemption for Securities Transactions Involving
Employee Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers, 51 FR 41686 (Nov. 18,
1986), amended at 67 FR 64137 (Oct. 17, 2002).
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The Department is proposing to amend PTE 86-128 to require all
fiduciaries relying on the exemption to adhere to the same impartial
conduct standards required in the Best Interest Contract Exemption. At
the same time, the proposed amendment would eliminate relief for
investment advice fiduciaries to IRA owners; instead they would be
required to rely on the Best Interest Contract Exemption for an
exemption for such compensation. In the Department's view, the
provisions in the Best Interest Contract Exemption better address the
interests of IRAs with respect to transactions otherwise covered by PTE
86-128 and, unlike plan participants and beneficiaries, there is no
separate plan fiduciary in the IRA market to review and authorize the
transaction. Investment advice fiduciaries to plans would remain
eligible for relief under the exemption, as would investment managers
with full investment discretion over the investments of plans and IRA
owners, but they would be required to comply with all the protective
conditions, described above. Finally, the Department is proposing that
PTE 86-128 extend to a new covered transaction, for fiduciaries to sell
mutual fund shares out of their own inventory (i.e. acting as
principals, rather than agents) to plans and IRAs and to receive
commissions for doing so. This transaction is currently the subject of
another exemption, PTE 75-1, Part II(2) (discussed below) that the
Department is proposing to revoke.
Several changes are proposed with respect to PTE 75-1, a multi-part
exemption for securities transactions involving broker-dealers and
banks, and plans and IRAs.\14\ Part I(b) and (c) currently provide
relief for certain non-fiduciary services to plans and IRAs. The
Department is proposing to revoke these provisions, and require persons
seeking to engage in such transactions to rely instead on the existing
statutory exemptions provided in ERISA section 408(b)(2) and Code
section 4975(d)(2), and the Department's implementing regulations at 29
CFR 2550.408b-2. In the Department's view, the conditions of the
statutory exemption are more appropriate for the provision of services.
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\14\ Exemptions from Prohibitions Respecting Certain Classes of
Transactions Involving Employee Benefit Plans and Certain Broker-
Dealers, Reporting Dealers and Banks, 40 FR 50845 (Oct. 31, 1975),
as amended at 71 FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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PTE 75-1, Part II(2), currently provides relief for fiduciaries to
receive commissions for selling mutual fund shares to plans and IRAs in
a principal transaction. As described above, the Department is
proposing to provide relief for these types of transactions in PTE 86-
128, and so is proposing to revoke PTE 75-1, Part II(2), in its
entirety. As discussed in more detail in the notice of proposed
amendment/revocation, the Department believes the conditions of PTE 86-
128 are more appropriate for these transactions.
PTE 75-1, Part V, currently permits broker-dealers to extend credit
to a plan or IRA in connection with the purchase or sale of securities.
The exemption does not permit broker-dealers that are fiduciaries to
receive compensation when doing so. The Department is proposing to
amend PTE 75-1, Part V, to permit investment advice fiduciaries to
receive compensation for lending money or otherwise extending credit to
plans and IRAs, but only for the limited purpose of avoiding a failed
securities transaction.
PTE 84-24 \15\ covers transactions involving mutual fund shares, or
insurance or annuity contracts, sold to plans or IRAs by pension
consultants, insurance agents, brokers, and mutual fund principal
underwriters who are fiduciaries as a result of advice they give in
connection with these transactions. The exemption allows these
investment advice fiduciaries to receive a sales commission with
respect to products purchased by plans or IRAs. The exemption is
limited to sales commissions that are reasonable under the
circumstances. The investment advice fiduciary must provide disclosure
of the amount of the commission and other terms of the transaction to
an independent fiduciary of the plan or IRA, and obtain approval for
the transaction. To use this exemption, the investment advice fiduciary
may not have certain roles with respect to the plan or IRA such as
trustee, plan administrator, or fiduciary with written authorization to
manage the plan's assets and employers. However it is available to
investment advice fiduciaries regardless of whether they expressly
acknowledge their fiduciary status or are simply functional or
``inadvertent'' fiduciaries that have not expressly agreed to act as
fiduciary advisers, provided there is no written authorization granting
them discretion to acquire or dispose of the assets of the plan or IRA.
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\15\ Class Exemption for Certain Transactions Involving
Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, Investment Companies and Investment Company Principal
Underwriters, 49 FR 13208 (Apr. 3, 1984), amended at 71 FR 5887
(Feb. 3, 2006).
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The Department is proposing to amend PTE 84-24 to require all
fiduciaries relying on the exemption to adhere to the same impartial
conduct standards required in the Best Interest Contract Exemption. At
the same time, the proposed amendment would revoke PTE 84-24 in part so
that investment advice fiduciaries to IRA owners would not be able to
rely on PTE 84-24 with respect to (1) transactions involving variable
annuity contracts and other annuity contracts that constitute
securities under federal securities laws, and (2) transactions
involving the purchase of mutual fund shares. Investment advice
fiduciaries would instead be required to rely on the Best Interest
Contract Exemption for compensation received in connection with these
transactions. The Department believes that investment advice
transactions involving annuity contracts that are treated as securities
and transactions involving the purchase of mutual fund shares should
occur under the conditions of the Best Interest Contract Exemption due
to the similarity of these investments, including their distribution
channels and disclosure obligations, to other investments covered in
the Best Interest Contract Exemption. Investment advice fiduciaries to
ERISA plans would remain eligible for relief under the exemption with
respect to transactions involving all insurance and annuity
[[Page 21966]]
contracts and mutual fund shares and the receipt of commissions
allowable under that exemption. Investment advice fiduciaries to IRAs
could still receive commissions for transactions involving non-
securities insurance and annuity contracts, but they would be required
to comply with all the protective conditions, described above.
Finally, the Department is proposing amendments to certain other
existing class exemptions to require adherence to the impartial conduct
standards required in the Best Interest Contract Exemption.
Specifically, PTEs 75-1, Part III, 75-1, Part IV, 77-4, 80-83, and 83-
1, would be amended. Other than the amendments described above,
however, the existing class exemptions will remain in place, affording
additional flexibility to fiduciaries who currently use the exemptions
or who wish to use the exemptions in the future. The Department seeks
comment on whether additional exemptions are needed in light of the
Proposed Regulation.
Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption
As noted above, the exemption proposed in this notice provides
relief for some of the same compensation payments as the existing
exemptions described above. It is intended, however, to flexibly
accommodate a wide range of current business practices, while
minimizing the harmful impact of conflicts of interest on the quality
of advice. The exemption permits fiduciaries to continue to receive a
wide variety of types of compensation that would otherwise be
prohibited. It seeks to preserve beneficial business models by taking a
standards-based approach that will broadly permit firms to continue to
rely on common fee practices, as long as they are willing to adhere to
basic standards aimed at ensuring that their advice is in the best
interest of their customers. This standards-based approach stands in
marked contrast to existing class exemptions that generally focus on
very specific types of investments or compensation and take a highly
prescriptive approach to specifying conditions. The proposed exemption
would provide relief for common investments \16\ of retirement
investors under the umbrella of one exemption. It is intended that this
updated approach will ease compliance costs and reduce complexity while
promoting the provision of investment advice that is in the best
interest of retirement investors.
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\16\ See Section VIII(c) of the proposed exemption, defining the
term ``Asset,'' and the preamble discussion in the ``Scope of Relief
in the Best Interest Contract Exemption'' section below.
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Section I of the proposed exemption would provide relief for the
receipt of prohibited compensation by ``Advisers,'' ``Financial
Institutions,'' ``Affiliates'' and ``Related Entities'' for services
provided in connection with a purchase, sale or holding of an ``Asset''
\17\ by a plan or IRA as a result of the Adviser's advice. The
exemption also uses the term ``Retirement Investor'' to describe the
types of persons who can be advice recipients under the exemption.\18\
These terms are defined in Section VIII of this proposed exemption. The
following sections discuss these key definitional terms of the
exemption as well as the scope and conditions of the proposed
exemption.
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\17\ See Section VIII(c) of the proposed exemption.
\18\ While the Department uses the term ``Retirement Investor''
throughout this document, the proposed exemption is not limited only
to investment advice fiduciaries of employee pension benefit plans
and IRAs. Relief would be available for investment advice
fiduciaries of employee welfare benefit plans as well.
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Entities Defined
1. Adviser
The proposed exemption contemplates that an individual person, an
Adviser, will provide advice to the Retirement Investor. An Adviser
must be an investment advice fiduciary of a plan or IRA who is an
employee, independent contractor, agent, or registered representative
of a ``Financial Institution'' (discussed in the next section), and the
Adviser must satisfy the applicable federal and state regulatory and
licensing requirements of insurance, banking, and securities laws with
respect to the receipt of the compensation.\19\ Advisers may be, for
example, registered representatives of broker-dealers registered under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, or insurance agents or brokers.
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\19\ See Section VIII(a) of the proposed exemption.
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2. Financial Institutions
For purposes of the proposed exemption, a Financial Institution is
the entity that employs an Adviser or otherwise retains the Adviser as
an independent contractor, agent or registered representative.\20\
Financial Institutions must be registered investment advisers, banks,
insurance companies, or registered broker-dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See Section VIII(e) of the proposed exemption.
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3. Affiliates and Related Entities
Relief is also proposed for the receipt of otherwise prohibited
compensation by ``Affiliates'' and ``Related Entities'' with respect to
the Adviser or Financial Institution.\21\ Affiliates are (i) any person
directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with the Adviser or Financial
Institution; (ii) any officer, director, employee, agent, registered
representative, relative, member of family, or partner in, the Adviser
or Financial Institution; and (iii) any corporation or partnership of
which the Adviser or Financial Institution is an officer, director or
employee or in which the Adviser or Financial Institution is a partner.
For this purpose, ``control'' means the power to exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of a person other than an
individual. Related Entities are entities other than Affiliates in
which an Adviser or Financial Institution has an interest that may
affect their exercise of their best judgment as fiduciaries.
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\21\ See Section VIII(b) and (k) of the proposed exemption.
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4. Retirement Investor
The proposed exemption uses the term ``Retirement Investor'' to
describe the types of persons who can be investment advice recipients
under the exemption. The Retirement Investor may be a plan participant
or beneficiary with authority to direct the investment of assets in his
or her plan account or to take a distribution; in the case of an IRA,
the beneficial owner of the IRA (i.e., the IRA owner); or a plan
sponsor (or an employee, officer or director thereof) of a non-
participant-directed ERISA plan that has fewer than 100
participants.\22\
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\22\ See Section VIII(l) of the proposed exemption.
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Scope of Relief in the Best Interest Contract Exemption
The Best Interest Contract Exemption set forth in Section I would
provide prohibited transaction relief for the receipt by Advisers,
Financial Institutions, Affiliates and Related Entities of a wide
variety of compensation forms as a result of investment advice provided
to the Retirement Investors, if the conditions of the exemption are
satisfied. Specifically, Section I(b) of the proposed exemption
provides that the exemption would permit an Adviser, Financial
Institution and their Affiliates and Related Entities to receive
compensation for services provided in connection with the purchase,
sale or holding of an Asset by a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, as a result of an Adviser's or
[[Page 21967]]
Financial Institution's investment advice to a Retirement Investor.
The proposed exemption would apply to the restrictions of ERISA
section 406(b) and the sanctions imposed by Code section 4975(a) and
(b), by reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F). These provisions
prohibit conflict of interest transactions and receipt of third-party
payments by investment advice fiduciaries.\23\ For relief to be
available under the exemption, the Adviser and Financial Institution
must comply with the applicable conditions, including entering into a
contract that acknowledges fiduciary status and requires adherence to
certain Impartial Conduct Standards.
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\23\ Relief is also proposed from ERISA section 406(a)(1)(D) and
Code section 4975(c)(1)(D), which prohibit transfer of plan assets
to, or use of plan assets for the benefit of, a party in interest
(including a fiduciary).
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The types of compensation payments contemplated by this proposed
exemption include commissions paid directly by the plan or IRA, as well
as commissions, trailing commissions, sales loads, 12b-1 fees, and
revenue sharing payments paid by the investment providers or other
third parties to Advisers and Financial Institutions. The exemption
also would cover other compensation received by the Adviser, Financial
Institution or their Affiliates and Related Entities as a result of an
investment by a plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, such
as investment management fees or administrative services fees from an
investment vehicle in which the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA invests.
As proposed, the exemption is limited to otherwise prohibited
compensation generated by investments that are commonly purchased by
plans, participant and beneficiary accounts, and IRAs. Accordingly, the
exemption defines the ``Assets'' that can be sold under the exemption
as bank deposits, CDs, shares or interests in registered investment
companies, bank collective funds, insurance company separate accounts,
exchange-traded REITs, exchange-traded funds, corporate bonds offered
pursuant to a registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933,
agency debt securities as defined in FINRA Rule 6710(l) or its
successor, U.S. Treasury securities as defined in FINRA Rule 6710(p) or
its successor, insurance and annuity contracts (both securities and
non-securities), guaranteed investment contracts, and equity securities
within the meaning of 17 CFR 230.405 that are exchange-traded
securities within the meaning of 17 CFR 242.600. However, the
definition does not encompass any equity security that is a security
future or a put, call, straddle, or any other option or privilege of
buying an equity security from or selling an equity security to another
without being bound to do so.\24\
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\24\ See Section VIII(c) of the proposed exemption.
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Prohibited compensation received for investments that fall outside
the definition of Asset would not be covered by the exemption. Limiting
the exemption in this manner ensures that the investments needed to
build a basic diversified portfolio are available to plans, participant
and beneficiary accounts, and IRAs, while limiting the exemption to
those investments that are relatively transparent and liquid, many of
which have a ready market price. The Department also notes that many
investment types and strategies that would not be covered by the
exemption can be obtained through pooled investment funds, such as
mutual funds, that are covered by the exemption.
Request for Comment. The Department requests comment on the
proposed definition of Assets, in particular:
Do commenters agree we have identified all common
investments of retail investors?
Have we defined individual investment products with enough
precision that parties will know if they are complying with this aspect
of the exemption?
Should additional investments be included in the scope of
the exemption? Commenters urging addition of other investment products
should fully describe the characteristics and fee structures associated
with the products, as well as data supporting their position that the
product is a common investment for retail investors.
The Department encourages parties to apply to the Department for
individual or class exemptions for types of investments not covered by
the exemption to the extent that they believe the proposed package of
exemptions does not adequately cover beneficial investment practices
for which appropriate protections could be crafted in an exemption.
Limitation to Prohibited Compensation Received As a Result of Advice to
Retirement Investors
The Department proposed this exemption to promote the provision of
investment advice to retail investors that is in their best interest
and untainted by conflicts of interest. The exemption would permit
receipt by Advisers and Financial Institutions of otherwise prohibited
compensation commonly received in the retail market, such as
commissions, 12b-1 fees, and revenue sharing payments, subject to
conditions designed specifically to protect the interests of the
investors. For consistency with these objectives, the exemption would
apply to the receipt of such compensation by Advisers, Financial
Institutions and their Affiliates and Related Entities only when advice
is provided to retail Retirement Investors, including plan participants
and beneficiaries, IRA owners, and plan sponsors (including the
sponsor's employees, officers, and directors) acting on behalf of non-
participant-directed plans that have fewer than 100 participants. As
discussed in the preamble to the Proposed Regulation and in the
associated Regulatory Impact Analysis, these investors are particularly
vulnerable to abuse. The proposed exemption is designed to protect
these investors from the harmful impact of conflicts of interest, while
minimizing the potential disruption to a retail market that relies upon
many forms of compensation that ERISA would otherwise prohibit.
The Department believes that investment advice in the institutional
market is best addressed through other approaches. Accordingly, the
proposed exemption does not extend to transactions involving certain
larger ERISA plans--those with more than 100 participants. Advice
providers to these plans are already accustomed to operating in a
fiduciary environment and within the framework of existing prohibited
transaction exemptions, which tightly constrain the operation of
conflicts of interest. As a result, including large plans within the
definition of Retirement Investor could have the undesirable
consequence of reducing protections provided under existing law to
these investors, without offsetting benefits. In particular, it could
have the undesirable effect of increasing the number and impact of
conflicts of interest, rather than reducing or mitigating them.
While the Department believes that the Best Interest Contract
Exemption is not the appropriate way to address any potential concerns
about the impact of the expanded fiduciary definition on large plans,
the Department agrees that an adjustment is necessary to accommodate
arm's length transactions with plan investors with financial expertise.
Accordingly, as part of this regulatory project, the Department has
separately proposed a seller's carve-out in the Proposed Conflict of
Interest Regulation. Under the terms of that
[[Page 21968]]
carve-out, persons who provide recommendations to certain ERISA plan
investors with financial expertise (but not to plan participants or
beneficiaries, or IRA owners) can avoid fiduciary status altogether.
The seller's carve-out was developed to avoid the application of
fiduciary status to a plan's counterparty in an arm's length commercial
transaction in which the plan's representative has no reasonable
expectation of impartial advice. When the carve-out's terms are
satisfied, it is available for transactions with plans that have more
than 100 participants.
The Department recognizes, however, that there are smaller non-
participant-directed plans for which the plan sponsor (or an employee,
officer or director thereof) is responsible for choosing the specific
investments and allocations for their participating employees. The
Department believes that these small plan fiduciaries are appropriately
categorized with plan participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, as
retail investors. For this reason, the proposed exemption's definition
of Retirement Investor includes plan sponsors (or employees, officers
and directors thereof) of plans with fewer than 100 participants.\25\
As a result, the exemption would extend to advice providers to such
smaller plans.
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\25\ The Department notes that plan participants and
beneficiaries in ERISA plans can be Retirement Investors regardless
of the number of participants in such plan. Therefore, the 100-
participant limitation does not apply when advice is provided
directly to the participants and beneficiaries.
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The proposed threshold of fewer than 100 participants is intended
to reasonably identify plans that will most benefit from both the
flexibility provided by this exemption and the protections embodied in
its conditions. The threshold also mirrors the Proposed Regulations'
100-or-more participant threshold for the seller's carve-out. That
threshold recognizes the generally greater sophistication possessed by
larger plans' discretionary fiduciaries, as well as the greater
vulnerability of retail investors, such as small plans. As explained in
more detail in the preamble to the Proposed Regulation, investment
recommendations to small plans, IRA owners and plan participants and
beneficiaries do not fit the ``arms length'' characteristics that the
seller's carve-out is designed to preserve. Recommendations to retail
investors are routinely presented as advice, consulting, or financial
planning services. In the securities markets, brokers' suitability
obligations generally require a significant degree of
individualization, and research has shown that disclaimers are
ineffective in alerting typically unsophisticated investors to the
dangers posed by conflicts of interest, and may even exacerbate the
dangers. Most retail investors lack financial expertise, are unaware of
the magnitude and impact of conflicts of interest, and are unable
effectively to assess the quality of the advice they receive.
The 100 or more threshold is also consistent with that applicable
for similar purposes under existing rules and practices. The Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes certain
requirements with respect to Federal rules that are subject to the
notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and which are likely to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
For purposes of the RFA, the Department considers a small entity to be
an employee benefit plan with fewer than 100 participants. The basis of
this definition is found in section 104(a)(2) of ERISA that permits the
Secretary of Labor to prescribe simplified annual reports for pension
plans that cover fewer than 100 participants. Under current Department
rules, such small plans generally are eligible for streamlined
reporting and relieved of related audit requirements.
The Department invites comment on the proposed exemption's
limitation to prohibited compensation received as a result of advice to
Retirement Investors. In particular, we ask whether commenters support
the limitation as currently formulated, whether the definitions should
be revised, or whether there should not be an exclusion with respect to
such larger plans at all. Commenters on this subject are also
encouraged to address the interaction of the exemption's limitation
with the scope of the seller's carve-out in the Proposed Regulation.
Finally, we request comment on whether the exemption should be expanded
to cover advice to plan sponsors (including the sponsor's employees,
officers, and directors) of participant-directed plans with fewer than
100 participants on the composition of the menu of investment options
available under such plans, and if so, whether additional or different
conditions should apply.
Exclusions in Section I(c) of the Proposed Exemption
Section I(c) of the proposal sets forth additional exclusions from
the exemption. Section I(c)(1) provides that the exemption would not
apply to the receipt of prohibited compensation from a transaction
involving an ERISA plan if the Adviser, Financial Institution or
Affiliate is the employer of employees covered by the ERISA plan. The
Department believes that due to the special nature of the employer/
employee relationship, an exemption permitting an Adviser and Financial
Institution to profit from investments by employees in their employer-
sponsored plan would not be in the interest of, or protective of, the
plans and their participants and beneficiaries. This restriction does
not apply, however, in the case of an IRA or other similar plan that is
not covered by Title I of ERISA. Accordingly, an Adviser or Financial
Institution may provide advice to the beneficial owner of an IRA who is
employed by the Adviser, its Financial Institution or an Affiliate, and
receive prohibited compensation as a result, provided the IRA is not
covered by Title I of ERISA.
Section I(c)(1) further provides that the exemption does not apply
if the Adviser or Financial Institution is a named fiduciary or plan
administrator, as defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A)) with respect to an
ERISA plan, or an affiliate thereof, that was selected to provide
advice to the plan by a fiduciary who is not independent of them.\26\
This provision is intended to disallow selection of Advisers and
Financial Institutions by named fiduciaries or plan administrators that
have an interest in them.
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\26\ See Section VIII(f), defining the term ``Independent.''
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Section I(c)(2) provides that the exemption does not extend to
prohibited compensation received when the Adviser engages in a
principal transaction with the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA.\27\ A principal transaction is a transaction in which
the Adviser engages in a transaction with the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, on behalf of the account of the Financial
Institution or another person directly or indirectly, through one or
more intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or under common
control with the Financial Institution. Principal transactions involve
conflicts of interest not addressed by the safeguards of this proposed
exemption. Elsewhere in today's Federal Register, the Department is
proposing an exemption for investment advice fiduciaries to engage in
principal transactions involving certain debt securities. The proposed
exemption for principal transactions contains conditions
[[Page 21969]]
specific to those transactions but is designed to align with this
proposed exemption so as to ease parties' ability to comply with both
exemptions with respect to the same investor.
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\27\ For purposes of this proposed exemption, however, the
Department does not view a riskless principal transaction involving
mutual fund shares as an excluded principal transaction.
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Section I(c)(3) provides that the exemption would not cover
prohibited compensation that is received by an Adviser or Financial
Institution as a result of investment advice that is generated solely
by an interactive Web site in which computer software-based models or
applications provide investment advice to Retirement Investors based on
personal information each investor supplies through the Web site
without any personal interaction or advice from an individual Adviser.
Such computer derived advice is often referred to as ``robo-advice.''
While the Department believes that computer generated advice that is
delivered in this manner may be very useful to Retirement Investors,
relief will not be included in the proposal. As the marketplace for
such advice is still evolving in ways that both appear to avoid
conflicts of interest that would violate the prohibited transaction
rules, and minimize cost, the Department believes that inclusion of
such advice in this exemption could adversely modify the incentives
currently shaping the market for robo-advice. Furthermore, a statutory
prohibited transaction exemption at ERISA section 408(g) covers
computer-generated investment advice and is available for robo-advice
involving prohibited transactions if its conditions are satisfied. See
29 CFR 2550.408g-1.
Finally, Section I(c)(4) provides that the exemption is limited to
Advisers who are fiduciaries by reason of providing investment
advice.\28\ Advisers who have full investment discretion with respect
to plan or IRA assets or who have discretionary authority over the
administration of the plan or IRA, for example, are not affected by the
Proposed Regulation and are therefore not the subject of this
exemption.
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\28\ See also Section VIII(a), defining the term ``Adviser.''
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Conditions of the Proposed Exemption
Sections II-V of the proposal list the conditions applicable to the
Best Interest Contract Exemption described in Section I. All applicable
conditions must be satisfied in order to avoid application of the
specified prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA and the Code. The
Department believes that these conditions are necessary for the
Secretary to find that the exemption is administratively feasible, in
the interests of plans and of their participants and beneficiaries, and
IRA owners and protective of the rights of the participants and
beneficiaries of such plans and IRA owners. Under ERISA section
408(a)(2), and Code section 4975(c)(2), the Secretary may not grant an
exemption without making such findings. The proposed conditions of the
exemption are described below.
Contractual Obligations Applicable to the Best Interest Contract
Exemption (Section II)
Section II(a) of the proposal requires that an Adviser and
Financial Institution enter into a written contract with the Retirement
Investor prior to recommending that the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, purchase, sell or hold an Asset. The
contract must be executed by both the Adviser and the Financial
Institution as well as the Retirement Investor. In the case of advice
provided to a plan participant or beneficiary in a participant-directed
individual account plan, the participant or beneficiary should be the
Retirement Investor that is the party to the contract, on behalf of his
or her individual account.
The contract may be part of a master agreement with the Retirement
Investor and does not require execution prior to each additional
recommendation to purchase, sell or hold an Asset. The exemption, in
particular the requirement to adhere to a best interest standard, does
not mandate an ongoing or long-term advisory relationship, but rather
leaves that to the parties. The terms of the contract, along with other
representations, agreements, or understandings between the Adviser,
Financial Institution and Retirement Investor, will govern whether the
nature of the relationship between the parties is ongoing or not.
The contract is the cornerstone of the proposed exemption, and the
Department believes that by requiring a contract as a condition of the
proposed exemption, it creates a mechanism by which a Retirement
Investor can be alerted to the Adviser's and Financial Institution's
obligations and be provided with a basis upon which its rights can be
enforced. In order to comply with the exemption, the contract must
contain every required element set forth in Section II(b)-(e) and also
must not include any of the prohibited provisions described in Section
II(f). It is intended that the contract creates actionable obligations
with respect to both the Impartial Conduct Standards and the
warranties, described below. In addition, failure to satisfy the
Impartial Conduct Standards will result in loss of the exemption.
It should be noted, however, that compliance with the exemption's
conditions is necessary only with respect to transactions that
otherwise would constitute prohibited transactions under ERISA and the
Code. The exemption does not purport to impose conditions on the
management of investments held outside of ERISA-covered plans and IRAs.
Accordingly, the contract and its conditions are mandatory only with
respect to investments held by plans and IRAs.
1. Fiduciary Status
The proposal sets forth multiple contractual requirements. The
first and most fundamental contractual requirement, which is set out in
Section II(b) of proposal, is that that both the Adviser and Financial
Institution must acknowledge fiduciary status under ERISA or the Code,
or both, with respect to any recommendations to the Retirement Investor
to purchase, sell or hold an Asset. If this acknowledgment of fiduciary
status does not appear in a contract with a Retirement Investor, the
exemption is not satisfied with respect to transactions involving that
Retirement Investor. This fiduciary acknowledgment is critical to
ensuring that there is no uncertainty--before or after investment
advice is given with regard to the Asset--that both the Adviser and
Financial Institution are acting as fiduciaries under ERISA and the
Code with respect to that advice.
The acknowledgment of fiduciary status in the contract is
nonetheless limited to the advice to the Retirement Investor to
purchase, sell or hold the Asset. The Adviser and Financial Institution
do not become fiduciaries with respect to any other conduct by virtue
of this contractual requirement.
2. Standards of Impartial Conduct
Building upon the required acknowledgment of fiduciary status, the
proposal additionally requires that both the Adviser and the Financial
Institution contractually commit to adhering to certain specifically
delineated Impartial Conduct Standards when providing investment advice
to the Retirement Investor regarding Assets, and that they in fact do
adhere to such standards. Therefore, if an Adviser and/or Financial
Institution fail to comply with the Impartial Conduct Standards, relief
under the exemption is no longer available and the contract is
violated.
Specifically, Section II(c)(1) of the proposal requires that under
the contract the Adviser and Financial Institution provide advice
regarding Assets that is in the ``best interest'' of
[[Page 21970]]
the Retirement Investor. Best interest is defined to mean that the
Adviser and Financial Institution act with the care, skill, prudence,
and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent
person would exercise based on the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and the needs of the Retirement
Investor, when providing investment advice to them. Further, under the
best interest standard, the Adviser and Financial Institution must act
without regard to the financial or other interests of the Adviser,
Financial Institution or their Affiliates or any other party. Under
this standard, the Adviser and Financial Institution must put the
interests of the Retirement Investor ahead of the financial interests
of the Adviser, Financial Institution or their Affiliates, Related
Entities or any other party.
The best interest standard set forth in this exemption is based on
longstanding concepts derived from ERISA and the law of trusts. For
example, ERISA section 404 requires a fiduciary to act ``solely in the
interest of the participants . . . with the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man
acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in
the conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like aims.''
Similarly, both ERISA section 404(a)(1)(A) and the trust-law duty of
loyalty require fiduciaries to put the interests of trust beneficiaries
first, without regard to the fiduciaries' own self-interest.
Accordingly, the Department would expect the standard to be interpreted
in light of forty years of judicial experience with ERISA's fiduciary
standards and hundreds more with the duties imposed on trustees under
the common law of trusts. In general, courts focus on the process the
fiduciary used to reach its determination or recommendation--whether
the fiduciaries, ``at the time they engaged in the challenged
transactions, employed the proper procedures to investigate the merits
of the investment and to structure the investment.'' Donovan v.
Mazzola, 716 F.2d 1226, 1232 (9th Cir. 1983). Moreover, a fiduciary's
investment recommendation is measured based on the circumstances
prevailing at the time of the transaction, not on how the investment
turned out with the benefit of hindsight.
In this regard, the Department notes that while fiduciaries of
plans covered by ERISA are subject to the ERISA section 404 standards
of prudence and loyalty, the Code contains no provisions that hold IRA
fiduciaries to these standards. However, as a condition of relief under
the proposed exemption, both IRA and plan fiduciaries would have to
agree to, and uphold, the best interest and Impartial Conduct
Standards, as set forth in Section II(c). The best interest standard is
defined to effectively mirror the ERISA section 404 duties of prudence
and loyalty, as applied in the context of fiduciary investment advice.
In addition to the best interest standard, the exemption imposes
other important standards of impartial conduct in Section II(c) of the
proposal. Section II(c)(2) requires that the Adviser and Financial
Institution agree that they will not recommend an Asset if the total
amount of compensation anticipated to be received by the Adviser,
Financial Institution, and their Affiliates and Related Entities in
connection with the purchase, sale or holding of the Asset by the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, will exceed reasonable
compensation in relation to the total services they provide to the
applicable Retirement Investor. The obligation to pay no more than
reasonable compensation to service providers is long recognized under
ERISA. See ERISA section 408(b)(2), 29 CFR 2550.408b-2(a)(3), and 29
CFR 2550.408c-2. The reasonableness of the fees depends on the
particular facts and circumstances. Finally, Section II(c)(3) requires
that the Adviser's and Financial Institution's statements about Assets,
fees, material conflicts of interest, and any other matters relevant to
a Retirement Investor's investment decisions, not be misleading.
Under ERISA section 408(a) and Code section 4975(c), the Department
cannot grant an exemption unless it first finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interests of plans and their
participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and protective of the
rights of participants and beneficiaries of plans and IRA owners. An
exemption permitting transactions that violate the requirements of
Section II(c) would be unlikely to meet these standards.
3. Warranty--Compliance With Applicable Law
Section II(d) of the proposal requires that the contract include
certain warranties intended to be protective of the rights of
Retirement Investors. In particular, to satisfy the exemption, the
Adviser, and Financial Institution must warrant that they and their
Affiliates will comply with all applicable federal and state laws
regarding the rendering of the investment advice, the purchase, sale or
holding of the Asset and the payment of compensation related to the
purchase, sale and holding. Although this warranty must be included in
the contract, the exemption is not conditioned on compliance with the
warranty. Accordingly, the failure to comply with applicable federal or
state law could result in contractual liability for breach of warranty,
but it would not result in loss of the exemption, as long as the breach
did not involve a violation of one of the exemption's other conditions
(e.g., the best interest standard). De minimis violations of state or
federal law would be unlikely to violate the exemption's other
conditions, such as the best interest standard, and would not typically
result in the loss of the exemption.
4. Warranty--Policies and Procedures
The Financial Institution must also contractually warrant that it
has adopted written policies and procedures that are reasonably
designed to mitigate the impact of material conflicts of interest that
exist with respect to the provision of investment advice to Retirement
Investors and ensure that individual Advisers adhere to the Impartial
Conduct Standards described above. For purposes of the exemption, a
material conflict of interest is deemed to exist when an Adviser or
Financial Institution has a financial interest that could affect the
exercise of its best judgment as a fiduciary in rendering advice to a
Retirement Investor regarding an Asset.\29\ Like the warranty on
compliance with applicable law, discussed above, this warranty must be
in the contract but the exemption is not conditioned on compliance with
the warranty. Failure to comply with the warranty could result in
contractual liability for breach of warranty.
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\29\ See Section VIII(h) of the proposed exemption.
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As part of the contractual warranty on policies and procedures, the
Financial Institution must state that in formulating its policies and
procedures, it specifically identified material conflicts of interest
and adopted measures to prevent those material conflicts of interest
from causing violations of the Impartial Conduct Standards. Further,
the Financial Institution must state that neither it nor (to the best
of its knowledge) its Affiliates or Related Entities will use quotas,
appraisals, performance or personnel actions, bonuses, contests,
special awards, differentiated compensation or other actions or
incentives to the extent they would tend to encourage individual
Advisers to make recommendations that are not in the best interest of
Retirement Investors.
While these warranties must be part of the contract between the
Adviser and
[[Page 21971]]
Financial Institution and the Retirement Investor, the proposal does
not mandate the specific content of the policies and procedures. This
flexibility is intended to allow Financial Institutions to develop
policies and procedures that are effective for their particular
business models, within the constraints of their fiduciary obligations
and the Impartial Conduct Standards.
Under the proposal, a Financial Institution's policies and
procedures must not authorize compensation or incentive systems that
would tend to encourage individual Advisers to make recommendations
that are not in the best interest of Retirement Investors. Consistent
with the general approach in the proposal to the Financial
Institution's policies and procedures, however, there are no particular
required compensation or employment structures. Certainly, one way for
a Financial Institution to comply is to adopt a ``level-fee''
structure, in which compensation for Advisers does not vary based on
the particular investment product recommended. But the exemption does
not mandate such a structure. The Department believes that the specific
implementation of this requirement is best determined by the Financial
Institution in light of its particular circumstances and business
models.
For further clarification, the Department sets forth the following
examples of broad approaches to compensation structures that could help
satisfy the contractual warranty regarding the policies and procedures.
In connection with all these examples, it is important that the
Financial Institution carefully monitor whether the policies and
procedures are, in fact, working to prevent the provision of biased
advice. The Financial Institution must correct isolated or systemic
violations of the Impartial Conduct Standards and reasonably revise
policies and procedures when failures are identified.
Example 1: Independently certified computer models.\30\ The
Adviser provides investment advice that is in accordance with an
unbiased computer model created by an independent third party. Under
this example, the Adviser can receive any form or amount of
compensation so long as the advice is rendered in strict accordance
with the model.\31\
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\30\ These examples should not be read as retracting views the
Department expressed in prior Advisory Opinions regarding how an
investment advice fiduciary could avoid prohibited transactions that
might result from differential compensation arrangements.
Specifically, in Advisory Opinion 2001-09A, the Department concluded
that the provision of fiduciary investment advice would not result
in prohibited transactions under circumstances where the advice
provided by the fiduciary with respect to investment funds that pay
additional fees to the fiduciary is the result of the application of
methodologies developed, maintained and overseen by a party
independent of the fiduciary in accordance with the conditions set
forth in the Advisory Opinion. A computer model also can be used as
part of an advice arrangement that satisfies the conditions under
the prohibited transaction exemption in ERISA section 408(b)(14) and
(g), described above.
\31\ As previously noted, this exemption is not available for
advice generated solely by a computer model and provided to the
Retirement Investor electronically without live advice.
Nevertheless, this exemption remains available in the hypothetical
because the advice is delivered by a live Adviser.
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Example 2: Asset-based compensation. The Financial Institution
pays the Adviser a percentage, which does not vary based on the
types of investments, of the dollar amount of assets invested by the
plans, participant and beneficiary accounts, and IRAs with the
Adviser. Under this example, assume the Financial Institution
established the percentage as 0.1% on a quarterly basis. If a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, invested a total of
$10,000 with the Adviser, divided 25% in equity securities, 50% in
proprietary mutual funds, and 25% in bonds underwritten by non-
Related Entities, and did not withdraw any of the money within the
quarter, the Adviser would receive 0.1% of the $10,000.
Example 3: Fee offset. The Financial Institution establishes a
fee schedule for its services. It accepts transaction-based payments
directly from the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA,
and/or from third party investment providers. To the extent the
payments from third party investment providers exceed the
established fee for a particular service, such amounts are rebated
to the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA. To the
extent third party payments do not satisfy the established fee, the
plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA is charged directly
for the remaining amount due.\32\
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\32\ See footnote 31 supra. Certain types of fee-offset
arrangements may result in avoidance of prohibited transactions
altogether. In Advisory Opinion Nos. 97-15A and 2005-10A, the
Department explained that a fiduciary investment adviser could
provide investment advice to a plan with respect to investment funds
that pay it or an affiliate additional fees without engaging in a
prohibited transaction if those fees are offset against fees that
the plan otherwise is obligated to pay to the fiduciary.
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Example 4: Differential Payments Based on Neutral Factors. The
Financial Institution establishes payment structures under which
transactions involving different investment products result in
differential compensation to the Adviser based on a reasonable
assessment of the time and expertise necessary to provide prudent
advice on the product or other reasonable and objective neutral
factors. For example, a Financial Institution could compensate an
Adviser differently for advisory work relating to annuities, as
opposed to shares in a mutual fund, if it reasonably determined that
the time to research and explain the products differed. However, the
payment structure must be reasonably designed to avoid incentives to
Advisers to recommend investment transactions that are not in
Retirement Investors' best interest.
Example 5: Alignment of Interests. The Financial Institution's
policies and procedures establish a compensation structure that is
reasonably designed to align the interests of the Adviser with the
interests of the Retirement Investor. For example, this might
include compensation that is primarily asset-based, as discussed in
Example 2, with the addition of bonuses and other incentives paid to
promote advice that is in the Best Interest of the Retirement
Investor. While the compensation would be variable, it would align
with the customer's best interest.
These examples are not exhaustive, and many other compensation and
employment arrangements may satisfy the contractual warranties. The
exemption imposes a broad standard for the warranty and policies and
procedures requirement, not an inflexible and highly-prescriptive set
of rules. The Financial Institution retains the latitude necessary to
design its compensation and employment arrangements, provided that
those arrangements promote, rather than undermine, the best interest
and Impartial Conduct Standards.
Whether a Financial Institution adopts one of the specific
approaches taken in the examples above or a different approach, the
Department expects that it will engage in a good faith process to
prudently establish and oversee policies and procedures that will
effectively mitigate conflicts of interest and ensure adherence to the
Impartial Conduct Standards. To this end, Financial Institutions may
also want to consider designating an individual or group responsible
for addressing material conflicts of interest issues. An internal
compliance officer or a committee could monitor adherence to the
Impartial Conduct Standards and consider ways to ensure compliance. The
individual or group could also develop procedures for reporting
material conflicts of interest and for handling external and internal
complaints within the Financial Institution, and disciplinary measures
for non-compliance with the Impartial Conduct Standards. Additionally,
Financial Institutions should consider how best to inform and train
individual Advisers on the Impartial Conduct Standards and other
requirements of the exemption.
Additionally, Financial Institutions could consider the following
components of effective policies and procedures relating to an
Adviser's compensation: (i) Avoiding creating compensation thresholds
that enable an Adviser to increase his or her
[[Page 21972]]
compensation disproportionately through an incremental increase in
sales; (ii) monitoring activity of Advisers approaching compensation
thresholds such as higher payout percentages, back-end bonuses, or
participation in a recognition club, such as a President's Club; (iii)
maintaining neutral compensation grids that pay the Adviser a flat
payout percentage regardless of product type sold (so long as they do
not merely transmit the Financial Institution's conflicts to the
Adviser); (iv) refraining from providing higher compensation or other
rewards for the sale of proprietary products or products for which the
firm has entered into revenue sharing arrangements; (v) stringently
monitoring recommendations around key liquidity events in the
investor's lifecycle where the recommendation is particularly
significant (e.g. when an investor rolls over his pension or 401(k)
account); and (vi) developing metrics for good and bad behavior (red
flag processes) and using clawbacks of deferred compensation to adjust
compensation for employees who do not properly manage conflicts of
interest.\33\
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\33\ See FINRA Report on Conflicts of Interest, October 2013.
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The Department seeks comments on all aspects of its discussion of
the sorts of policies and procedures that will satisfy the required
contractual warranties of Section II(d)(2)-(4). In particular, the
Department requests comments on whether the exemption should be more
prescriptive about the terms of policies and procedures, or provide
more detailed examples of acceptable policies and procedures. In
addition, the Department requests comments on whether commenters
believe the examples describe policies and procedures that would
achieve the investor-protective objectives of the exemption.
5. Contractual Disclosures
Finally, Section II(e) of the proposal requires certain disclosures
in the written contract. If the disclosures do not appear in a contract
with a Retirement Investor, the exemption is not satisfied with respect
to transactions involving that Retirement Investor. First, Section
II(e)(1) provides that the Financial Institution and the Adviser must
identify in the written contract any material conflicts of interest.
This disclosure may be a general description of the types of material
conflicts of interest applicable to the Financial Institution and
Adviser, provided the disclosure also informs the Retirement Investor
that a more specific description that is kept current is available on
the Financial Institution's Web site (web address provided) and by
mail, upon request of the Retirement Investor.
Second, Section II(e)(2) requires that the written contract must
inform the Retirement Investor of the right to obtain complete
information about all of the fees currently associated with the Assets
in which it is invested, including all of the fees payable to the
Adviser, Financial Institution, and any Affiliates and Related Entities
in connection with such investments. The fee information must be
complete, and it must include both the direct and the indirect fees
paid by the plan or IRA.\34\ Section II(e)(3) provides that the written
contract also must disclose to the Retirement Investor whether the
Financial Institution offers proprietary products or receives third
party payments with respect to the purchase, sale or holding of any
Asset. Third party payments, for purposes of this exemption, are
defined as sales charges (when not paid directly by the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA), 12b-1 fees, and other
payments paid to the Adviser, Financial Institution or any Affiliate or
Related Entity by a third party as a result of the purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset by a plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA. A proprietary product is defined for purposes of this exemption as
a product that is managed by the Financial Institution or any of its
Affiliates. In conjunction with this disclosure, the contract must
provide the address of a Web page that discloses the compensation
arrangements entered into by the Adviser and the Financial Institution,
as required by Section III(c) of the proposal and discussed below.
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\34\ To the extent compliance with this information request
requires Advisers and Financial Institutions to obtain such
information from entities that are not closely affiliated with them,
the Adviser or Financial Institution may supply such information to
the Retirement Investor in compliance with the exemption provided
the Adviser and Financial Institution act in good faith and do not
know that the materials are incomplete or inaccurate. For purposes
of the proposed exemption, Affiliates within the meaning of Section
VIII(b)(1) and (2) are considered closely affiliated such that the
good faith reliance would not apply.
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Enforcement of the Contractual Obligations
The contractual requirements set forth in Section II of the
proposal are enforceable. Plans, plan participants and beneficiaries,
IRA owners, and the Department may use the contract as a tool to ensure
compliance with the exemption. The Department notes, however, that this
contractual tool creates different rights with respect to plans,
participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners and the Department.
1. IRA Owners
The contract between the IRA owner and the Adviser and Financial
Institution forms the basis of the IRA owner's enforcement rights. As
outlined above, the contract embodies obligations on the part of the
Adviser and Financial Institution. The Department intends that all the
contractual obligations (the Impartial Conduct Standards and the
warranties) will be actionable by IRA owners. The most important of
these contractual obligations for enforcement purposes is the
obligation imposed on both the Adviser and the Financial Institution to
comply with the Impartial Conduct Standards. Because these standards
are contractually imposed, the IRA owner has a contract claim if, for
example, the Adviser recommends an investment product that is not in
the best interest of the IRA owner.
2. Plans, Plan Participants and Beneficiaries
The protections of the exemption and contractual terms will also be
enforceable by plans, plan participants and beneficiaries.
Specifically, if an Adviser or Financial Institution received
compensation in a prohibited transaction but failed to satisfy any of
the Impartial Conduct Standards or any other condition of the
exemption, the Adviser and Financial Institution would be unable to
qualify for relief under the exemption, and, as a result, could be
liable under ERISA section 502(a)(2) and (3). An Adviser's failure to
comply with the exemption or the Impartial Conduct Standards would
result in a non-exempt prohibited transaction and would likely
constitute a fiduciary breach. As a result, a plan, plan participant or
beneficiary would be able to sue under ERISA section 502(a)(2) or (3)
to recover any loss in value to the plan (including the loss in value
to an individual account), or to obtain disgorgement of any wrongful
profits or unjust enrichment. Additionally, plans, participants and
beneficiaries could enforce their obligations in an action based on
breach of the agreement.
3. The Department
In addition, the Department would be able to enforce ERISA's
prohibited transaction and fiduciary duty provisions with respect to
employee benefit plans, but not IRAs, in the event that the Adviser or
Financial Institution received compensation in a prohibited transaction
but failed to comply with the exemption or the Impartial Conduct
Standards. If, for example, any of the
[[Page 21973]]
specific conditions of the exemption are not met, the Adviser and
Financial Institution will have engaged in a non-exempt prohibited
transaction, and the Department will be entitled to seek relief under
ERISA section 502(a)(2) and (5).
4. Excise Taxes Under the Code
In addition to the claims described above that may be brought by
IRA owners, plans, plan participants and beneficiaries, and the
Department, to enforce the contract and ERISA, Advisers and Financial
Institutions that engage in prohibited transactions under the Code are
subject to an excise tax. The excise tax is generally equal to 15% of
the amount involved. Parties who have participated in a prohibited
transaction for which an exemption is not available must pay the excise
tax and file Form 5330 with the Internal Revenue Service.
Prohibited Provisions
Finally, in order to preserve these various enforcement rights,
Section II(f) of the proposal provides that certain provisions may not
be part of the contract. If these provisions appear in a contract with
a Retirement Investor, the exemption is not satisfied with respect to
transactions involving that Retirement Investor. First, the proposal
requires that the contract may not contain exculpatory provisions that
disclaim or otherwise limit liability for an Adviser's or Financial
Institution's violations of the contract's terms. Second, the contract
may not require the Retirement Investor to agree to waive or qualify
its right to bring or participate in a class action or other
representative action in court in a contract dispute with the Adviser
or Financial Institution. The right of a Retirement Investor to bring a
class-action claim in court (and the corresponding limitation on
fiduciaries' ability to mandate class-action arbitration) is consistent
with FINRA's position that its arbitral forum is not the correct venue
for class-action claims. As proposed, this section would not affect the
ability of a Financial Institution or Adviser, and a Retirement
Investor, to enter into a pre-dispute binding arbitration agreement
with respect to individual contract claims. The Department expects that
most individual arbitration claims under this exemption will be subject
to FINRA's arbitration procedures and consumer protections. The
Department seeks comments on whether there are certain procedures and/
or consumer protections that it should adopt or mandate for those
disputes not covered by FINRA.
Disclosure Requirements for Best Interest Contract Exemption (Section
III)
In order to facilitate access to information on Financial
Institution and Adviser compensation, the proposal requires both public
disclosure and disclosure to Retirement Investors.
1. Web Page
Section III(c) of the proposal requires that the Financial
Institution maintain a public Web page that provides several different
types of information. The Web page must show the direct and indirect
material compensation payable to the Adviser, Financial Institution and
any Affiliate for services provided in connection with each Asset (or,
if uniform across a class of Assets, the class of Assets) that a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an IRA, is able to purchase,
hold, or sell through the Adviser or Financial Institution, and that a
plan, participant or beneficiary account, or an IRA has purchased,
held, or sold within the last 365 days, the source of the compensation,
and how the compensation varies within and among Asset classes. The Web
page must be updated at reasonable intervals, not less than quarterly.
The compensation may be expressed as a monetary amount, formula or
percentage of the assets involved in the purchase, sale or holding.
The information provided by the Web page will provide a broad base
of information about the various pricing and compensation structures
adopted by Financial Institutions and Advisers. The Department believes
that the data provided on the Web page will provide information that
can be used by financial information companies to analyze and provide
information comparing the practices of different Advisers and Financial
Institutions. Such information will allow a Retirement Investor to
evaluate costs and Advisers' and Financial Institutions' compensation
practices.
The Web page information must be provided in a manner that is
easily accessible to a Retirement Investor and the general public.
Appendix I to this notice is an exemplar of a possible web disclosure.
In addition, the Web page must also contain a version of the same
information that is formatted in a machine-readable manner. The
Department recognizes that machine readable data can be formatted in
many ways. Therefore, the Department requests comment on the format and
data fields that should be required under such a condition.
2. Individual Transactional Disclosure
In Section III(a), the exemption requires point of sale disclosure
to the Retirement Investor, prior to the execution of the investment
transaction, regarding the all-in cost and anticipated future costs of
recommended Assets. The disclosure is designed to make as clear and
salient as possible the total cost that the plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA will incur when following the Adviser's
recommendation, and to provide cost information that can be compared
across different Assets that are recommended for investment. In
addition, the projection of the costs over various holding periods
would inform the Retirement Investor of the cumulative impact of the
costs over time and of potential costs when the investment is sold.
As proposed, the disclosure requirement of Section III(a) would be
provided in a summary chart designed to direct the Retirement
Investor's attention to a few important data points regarding fees, in
a time frame that would enable the Retirement Investor to discuss other
(possibly less costly) alternatives with the Adviser prior to executing
the transaction. The disclosure chart does not have to be provided
again with respect to a subsequent recommendation to purchase the same
investment product, so long as the chart was previously provided to the
Retirement Investor within the past 12 months and the total cost has
not materially changed.
To the extent compliance with the point of sale disclosure requires
Advisers and Financial Institutions to obtain cost information from
entities that are not closely affiliated with them, they may rely in
good faith on information and assurances from the other entities, as
long as they do not know that the materials are incomplete or
inaccurate. This good faith reliance applies unless the entity
providing the information to the Adviser and Financial Institution is
(1) a person directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under common control with the Adviser or
Financial Institution; or (2) any officer, director, employee, agent,
registered representative, relative (as defined in ERISA section
3(15)), member of family (as defined in Code section 4975(e)(6)) of, or
partner in, the Adviser or Financial Institution.\35\
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\35\ See proposed definition of Affiliate, Section VIII(b)(1)
and (b)(2).
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The required chart would disclose with respect to each Asset
[[Page 21974]]
recommended, the ``total cost'' to the plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA, of the investment for 1-, 5- and 10-year periods
expressed as a dollar amount, assuming an investment of the dollar
amount recommended by the Adviser, and reasonable assumptions about
investment performance, which must be disclosed.
As defined in the proposal, the ``total cost'' of investing in an
asset means the sum of the following, as applicable: Acquisition costs,
ongoing costs, disposition costs, and any other costs that reduce the
asset's rate of return, are paid by direct charge to the plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, or reduce the amounts
received by the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA (e.g.,
contingent fees, such as back-end loads, including those that phase out
over time, with such terms explained beneath the table). The terms
``acquisition costs,'' ``ongoing costs,'' and ``disposition costs,''
are defined in the proposal. Appendix II to this proposal contains a
model chart that may be used to provide the information required under
this section. Use of the model chart is not mandatory. However, use of
an appropriately completed model chart will be deemed to satisfy the
requirement of Section III(a).
Request for comment. The Department requests comment on the design
of this proposed point of sale disclosure, as well as issues related to
the ability of the Adviser to provide the disclosure and whether it
will provide information that is meaningful to Retirement Investors. In
general, commenters are asked to address the anticipated cost of
compliance with the point of sale disclosure and whether the disclosure
as we have described it will provide information that is more useful to
Retirement Investors than other similar disclosures that are required
under existing law. As discussed below in more detail, the Department
requests comment on whether the disclosure can be designed to provide
information that would result in a useful comparison among Assets;
whether it is feasible for Advisers and Financial Institutions to
obtain reliable information to complete the chart at the time it would
be required to be provided to the Retirement Investor; and whether the
disclosure, without information on other characteristics of the
investment, would improve Retirement Investors' ability to make
informed investment decisions.
Design. As explained above, the proposal contemplates a chart with
the following information: All-in cost of the Asset, and the cost if
held for 1-, 5-, and 10 years. The all-in cost would be calculated with
the following components: ``acquisition costs,'' ``ongoing costs,''
``disposition costs,'' and ``other.'' The Department seeks comment on
all aspects of this approach. In particular, we ask:
Are the all-in costs of the investments permitted under
the proposal capable of being reflected accurately in the chart?
Are all-in costs already reflected in the summary
prospectuses for certain investments?
Have we correctly identified the possible various costs
associated with the permitted investments?
Should the point of sale disclosure requirement be limited
to certain events, such as opening a new account or rolling over
existing investments? If so, what changes would be needed to the model
chart?
Are our proposed definitions of the various costs clear
enough to result in information that is reasonably comparable across
different Financial Institutions?
Is it possible to attribute all the costs to the account
of a particular plan, participant or beneficiary, or IRA?
How should long-term costs be measured?
Feasibility. The point of sale disclosure is proposed to be an
individualized disclosure provided prior to the execution of the
transaction. The Department seeks comment on whether there are
practical impediments to the creation and disclosure of the chart in
the time frame proposed. Therefore, we ask:
Will Advisers and Financial Institutions have access to
the information required to be disclosed in the chart?
Are there existing systems at Financial Institutions that
could produce the disclosure required in this proposal? If not, what is
the cost of developing a system to comply?
What are the costs associated with providing the
disclosure?
Would the costs be reduced if the Adviser and Financial
Institution could provide the disclosure for full portfolios of
investments, rather than for each investment recommendation separately?
Would the costs be reduced if the timing of the disclosure
was more closely aligned with the SEC's disclosure requirements
applicable to broker-dealers (i.e. at or before the completion of the
transaction), rather than point of sale?
Are there particular asset classes for which this kind of
point of sale disclosure is more feasible or less feasible? What share
of assets held by Retirement Investors or share of transactions
executed by Advisers and Financial Institutions fall within the asset
classes for which the point of sale disclosure is more feasible and
less feasible?
Are there particular asset classes for which all the
information that would be required to be disclosed in the chart is
currently required in a similar format under existing law?
Would the required disclosure be more feasible or less
costly if a narrative statement were required instead of a summary
chart?
Impact. The point of sale disclosure would be intended to inform
the Retirement Investor of the costs associated with the investment.
Would such a disclosure in this simple format provide information that
is meaningful and likely to improve a Retirement Investor's decision
making? We ask for input on the following:
Would the simplified format result in the communication of
information that is accurate, and contribute to informed investment
decisions?
Do commenters recommend an alternative format or
alternative disclosures?
Would the relative fees associated with different types of
investment products, without a required disclosure of the relative
risks of the product (i.e., mutual fund ongoing fees versus a one-time
brokerage commission for a stock transaction) contribute to informed
investment decisions?
In the absence of a required benchmark, is the disclosure
of the all-in fees of a particular investment helpful to the Retirement
Investor? If not, how could a benchmark be crafted for the various
Assets permitted to be sold under the proposal?
Alternative. Instead of the point of sale disclosure as proposed,
would a ``cigarette warning''-style disclosure be as effective and less
costly? For example, the disclosure could read:
Investors are urged to check loads, management fees, revenue-
sharing, commissions, and other charges before investing in any
financial product. These fees may significantly reduce the amount
you are able to invest over time and may also determine your
adviser's take-home pay. If these fees are not reported in marketing
materials or made apparent by your investment adviser, do not forget
to ask about them.
3. Individual Annual Disclosure
Section III(b) of the proposal requires individual disclosure in
the form of an annual disclosure. Specifically, the proposal requires
the Adviser or Financial Institution to provide each
[[Page 21975]]
Retirement Investor with an annual written disclosure within 45 days of
the end of the applicable year. The annual disclosure must include: (i)
A list identifying each Asset purchased or sold during the applicable
period and the price at which the Asset was purchased or sold; (ii) a
statement of the total dollar amount of all fees and expenses paid by
the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, both directly and
indirectly, with respect to each Asset purchased, held or sold during
the applicable period; and (iii) a statement of the total dollar amount
of all compensation received by the Adviser and Financial Institution,
directly or indirectly, from any party, as a result of each Asset sold,
purchased or held by the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA, during the applicable period. This disclosure is intended to show
the Retirement Investor the impact of the cost of the Adviser's advice
on the investments by the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA.
The Department requests comment on this disclosure, in light of the
potential point of sale disclosure. We are particularly interested in
comments discussing whether both disclosures would be helpful and, if
not, which would be more useful to Retirement Investors?
4. Non-Security Insurance and Annuity Contracts.
Section III(a) and (b) will apply to all Assets as defined in the
proposal. This includes insurance and annuity contracts that are
securities under federal securities law, such as variable annuities,
and insurance and annuity contracts that are not, such as fixed
annuities. The Department requests comment on whether the types of
information required in the Section III(a) and (b) disclosures are
applicable and available with respect to insurance and annuity
contracts that are not securities.
In this regard, we note that PTE 84-24 \36\ is an existing
exemption under which certain investment advice fiduciaries can receive
commissions on insurance and annuity contracts and mutual fund shares
that are purchased by plans and IRAs. Elsewhere in this issue of the
Federal Register, the Department has proposed to revoke relief under
PTE 84-24 as it applies to IRA transactions involving annuity contracts
that are securities (including variable annuity contracts) and mutual
fund shares. The fact that IRA owners generally do not benefit from the
protections afforded by the fiduciary duties owed by plan sponsors to
their employee benefit plans makes it critical that their interests are
protected by appropriate conditions in the Department exemptions. In
our view, this proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption contains
conditions that are uniquely protective of IRA owners.
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\36\ Class Exemption for Certain Transactions Involving
Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, Investment Companies and Investment Company Principal
Underwriters, 49 FR 13208 (Apr. 3, 1984), amended at 71 FR 5887
(Feb. 3, 2006).
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The Department has determined however that PTE 84-24 should remain
available for investment advice fiduciaries to receive commissions for
IRA (and plan) purchases of insurance and annuity contracts that are
not securities. This distinction is due in part to uncertainty as to
whether the disclosure requirements proposed herein are readily
applicable to insurance and annuity contracts that are not securities,
and whether the distribution methods and channels of insurance products
that are not securities fit within this exemption's framework.
The Department requests comment on this approach. In particular, we
ask whether we have drawn the correct lines between insurance and
annuity products that are securities and those that are not, in terms
of our decision to continue to allow IRA transactions involving non-
security insurance and annuity contracts to occur under the conditions
of PTE 84-24 while requiring IRA transactions involving securities to
occur under the conditions of this proposed Best Interest Contract
Exemption.
In order for us to evaluate our approach, we request public comment
the current disclosure requirements applicable to insurance and annuity
contracts that are not securities. Can Section III(a) and (b) can be
revised with respect to such non-securities insurance and annuity
contracts to provide meaningful information to investors as to the
costs of such investments and the overall compensation received by
Advisers and Financial Institutions in connection with the
transactions? In addition, the Department requests information on the
distribution methods and channels applicable to insurance and annuity
products that are not securities. What are common structures of
insurance agencies?
Finally, we request public input as to whether any conditions of
this proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption, other than the
disclosure conditions discussed above, would be inapplicable to non-
security insurance and annuity products? Are any aspects of this
exemption particularly difficult for insurance companies to comply
with?
Range of Investment Options (Section IV)
Section IV(a) of the proposal requires a Financial Institution to
offer for purchase, sale, or holding and the Adviser to make available
to the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, for purchase,
sale or holding a broad range of investment options. These investment
options should enable an Adviser to make recommendations to the
Retirement Investor with respect to all of the asset classes reasonably
necessary to serve the best interests of the Retirement Investor in
light of the Retirement Investor's objectives, risk tolerance and
specific financial circumstances. The Department believes that ensuring
that an Adviser has a wide range of investment options at his or her
disposal is the most likely method by which a Retirement Investor can
be assured of developing a balanced investment portfolio.
The Department recognizes, however, that some Financial
Institutions limit the investment products that a Retirement Investor
may purchase, sell or hold based on whether the products generate
third-party payments or are proprietary products, or for other reasons
(e.g., the firms specialize in particular asset classes or product
types). Both Financial Institutions and Advisers often rely on the
ability to sell proprietary products or the ability to generate
additional revenue through third-party payments to support their
business models. The proposal permits Financial Institutions with such
business models to rely on the exemption provided additional conditions
are satisfied.
The additional conditions are set forth in Section IV(b) of the
proposal. First, before limiting the investment products a Retirement
Investor may purchase, sell or hold, the Financial Institution must
make a specific written finding that the limitations do not prevent the
Adviser from providing advice that is in the best interest of the
Retirement Investors (i.e., advice that reflects the care, skill,
prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a
prudent person would exercise based on the investment objectives, risk
tolerance, financial circumstances, and needs of the Retirement
Investor, without regard to the financial or other interests of the
Adviser, Financial Institution or any Affiliate, Related Entity, or
other party) or from otherwise adhering to the Impartial Conduct
Standards.
[[Page 21976]]
Second, the proposal provides that the payments received in
connection with these limited menus be reasonable in relation to the
value of specific services provided to Retirement Investors in exchange
for the payments and not in excess of the services' fair market value.
This is more specific than the reasonable compensation requirement set
forth in the contract under Section II because of the limitation placed
by the Financial Institution on the investments available for Adviser
recommendation. The Department intends to ensure that such additional
payments received in connection with the advice are for specific
services to Retirement Investors.
The proposal additionally provides that the Financial Institution
or Adviser, before giving any recommendations to a Retirement Investor,
must give clear written notice to the Retirement Investor of any
limitations placed by the Financial Institution on the investment
products offered by the Adviser. In this regard, it is insufficient for
the notice merely to state that the Financial Institution ``may'' limit
investment recommendations, without specifically disclosing the extent
to which the Financial Institution in fact does so.
Finally, the proposal would require an Adviser or Financial
Institution to notify the Retirement Investor if the Adviser does not
recommend a sufficiently broad range of investment options to meet the
Retirement Investor's needs. For example, the Department envisions the
provision of such a notice when the Adviser and Financial Institution
provide advice with respect to a limited class of investment products,
but those products do not meet a particular investor's needs. The
Department requests comment on whether it is possible to state this
standard with more specificity, or whether more detailed guidance is
needed for parties to determine when compliance with the condition
would be necessary. The Department also requests comment on whether any
specific disclosure is necessary to inform the Retirement Investor
about the particular conflicts of interest associated with Advisers
that recommend only proprietary products, and, if so, what the
disclosure should say.
The conditions of Section IV do not apply to an Adviser or
Financial Institution with respect to the provision of investment
advice to a participant or beneficiary of a participant directed
individual account plan concerning the participant's or beneficiary's
selection of designated investment options available under the plan,
provided the Adviser and Financial Institution did not provide advice
to the responsible plan fiduciary regarding the menu of designated
investment options. In such circumstances, the Adviser and Financial
Institution are not responsible for the limitations on the investment
options.
EBSA Disclosure and Recordkeeping (Section V)
1. Notification to the Department of Reliance on the Exemption
Before receiving prohibited compensation in reliance on Section I
of this exemption, Section V(a) of the proposal requires that the
Financial Institution notify the Employee Benefits Security
Administration of the intention to rely on this exemption. The notice
need not identify any specific plan or IRA. The notice will remain in
effect until it is revoked in writing. The Department envisions
accepting the notice via email and regular mail.
This is a notice provision only and does not require any approval
or finding by the Department that the Financial Institution is eligible
for the exemption. Once a Financial Institution has sent the notice, it
can immediately begin to rely on the exemption provided the conditions
are satisfied.
2. Data Request
Section V(b) of the proposed exemption also would require Financial
Institutions to maintain certain data, which is specified in Section
IX, for six years from the date of the applicable transaction. The data
request would require Financial Institutions to maintain and disclose
to the Department upon request specific information regarding
purchases, sales, and holdings by Retirement Investors made pursuant to
advice provided by Advisers and Financial Institutions relying on the
proposed exemption. Financial Institutions may maintain this
information in any form that may be readily analyzed by the Department
or simply as raw data. Receipt of this additional data will assist the
Department in assessing the effectiveness of the exemption.
No party, other than the Financial Institution responsible for
compliance, will be subject to the taxes imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), if applicable, if the Financial Institution fails to
maintain the data or the data are not available for examination.
Request for Comment. The proposed data request covers certain
information with respect to investment inflows, outflows and holdings,
and returns, by plans, participant and beneficiary accounts, and IRAs
and is intended to assist the Department in evaluating the
effectiveness of the exemption. We request comment on whether these are
the appropriate data points for the covered Assets. Are the terms used
clear enough to result in information that is reasonably comparable
across different Financial Institutions? Or should we include precise
definitions of inflows, outflows, holdings, returns, etc.? If so,
please suggest specifically how these terms should be defined. Are
different terms needed to request comparable information regarding
insurance and annuity contracts that are not securities?
3. General Recordkeeping
Finally, Section V(c) and (d) of the proposal contains a general
recordkeeping requirement applicable to the Financial Institution. The
general recordkeeping requirement relates to the records necessary for
the Department and certain other entities to determine whether the
conditions of this exemption have been satisfied.
Effect of Failure To Comply With Conditions
If the exemption is granted, relief under the Best Interest
Contract Exemption will be available only if all applicable conditions
described above are satisfied. Satisfaction of the conditions is
determined on a transaction by transaction basis, however. Thus, the
effect of noncompliance with a condition depends on whether the
condition applies to a single transaction or multiple transactions. For
example, if an Adviser fails to provide a transaction disclosure in
accordance with Section III(a) with respect to an Asset purchased by a
plan, participant or beneficiary account, or an IRA, the relief
provided by the Best Interest Contract Exemption would be unavailable
to the Adviser and Financial Institution only for the otherwise
prohibited compensation received in connection with the investment in
that specific Asset by the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
IRA. More broadly, if an Adviser and Financial Institution fail to
enter into a contract with a Retirement Investor in accordance with
Section II, relief under the Best Interest Contract Exemption would be
unavailable solely with respect to the investments by that Retirement
Investor, not all Retirement Investors to which the Adviser and
Financial Institution provide advice. However, if a Financial
Institution fails to comply with a condition that is necessary for all
transactions involving investment advice to Retirement
[[Page 21977]]
Investors, such as the maintenance of the Web page required by Section
III(c), the Financial Institution will not be eligible for the relief
under the Best Interest Contract Exemption for all prohibited
transactions entered into during the period in which the failure to
comply existed.
Supplemental Exemptions
1. Proposed Insurance and Annuity Exemption (Section VI)
The Best Interest Contract Exemption, as set forth above, permits
Advisers and Financial Institutions to receive compensation that would
otherwise be prohibited by the self-dealing and conflicts of interest
provisions of ERISA and the Code. ERISA and the Code contain additional
prohibitions on certain specific transactions between plans and IRAs
and ``parties in interest'' and ``disqualified persons,'' including
service providers. These additional prohibited transactions include:
(i) The purchase or sale of an asset between a plan/IRA and a party in
interest/disqualified person, and (ii) the transfer of plan/IRA assets
to a party in interest/disqualified person. These prohibited
transactions are subject to excise tax and personal liability for the
fiduciary.
A plan's or IRA's purchase of an insurance or annuity product would
be a prohibited transaction if the insurance company has a pre-existing
relationship with the plan/IRA as a service provider, or is otherwise a
party in interest/disqualified person. In the Department's view, this
circumstance is common enough in connection with recommendations by
Advisers and Financial Institutions to warrant proposal of an exemption
for these types of transactions in conjunction with the Best Interest
Contract Exemption. The Department anticipates that the fiduciary that
causes a plan's or IRA's purchase of an insurance or annuity product
would not be the Adviser or Financial Institution but would instead be
another fiduciary, such as a plan sponsor or IRA owner, acting on the
Adviser's or Financial Institution's advice. Because the party
requiring relief for this prohibited transaction is separate and
independent of the Adviser and Financial Institution, the Department is
proposing this exemption subject to discrete conditions described
below.
Although there is an existing exemption which would often cover
these transactions, PTE 84-24, the Department is proposing elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register to revoke that exemption to the
extent it provides relief for transactions involving IRAs' purchase of
variable annuity contracts and other annuity contracts that are
securities under federal securities law. We have therefore decided to
provide an exemption for these transactions as part of this document,
both to ensure that relief is available for transactions involving IRAs
but also for ease of compliance for transactions involving other
Retirement Investors (i.e., plan participants, beneficiaries and small
plan sponsors).
As with the Best Interest Contract Exemption, relief under the
proposed insurance and annuity exemption in Section VI would not extend
to a plan covered by Title I of ERISA where (i) the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate is the employer of employees covered by
the plan, or (ii) the Adviser or Financial Institution is a named
fiduciary or plan administrator (as defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A))
with respect to the plan, or an affiliate thereof, that has not been
selected by a fiduciary that is Independent. The conditions proposed
for the insurance and annuity exemption are that the transaction must
be effected by the insurance company in the ordinary course of its
business as an insurance company, the combined total of all fees and
compensation received by the insurance company is not in excess of
reasonable compensation under the circumstances, the purchase is for
cash only, and that the terms of the purchase are at least as favorable
to the plan as the terms generally available in an arm's length
transaction with an unrelated party.\37\
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\37\ The condition requiring the purchase to be made for cash
only is not intended to preclude purchases with plan or IRA
contributions, but rather to preclude transactions effected in-kind
through an exchange of securities or other assets. In-kind exchanges
would not be permitted as part of this class exemption due to the
potential need for conditions relating to valuation of the assets to
be exchanged.
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2. Exemption for Pre-Existing Transactions (Section VII)
Section VII of the proposal would provide an exemption for
Advisers, Financial Institutions, and their Affiliates and Related
Entities in connection with transactions that occurred prior to the
applicability date of the Proposed Regulation, if adopted.
Specifically, the exemption would provide relief from ERISA sections
406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) for the receipt of prohibited compensation,
after the applicability date of the regulation, by an Adviser,
Financial Institution and any Affiliate or Related Entity for services
provided in connection with the purchase, sale or holding of an Asset
before the applicability date. The Department is proposing this
exemption to provide relief for investment professionals that may have
provided advice prior to the applicability date of the regulation but
did not consider themselves fiduciaries. Their receipt after the
applicability date of ongoing periodic payments of compensation
attributable to a purchase, sale or holding of an Asset by a plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, prior to the applicability
date of the regulation might otherwise raise prohibited transaction
concerns.
The Department is also proposing this exemption for Advisers and
Financial Institutions who were considered fiduciaries before the
applicability date, but who entered into transactions involving plans
and IRAs before the applicability date in accordance with the terms of
a prohibited transaction exemption that has since been amended. Section
VII would permit Advisers, Financial Institutions, and their Affiliates
and Related Entities, to receive compensation such as 12b-1 fees, after
the applicability date, that is attributable to a purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset by a plan, participant or beneficiary account, or
an IRA, that occurred prior to the applicability date.
In order to take advantage of this relief, the exemption would
require that the compensation must be received pursuant to an
agreement, arrangement or understanding that was entered into prior to
the applicability date of the regulation, and that the Adviser and
Financial Institution not provide additional advice to the plan or IRA,
regarding the purchase, sale or holding of the Asset after the
applicability date of the regulation. Relief would not be extended to
compensation that is excluded pursuant to Section I(c) of the proposal
or to compensation received in connection with a purchase or sale
transaction that, at the time it was entered into, was a non-exempt
prohibited transaction. The Department requests comment on whether
there are other areas in which exemptions would be desirable to avoid
unforeseen consequences in connection with the timing of the
finalization of the Proposed Regulation.
3. Low Fee Streamlined Exemption
While the flexibility of the Best Interest Contract Exemption is
designed to accommodate a wide range of current business practices and
avoid the need for highly prescriptive regulation, the Department
acknowledges that there may be actors in the industry that would
[[Page 21978]]
prefer a more prescriptive approach. The Department believes that both
approaches could be desirable and could, if designed properly, minimize
the harmful impact of conflicts of interest on the quality of advice.
Accordingly, in addition to the Best Interest Contract Exemption, the
Department is also considering issuing a separate streamlined exemption
that would allow Advisers and Financial Institutions (and their
Affiliates and Related Entities) to receive otherwise prohibited
compensation in connection with plan, participant and beneficiary
accounts, and IRA investments in certain high-quality low-fee
investments, subject to fewer conditions. However, at this point, the
Department has been unable to operationalize this concept and therefore
has not proposed text for such a streamlined exemption. Instead, we
seek public input to assist our consideration and design of the
exemption.
A low-fee streamlined exemption is an attractive idea that, if
properly crafted, could achieve important goals. It could minimize the
compliance burdens for Advisers offering high-quality low-fee
investment products with minimal potential for material conflicts of
interest, as discussed further below. Products that met the conditions
of the streamlined exemption could be recommended to plans,
participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners, and the Adviser could
receive variable and third-party compensation as a result of those
recommendations, without satisfying some or all of the conditions of
the Best Interest Contract Exemption. The streamlined exemption could
reward and encourage best practices with respect to optimizing the
quality, amount, and combined, all-in cost of recommended financial
products, financial advice, and other related services. In particular,
a streamlined exemption could be useful in enhancing access to quality,
affordable financial products and advice by savers with smaller account
balances. Additionally, because it would be premised on a fee
comparison, it would apply only to investments with relatively simple
and transparent fee structures.
In this regard, the Department believes that certain high-quality
investments are provided pursuant to fee structures in which the
payments are sufficiently low that they do not present serious
potential material conflicts of interest. In theory, a streamlined
exemption with relatively few conditions could be constructed around
such investments. Facilitating investments in such high-quality low-fee
products would be consistent with the prevailing (though by no means
universal) view in the academic literature that posits that the optimal
investment strategy is often to buy and hold a diversified portfolio of
assets calibrated to track the overall performance of financial
markets. Under this view, for example, a long-term recommendation to
buy and hold a low-priced (often passively managed) target date fund
that is consistent with the investor's future risk appetite trajectory
is likely to be sound. As another example, under this view, a medium-
term recommendation to buy and hold (for 5 or perhaps 10 years) an
inexpensive, risk-matched balanced fund or combination of funds, and
afterward to review the investor's circumstances and formulate a new
recommendation also is likely to be sound.
If it could be constructed appropriately, a streamlined exemption
for high-quality low-fee investments could be subject to relatively few
conditions, because the investments present minimal risk of abuse to
plans, participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners. The aim would be
to design conditions with sufficient objectivity that Advisers and
Financial Institutions could proceed with certainty in their business
operations when recommending the investments. The Department does not
anticipate that such a streamlined exemption would require Advisers and
Financial Institutions to undertake the contractual commitments to
adhere to the Impartial Conduct Standards or adopt anti-conflict
policies and procedures with respect to advice given on such products,
as is proposed in the Best Interest Contract Exemption. However, some
of the required disclosures proposed in the Best Interest Contract
Exemption would likely be imposed in the streamlined exemption.
The Department has initially focused on mutual funds as the only
type of investment widely held by Retirement Investors that would be
readily susceptible to the type of expense calculations necessary to
implement the low-fee streamlined exemption. This is due to the
transparency associated with mutual fund investments and, in
particular, the requirement that the mutual fund disclose its fees and
operating expenses in its prospectus. Accordingly, data on mutual fund
fees and expenses is widely available.
Within the category of mutual fund investments, the Department is
considering whether the streamlined exemption would be available to
funds with all-in fees below a certain amount. However, the Department
lacks data regarding the characteristics of mutual funds with low all-
in fees. Consequently, we are exploring whether the streamlined
exemption should contain additional conditions to safeguard the
interests of plans, participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners. For
example, the streamlined exemption could require that the investment
product be ``broadly diversified to minimize risk for targeted
return,'' or ``calibrated to provide a balance of risk and return
appropriate to the investor's circumstances and preferences for the
duration of the recommended holding period.'' However, we recognize
that adding conditions might undercut the usefulness of the streamlined
exemption.
Request for Comment. The Department requests comment on these
possible initial terms of a streamlined exemption and other questions
relating to the technical design of such an exemption and its likely
utility to Advisers and Financial Institutions. Additionally, the
Department requests public input on the likely consequences of the
establishment of a low-fee streamlined exemption.
Design. The Department requests public input on the technical
design challenges in defining high-quality low-fee investment products
that would satisfy the policy goals of the streamlined exemption. We
are concerned that there may be no single, objective way to evaluate
fees and expenses associated with mutual funds (or other investments)
and no single cut-off to determine when fees are sufficiently low. One
cut-off could be too low for some investors' needs and too high for
others'. A very low cut-off would strongly favor passively managed
funds. A high cut-off would permit recommendations that may not be
sound and free from bias. Multiple cut-offs for different product
categories would be complex and would risk introducing bias between the
categories. In addition, it is unclear whether mutual funds with the
lowest fees necessarily represent the highest quality investments for
Retirement Investors. As noted above, the streamlined exemption would
not expressly contain a ``best interest'' standard.
To further aid in the design of the streamlined exemption, the
Department requests comments on the questions below. The Regulatory
Impact Analysis for the Proposed Regulation, published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register, describes additional questions the
Department is considering regarding
[[Page 21979]]
the development of a low-fee streamlined exemption.
Should the streamlined exemption cover investment products
other than mutual funds? The streamlined exemption would be based on
the premise that low-cost investment products distributed pursuant to
relatively unconflicted fee structures present minimal risk of abuse to
plans, participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners. In order to
design a streamlined exemption for the sale of such products, the
products must have fee structures that are transparent, publicly
available, and capable of being compared reliably. Are there other
investments commonly held by Retirement Investors that meet these
criteria?
How should the fee calculation be performed? How should
fees be defined for the fee calculation to ensure a useful metric?
Should the fee calculation include both ongoing management/
administrative fees and one-time distribution/transactional costs? What
time period should the fee calculation cover? Should it cover fees as
projected over future time periods (e.g., one, five and ten year
periods) to lower the impact of one-time transactional costs such as
sales loads? If so, what discount rate should be used to determine the
present value of future fees?
How should the Department determine the fee cut-off? If
the Department established a streamlined exemption for low-fee mutual
funds and other products, how would the precise fee cut-off be
determined? How often should it be updated? What are characteristics of
mutual funds with very low fees? Should the cut-off be based on a
percentage of the assets invested (i.e., a specified number of basis
points) or as a percentile of the market? If a percentile, how should
reliable data be obtained to determine fund percentiles? Are there
available and appropriate sources of industry benchmarking data? Should
the Department collect data for this purpose? Is the range of fees in
the market known? Are there data that would suggest that mutual funds
with relatively low fees are (or are not) high quality investments for
a wide variety of Retirement Investors?
Should the low-fee cutoff be applied differently to
different types of funds? Should a single fee cut-off apply broadly to
all mutual funds, or would that exclude entire categories of funds with
certain investment strategies? Would it be appropriate to develop sub-
categories of funds for the fee cut-offs? If so, how should the sub-
categories be defined?
Should ETFs be covered? Within the category of mutual
funds, should exchange-traded funds (ETFs) be covered under the
streamlined exemption? If so, how would the commission associated with
an ETF transaction be incorporated into the low-fee calculation?
What, if any, conditions other than low fees should be
required as part of the streamlined exemption? If the streamlined
exemption covers only mutual funds, are conditions relating to their
availability and transparent pricing unnecessary? Are conditions
relating to liquidity necessary? Should funds covered by the
streamlined exemption be required to be broadly diversified to minimize
risk for targeted return? Should the streamlined exemption contain a
requirement that the investment be calibrated to provide a balance of
risk and return appropriate to the investor's circumstances and
preferences for the duration of the recommended holding period? Should
the funds be required to meet the requirements of a ``qualified default
investment alternative,'' as described in 29 CFR 2550.404c-5?
How should the low-fee cut-off be communicated to Advisers
and Financial Institutions? Should the initial cut-off and subsequent
updates be written as a condition of the exemption, or publicized
through other formats? How would Advisers and Financial Institutions be
sure that certain funds meet the low-fee cut-off? By what means and how
frequently should Advisers and Financial Institutions be required to
confirm that mutual funds that they recommend (or recommended in the
past) continue to meet the low-fee cut-off?
How could consumers police the low-fee cut-off? What
enforcement mechanism could be used to assure that the Advisers taking
advantage of such a safe harbor are correctly analyzing whether their
products meet the cut-off?
Utility. In addition to seeking comment on the technical design of
the streamlined exemption, the Department asks for information on
whether the low-fee streamlined exemption would effectively reduce the
compliance burden for a significant number of Advisers and Financial
Institutions. Because of its design, the low-fee streamlined exemption
would generally apply on a product-by-product basis rather than at the
Financial Institution level, unless the Financial Institution and its
Advisers exclusively advise retail customers to invest in the low-fee
products. Therefore, the Department asks:
Would Advisers and Financial Institutions restrict their
business models to offer only the low-fee mutual funds that the
Department envisions covering in the streamlined exemption? Or, would
Advisers that offer products outside the streamlined exemption (higher-
fee mutual funds as well as other investment products such as stocks
and bonds) rely on the streamlined exemption for the low-fee mutual
fund investments and the Best Interest Contract Exemption for the other
investments? If Advisers and Financial Institutions had to implement
the safeguards required by the Best Interest Contract Exemption for
many of their Retirement Investor customers, would the availability of
the streamlined exemption result in material cost savings to them?
How do low-fee investment products compensate Advisers for
distribution? Do low-fee funds tend to pay sales loads, revenue sharing
and 12b-1 fees? If not, how would Advisers and Financial Institutions
be compensated within the low-fee confines of the streamlined
exemption?
What design features would be most likely to enhance the
utility of the low-fee streamlined exemption?
Consequences. The Department seeks the public's views on the
potential consequences of granting a streamlined exemption for certain
types of investments.
Would a streamlined exemption limited to low-fee mutual
fund investments or other categories of investments be in the interests
of plans and their participants and beneficiaries? Would the
availability of the streamlined exemption discourage Advisers and
Financial Institutions from offering other types of investments,
including higher-cost mutual funds, even if the offering of such other
investments would be in the best interest of the plan, participant or
beneficiary, or IRA owner? Would the streamlined exemption have the
beneficial effect of reducing investment costs? On the other hand,
could the streamlined exemption result in some of the lowest-cost
investment products increasing their fees to the cut-off threshold?
Would it expand the number of Financial Institutions that developed
low-fee options, making them more widely available?
How would the streamlined exemption affect the marketplace
for investment products? Would a low-fee streamlined exemption have the
unintended effect of unduly promoting certain investment styles? Which
types of Advisers and Financial Institutions would be most affected and
would they
[[Page 21980]]
be likely to revise their business models in response? Would there be
increased competition among Advisers and Financial Institutions to
offer investment products with lower fees? Would Retirement Investors
have more choices to diversify while paying less in fees? Would
Financial Institutions and Advisers offer other incentives to
Retirement Investors in order to sell specific products?
Availability of Other Prohibited Transaction Exemptions
Certain existing exemptions, including amendments thereto and
superseding exemptions, provide relief for specific types of
transactions that are outside of the scope of this proposed exemption.
A person seeking relief for a transaction covered by one of those
existing exemptions would need to comply with its requirements and
conditions. Those exemptions are as follows:
(1) PTE 75-1 (Part III),\38\ which provides relief for a plan's
acquisition of securities during an underwriting or selling syndicate
from any person other than a fiduciary who is a member of the
syndicate.
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\38\ 40 FR 50845 (Oct. 31, 1975).
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(2) PTE 75-1 (Part V),\39\ which exempts an extension of credit to
a plan from a party in interest.
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\39\ Id., as amended at 71 FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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(3) PTE 83-1,\40\ which provides relief for certain transactions
involving mortgage pool investment trusts and pass-through certificates
evidencing interests therein.
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\40\ 48 FR 895 (Jan. 7, 1983).
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(4) PTE 2004-16,\41\ which provides relief for a fiduciary of the
plan who is the employer of employees covered under the plan to
establish individual retirement plans for certain mandatory
distributions on behalf of separated employees at a financial
institution that is itself or an affiliate, and also select a
proprietary investment product as the initial investment for the plan.
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\41\ 69 FR 57964 (Sept. 28, 2004).
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(5) PTE 2006-16,\42\ which exempts certain loans of securities by
plans to broker-dealers and banks and provides relief for the receipt
of compensation by a fiduciary for services rendered in connection with
the securities loans.
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\42\ 71 FR 63786 (Oct. 31, 2006).
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Applicability Date
The Department is proposing that compliance with the final
regulation defining a fiduciary under ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) and
Code section 4975(e)(3)(B) will begin eight months after publication of
the final regulation in the Federal Register (Applicability Date). The
Department proposes to make this exemption, if granted, available on
the Applicability Date. Further, the Department is proposing to revoke
relief for transactions involving IRAs from two existing exemptions,
PTEs 86-128 and 84-24, as of the Applicability Date.\43\ As a result,
Advisers and Financial Institutions, including those newly defined as
fiduciaries, will generally have to comply with this exemption to
receive many common forms of compensation in transactions involving
IRAs.
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\43\ See the notices with respect to these proposals, published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register.
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The Department recognizes that complying with the requirements of
the exemption may represent a significant adjustment for many Advisers
and Financial Institutions, particularly in their dealings with IRA
owners. At the same time, in the Department's view, it is essential
that Advisers and Financial Institutions wishing to receive
compensation under the exemption institute certain conditions for the
protection of IRA customers as of the Applicability Date. These
safeguards include: Acknowledging fiduciary status,\44\ complying with
the Impartial Conduct Standards,\45\ adopting anti-conflict policies
and procedures,\46\ notifying EBSA of the use of the exemption,\47\ and
recordkeeping.\48\ The Department requests comment on whether Financial
Institutions anticipate that there will be existing contractual
obligations or other barriers that would prevent them from implementing
the exemption's policies and procedures requirement in this time frame.
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\44\ See Section II(b).
\45\ See Section II(c).
\46\ See Section II(d)(2)-(4).
\47\ See Section V(a).
\48\ See Section V(c).
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The Department also specifically requests comment on whether it
should delay certain other conditions of the exemption as applicable to
IRA transactions for an additional period (e.g., three months)
following the Applicability Date. For example, one possibility would be
to delay the requirement that Advisers and Financial Institutions
execute a contract with their IRA customers for an additional three-
month period, as well as the disclosure requirements in Sections III
and the data collection requirements described in Section IX. This
phased approach would give Financial Institutions additional time to
review and refine their policies and procedures and to put new
compliance systems in place, without exposure to contractual liability
to the IRA owners.
The Department does not believe that such additional delay would be
warranted for Advisers and Financial Institutions with respect to
transactions involving ERISA plan sponsors and ERISA plan participants
and beneficiaries. Advisers and Financial Institutions to ERISA plans
and their participants and beneficiaries are accustomed to working
within the existing exemptions, such as PTEs 86-128 and 84-24, and such
exemptions would remain available to them while they develop systems
for complying with this exemption.\49\ Nevertheless, the Department
also requests comments on the appropriate period for phasing in some or
all of the exemption's conditions with respect to ERISA plans as well
as IRAs.
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\49\ In this regard, the Department anticipates making the
Impartial Conduct Standards amendments to PTEs 86-128 and 84-24
effective as of the Applicability Date.
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The Department additionally notes that, elsewhere in this issue of
the Federal Register, it has proposed to revoke another existing
exemption, PTE 75-1, Part II(2), in its entirety in connection with a
proposed amendment to PTE 86-128. The Department requests comment on
whether this exemption is widely used and whether it should delay
revocation for some period after the Applicability Date while Advisers
and Financial Institutions develop systems for complying with PTE 86-
128.
No Relief Proposed From ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(C) or Code Section
4975(c)(1)(C) for the Provision of Services
If granted, this proposed exemption will not provide relief from a
transaction prohibited by ERISA section 406(a)(1)(C), or from the taxes
imposed by Code section 4975(a) and (b) by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(C), regarding the furnishing of goods, services or
facilities between a plan and a party in interest. The provision of
investment advice to a plan under a contract with a plan fiduciary is a
service to the plan and compliance with this exemption will not relieve
an Adviser or Financial Institution of the need to comply with ERISA
section 408(b)(2), Code section 4975(d)(2), and applicable regulations
thereunder.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department conducts a preclearance consultation program to
provide the general public and Federal
[[Page 21981]]
agencies with an opportunity to comment on proposed and continuing
collections of information in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)). This helps to ensure that
the public understands the Department's collection instructions,
respondents can provide the requested data in the desired format,
reporting burden (time and financial resources) is minimized,
collection instruments are clearly understood, and the Department can
properly assess the impact of collection requirements on respondents.
Currently, the Department is soliciting comments concerning the
proposed information collection request (ICR) included in the Best
Interest Contract Exemption (PTE) as part of its proposal to amend its
1975 rule that defines when a person who provides investment advice to
an employee benefit plan or IRA becomes a fiduciary. A copy of the ICR
may be obtained by contacting the PRA addressee shown below or at
https://www.RegInfo.gov.
The Department has submitted a copy of the PTE to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) in accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) for
review of its information collections. The Department and OMB are
particularly interested in comments that:
Evaluate whether the collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility;
Evaluate the accuracy of the agency's estimate of the
burden of the collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
Enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and
Minimize the burden of the collection of information on
those who are to respond, including through the use of appropriate
automated, electronic, mechanical, or other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information technology, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
Comments should be sent to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, Room 10235, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503; Attention: Desk Officer for the
Employee Benefits Security Administration. OMB requests that comments
be received within 30 days of publication of the proposed PTE to ensure
their consideration.
PRA Addressee: Address requests for copies of the ICR to G.
Christopher Cosby, Office of Policy and Research, U.S. Department of
Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Room N-5718, Washington, DC 20210. Telephone (202) 693-
8410; Fax: (202) 219-5333. These are not toll-free numbers. ICRs
submitted to OMB also are available at https://www.RegInfo.gov.
As discussed in detail below, the PTE would require financial
institutions and their advisers to enter into a contractual arrangement
with retirement investors making investment decisions on behalf of the
plan or IRA (i.e., plan participants or beneficiaries, IRA owners, or
small plan sponsors (or employees, officers or directors thereof)), and
make certain disclosures to the retirement investors and the Department
in order to receive relief from ERISA's prohibited transaction rules
for the receipt of compensation as a result of a financial
institution's and its adviser's advice (i.e., prohibited compensation).
Financial institutions would be required to maintain records necessary
to prove that the conditions of the exemption have been met. These
requirements are ICRs subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
The Department has made the following assumptions in order to
establish a reasonable estimate of the paperwork burden associated with
these ICRs:
Disclosures distributed electronically will be distributed
via means already used by respondents in the normal course of business
and the costs arising from electronic distribution will be negligible;
Financial institutions will use existing in-house
resources to prepare the contracts and disclosures, adjust their IT
systems, and maintain the recordkeeping systems necessary to meet the
requirements of the exemption;
A combination of personnel will perform the tasks
associated with the ICRs at an hourly wage rate of $125.95 for a
financial manager, $30.42 for clerical personnel, $79.67 for an IT
professional, and $129.94 for a legal professional; \50\
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\50\ The Department's estimated 2015 hourly labor rates include
wages, other benefits, and overhead, and are calculated as follows:
mean wage from the 2013 National Occupational Employment Survey
(April 2014, Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ocwage.pdf); wages as a percent of total
compensation from the Employer Cost for Employee Compensation (June
2014, Bureau of Labor Statistics https://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t02.htm); overhead as a multiple of compensation is assumed to
be 25 percent of total compensation for paraprofessionals, 20
percent of compensation for clerical, and 35 percent of compensation
for professional; annual inflation assumed to be 2.3 percent annual
growth of total labor cost since 2013 (Employment Costs Index data
for private industry, September 2014 https://www.bls.gov/news.release/eci.nr0.htm).
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Approximately 2,800 financial institutions \51\ will take
advantage of this exemption and they will use this exemption in
conjunction with transactions involving nearly all of their clients
that are small defined benefit and defined plans, participant directed
defined contribution plans, and IRA holders.\52\ \53\ Eight percent of
financial institutions (approximately 224) will be new firms beginning
use of this exemption each year.
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\51\ As described in the regulatory impact analysis for the
accompanying rule, the Department estimates that approximately 2,619
broker dealers service the retirement market. The Department
anticipates that the exemption will be used primarily, but not
exclusively, by broker-dealers. Further, the Department assumes that
all broker-dealers servicing the retirement market will use the
exemption. Beyond the 2,619 broker-dealers, the Department estimates
that almost 200 other financial institutions will use the exemption.
\52\ The Department welcomes comment on this estimate.
\53\ For purposes of this analysis, ``IRA holders'' include
rollovers from ERISA plans.
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Contract, Disclosures, and Notices
In order to receive prohibited compensation under this PTE, Section
II requires financial institutions and advisers to enter into a written
contract with retirement investors affirmatively stating that they are
fiduciaries under ERISA or the Code with respect to any recommendations
to the retirement investor to purchase, sell or hold specified assets,
and that the financial institution and adviser will give advice that is
in the best interest of the retirement investor.
Section III(a) requires the adviser to furnish the retirement
investor with a disclosure prior to the execution of the purchase of
the asset stating the total cost of investing in the asset. Section
III(b) requires the adviser or financial institution to furnish the
retirement investor with an annual statement listing all assets
purchased or sold during the year, as well as the associated fees and
expenses paid by the plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA,
and the compensation received by the financial institution and the
adviser. Section III(c) requires the financial institution to maintain
a publicly available Web page displaying the compensation (including
its source and how it varies within asset classes) that would be
received by the adviser, the financial institution and any affiliate
[[Page 21982]]
with respect to any asset that a plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or IRA could purchase through the adviser.
If the financial institution limits the assets available for sale,
Section IV requires the financial institution to furnish the retirement
investor with a written description of the limitations placed on the
menu. The adviser must also notify the retirement investor if it does
not recommend a sufficiently broad range of assets to meet the
retirement investor's needs.
Finally, before the financial institution begins engaging in
transactions covered under this PTE, Section V(a) requires the
financial institution to provide notice to the Department of its intent
to rely on this proposed PTE.
Legal Costs
The Department estimates that drafting the PTE's contractual
provisions, the notice to the Department, and the limited menu
disclosure will require 60 hours of legal time for financial
institutions during the first year that the financial institution uses
the PTE. This legal work results in approximately 168,000 hours of
burden during the first year and approximately 13,000 hours of burden
during subsequent years at an equivalent cost of $21.8 million and $1.7
million respectively.
IT Costs
The Department estimates that updating computer systems to create
the required disclosures, insert the contract provisions into existing
contracts, maintain the required records, and publish information on
the Web site will require 100 hours of IT staff time for financial
institutions during the first year that the financial institution uses
the PTE.\54\ This IT work results in approximately 280,000 hours of
burden during the first year and approximately 22,000 hours of burden
during subsequent years at an equivalent cost of $22.3 million and $1.8
million respectively.
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\54\ The Department assumes that nearly all financial
institutions already maintain Web sites and that updates to the
disclosure required by Section III(c) could be automated. Therefore,
the IT costs required by Section III(c) would be almost exclusively
start-up costs. The Department invites comment on these assumptions.
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Production and Distribution of Required Contract, Disclosures, and
Notices
The Department estimates that approximately 21.3 million plans and
IRAs have relationships with financial institutions and are likely to
engage in transactions covered under this PTE.
The Department assumes that financial institutions already maintain
contracts with their clients. Therefore, the required contractual
provisions will be inserted into existing contracts with no additional
cost for production or distribution.
The Department assumes that financial institutions will send
approximately 24 point-of-sale transaction disclosures each year to
37,000 small defined benefit plans and small defined contribution plans
that do not allow participants to direct investments. All of these
disclosures will be sent electronically at de minimis cost. Financial
institutions will send two point-of-sale transaction disclosures each
year to 1.1 million defined contribution plans participants and 20.2
million IRA holders. These disclosures will be distributed
electronically to 75 percent of defined contribution plan participants
and IRA holders. Paper copies of the disclosure will be given to 25
percent of defined contribution plan participants and IRA holders.
Further, 15 percent of the paper copies will be mailed, while the other
85 percent will be hand-delivered during in-person meetings. The
Department estimates that electronic distribution will result in de
minimis cost, while paper distribution will cost approximately $1.3
million. Paper distribution will also require one minute of clerical
time to print the disclosure and one minute of clerical time to mail
the disclosure, resulting in 204,000 hours at an equivalent cost of
$6.2 million annually.
The Department estimates that 21.3 million plans and IRAs will
receive an annual statement. Small defined benefit and defined
contribution plans that do not allow participants to direct investments
will receive a ten page statement electronically at de minimis cost.
Defined contribution plan participants and IRA holders will receive a
two page statement. This statement will be distributed electronically
to 38 percent of defined contribution plan participants and 50 percent
of IRA holders. Paper statements will be mailed to 62 percent of
defined contribution plan participants and 50 percent of IRA holders.
The Department estimates that electronic distribution will result in de
minimis cost, while paper distribution will cost approximately $6.3
million. Paper distribution will also require two minutes of clerical
time to print and mail the disclosure, resulting in 359,000 hours at an
equivalent cost of $10.9 million annually.
For purposes of this estimate, the Department assumes that nearly
all financial institutions using the PTE will limit their investment
menus in some way and provide the limited menu disclosure. Accordingly,
during the first year of the exemption the Department estimates that
all of the 21.3 million plans and IRAs would receive the one-page
limited menu disclosure. In subsequent years, approximately 1.7 million
plans and IRAs would receive the one-page limited menu disclosure.
Small defined benefit and defined contribution plans that do not allow
participants to direct investments would receive the disclosure
electronically at de minimis cost. The disclosure would be distributed
electronically to 75 percent of defined contribution plan participants
and IRA holders. Paper copies of the disclosure would be given to 25
percent of defined contribution plan participants and IRA holders.
Further, 15 percent of the paper copies would be mailed, while the
other 85 percent would be hand-delivered during in-person meetings. The
Department estimates that electronic distribution would result in de
minimis cost, while paper distribution would cost approximately
$922,000 during the first year and approximately $74,000 in subsequent
years. Paper distribution would also require one minute of clerical
time to print the disclosure and one minute of clerical time to mail
the disclosure, resulting in 244,000 hours in the first year and 20,000
hours in subsequent years at an equivalent cost of $7.4 million and
$595,000 respectively. If, as seems likely, many financial institutions
choose not to limit the universe of investment recommendations, we
would expect the actual costs to be substantially smaller.
Finally, the Department estimates that all of the 2,800 financial
institutions would mail the required one-page notice to the Department
during the first year and approximately 224 new financial institutions
would mail the required one-page notice to the Department in subsequent
years. Producing and distributing this notice would cost approximately
$1,500 during the first year and approximately $100 in subsequent
years. Producing and distributing this notice would also require 2
minutes of clerical time resulting in a burden of approximately 93
hours during the first year and approximately 7 hours in subsequent
years at an equivalent cost of $2,800 and $200 respectively.
Recordkeeping Requirement
Section V(b) requires financial institutions to maintain investment
return data in a manner accessible for examination by the Department
for six years. Section V(c) and (d) requires
[[Page 21983]]
financial institutions to maintain or cause to be maintained for six
years and disclosed upon request the records necessary for the
Department, Internal Revenue Service, plan fiduciary, contributing
employer or employee organization whose members are covered by the
plan, and participants, beneficiaries and IRA owners to determine
whether the conditions of this exemption have been met in a manner that
is accessible for audit and examination.
Most of the data retention requirements in Section V(b) are
consistent with data retention requirements made by the SEC and FINRA.
In addition, the data retention requirements correspond to the six year
statute of limitations in Section 413 of ERISA. Insofar as the data
retention time requirements in Section V(b) are lengthier than those
required by the SEC and FINRA, the Department assumes that retaining
data for an additional time period is a de minimis additional burden.
The records required in Section V(c) and Section V(d) are generally
kept as regular and customary business practices. Therefore, the
Department has estimated that the additional time needed to maintain
records consistent with the exemption will only require about one-half
hour, on average, annually for a financial manager to organize and
collate the documents or else draft a notice explaining that the
information is exempt from disclosure, and an additional 15 minutes of
clerical time to make the documents available for inspection during
normal business hours or prepare the paper notice explaining that the
information is exempt from disclosure. Thus, the Department estimates
that a total of 45 minutes of professional time per Financial
Institution would be required for a total hour burden of 2,100 hours at
an equivalent cost of $198,000.
In connection with this recordkeeping and disclosure requirements
discussed above, Section V(d)(2) and (3) provide that financial
institutions relying on the exemption do not have to disclose trade
secrets or other confidential information to members of the public
(i.e., plan fiduciaries, contributing employers or employee
organizations whose members are covered by the plan, participants and
beneficiaries and IRA owners), but that in the event a financial
institution refuses to disclose information on this basis, it must
provide a written notice to the requester advising of the reasons for
the refusal and advising that the Department may request such
information. The Department's experience indicates that this provision
is not commonly invoked, and therefore, the written notice is rarely,
if ever, generated. Therefore, the Department believes the cost burden
associated with this clause is de minimis. No other cost burden exists
with respect to recordkeeping.
Overall Summary
Overall, the Department estimates that in order to meet the
conditions of this PTE, 2,800 financial institutions will produce 86
million disclosures and notices during the first year of this PTE and
66.4 million disclosures and notices during subsequent years. These
disclosures and notices will result in 1.3 million burden hours during
the first year and 620,000 burden hours in subsequent years, at an
equivalent cost of $68.9 million and $21.4 million respectively. The
disclosures and notices in this exemption will also result in a total
cost burden for materials and postage of $8.6 million during the first
year and $7.7 million during subsequent years.
These paperwork burden estimates are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection (Request for new OMB Control
Number).
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Titles: (1) Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption.
OMB Control Number: 1210-NEW.
Affected Public: Business or other for-profit.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 2,800.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 85,985,156 in the first year
and 66,394,985 in subsequent years.
Frequency of Response: Initially, Annually, and When engaging in
exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 1,256,862 during the first
year and 619,766 in subsequent years.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $8,582,764 during the first
year and $7,733,247 in subsequent years.
General Information
The attention of interested persons is directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the subject of an exemption
under ERISA section 408(a) and Code section 4975(c)(2) does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or disqualified person with
respect to a plan or IRA from certain other provisions of ERISA and the
Code, including any prohibited transaction provisions to which the
exemption does not apply and the general fiduciary responsibility
provisions of ERISA section 404 which require, among other things, that
a fiduciary discharge his or her duties respecting the plan solely in
the interests of the participants and beneficiaries of the plan.
Additionally, the fact that a transaction is the subject of an
exemption does not affect the requirement of Code section 401(a) that
the plan must operate for the exclusive benefit of the employees of the
employer maintaining the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be granted under ERISA section 408(a)
and Code section 4975(c)(2), the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible, in the interests of plans and
their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and protective of
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of the plan and IRA
owners;
(3) If granted, the proposed exemption is applicable to a
particular transaction only if the transaction satisfies the conditions
specified in the exemption; and
(4) The proposed exemption, if granted, will be supplemental to,
and not in derogation of, any other provisions of ERISA and the Code,
including statutory or administrative exemptions and transitional
rules. Furthermore, the fact that a transaction is subject to an
administrative or statutory exemption is not dispositive of whether the
transaction is in fact a prohibited transaction.
Written Comments
The Department invites all interested persons to submit written
comments on the proposed exemption to the address and within the time
period set forth above. All comments received will be made a part of
the record. Comments should state the reasons for the writer's interest
in the proposed exemption. Comments received will be available for
public inspection at the above address.
Proposed Exemption
Section I--Best Interest Contract Exemption
(a) In general. ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code prohibit
fiduciary advisers to employee benefit plans (Plans) and individual
retirement plans (IRAs) from receiving compensation that varies based
on their investment recommendations. Similarly, fiduciary advisers are
prohibited from receiving compensation from third parties in connection
with their advice. This exemption permits certain persons who provide
investment advice to Retirement Investors, and their associated
financial institutions,
[[Page 21984]]
affiliates and other related entities, to receive such otherwise
prohibited compensation as described below.
(b) Covered transactions. This exemption permits Advisers,
Financial Institutions, and their Affiliates and Related Entities to
receive compensation for services provided in connection with a
purchase, sale or holding of an Asset by a Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, as a result of the Adviser's and Financial
Institution's advice to any of the following ``Retirement Investors:''
(1) A participant or beneficiary of a Plan subject to Title I of
ERISA with authority to direct the investment of assets in his or her
Plan account or to take a distribution;
(2) The beneficial owner of an IRA acting on behalf of the IRA; or
(3) A plan sponsor as described in ERISA section 3(16)(B) (or any
employee, officer or director thereof) of a non-participant-directed
Plan subject to Title I of ERISA with fewer than 100 participants, to
the extent it acts as a fiduciary who has authority to make investment
decisions for the Plan.
As detailed below, parties seeking to rely on the exemption must
contractually agree to adhere to Impartial Conduct Standards in
rendering advice regarding Assets; warrant that they have adopted
policies and procedures designed to mitigate the dangers posed by
Material Conflicts of Interest; disclose important information relating
to fees, compensation, and Material Conflicts of Interest; and retain
documents and data relating to investment recommendations regarding
Assets. The exemption provides relief from the restrictions of ERISA
section 406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) and the sanctions imposed by Code
section 4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(D), (E)
and (F). The Adviser and Financial Institution must comply with the
conditions of Sections II-V to rely on this exemption.
(c) Exclusions. This exemption does not apply if:
(1) The Plan is covered by Title I of ERISA, and (i) the Adviser,
Financial Institution or any Affiliate is the employer of employees
covered by the Plan, or (ii) the Adviser or Financial Institution is a
named fiduciary or plan administrator (as defined in ERISA section
3(16)(A)) with respect to the Plan, or an affiliate thereof, that was
selected to provide advice to the Plan by a fiduciary who is not
Independent;
(2) The compensation is received as a result of a transaction in
which the Adviser is acting on behalf of its own account or the account
of the Financial Institution, or the account of a person directly or
indirectly, through one or more intermediaries, controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with the Financial Institution (i.e., a
principal transaction);
(3) The compensation is received as a result of investment advice
to a Retirement Investor generated solely by an interactive Web site in
which computer software-based models or applications provide investment
advice based on personal information each investor supplies through the
Web site without any personal interaction or advice from an individual
Adviser (i.e., ``robo advice''); or
(4) The Adviser (i) exercises any discretionary authority or
discretionary control respecting management of the Plan or IRA assets
involved in the transaction or exercises any authority or control
respecting management or disposition of the assets, or (ii) has any
discretionary authority or discretionary responsibility in the
administration of the Plan or IRA.
Section II--Contract, Impartial Conduct, and Other Requirements
(a) Contract. Prior to recommending that the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA purchase, sell or hold the Asset, the
Adviser and Financial Institution enter into a written contract with
the Retirement Investor that incorporates the terms required by Section
II(b)-(e).
(b) Fiduciary. The written contract affirmatively states that the
Adviser and Financial Institution are fiduciaries under ERISA or the
Code, or both, with respect to any investment recommendations to the
Retirement Investor.
(c) Impartial Conduct Standards. The Adviser and the Financial
Institution affirmatively agree to, and comply with, the following:
(1) When providing investment advice to the Retirement Investor
regarding the Asset, the Adviser and Financial Institution will provide
investment advice that is in the Best Interest of the Retirement
Investor (i.e., advice that reflects the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person
would exercise based on the investment objectives, risk tolerance,
financial circumstances, and needs of the Retirement Investor, without
regard to the financial or other interests of the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate, Related Entity, or other party);
(2) When providing investment advice to the Retirement Investor
regarding the Asset, the Adviser and Financial Institution will not
recommend an Asset if the total amount of compensation anticipated to
be received by the Adviser, Financial Institution, Affiliates and
Related Entities in connection with the purchase, sale or holding of
the Asset by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, will
exceed reasonable compensation in relation to the total services they
provide to the Retirement Investor; and
(3) The Adviser's and Financial Institution's statements about the
Asset, fees, Material Conflicts of Interest, and any other matters
relevant to a Retirement Investor's investment decisions, will not be
misleading.
(d) Warranties. The Adviser and Financial Institution affirmatively
warrant the following:
(1) The Adviser, Financial Institution, and Affiliates will comply
with all applicable federal and state laws regarding the rendering of
the investment advice, the purchase, sale and holding of the Asset, and
the payment of compensation related to the purchase, sale and holding
of the Asset;
(2) The Financial Institution has adopted written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to mitigate the impact of Material
Conflicts of Interest and ensure that its individual Advisers adhere to
the Impartial Conduct Standards set forth in Section II(c);
(3) In formulating its policies and procedures, the Financial
Institution has specifically identified Material Conflicts of Interest
and adopted measures to prevent the Material Conflicts of Interest from
causing violations of the Impartial Conduct Standards set forth in
Section II(c); and
(4) Neither the Financial Institution nor (to the best of its
knowledge) any Affiliate or Related Entity uses quotas, appraisals,
performance or personnel actions, bonuses, contests, special awards,
differential compensation or other actions or incentives to the extent
they would tend to encourage individual Advisers to make
recommendations that are not in the Best Interest of the Retirement
Investor. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the contractual warranty set
forth in this Section II(d)(4) does not prevent the Financial
Institution or its Affiliates and Related Entities from providing
Advisers with differential compensation based on investments by Plans,
participant or beneficiary accounts, or IRAs, to the extent such
compensation would not encourage advice that runs counter to the Best
Interest of the Retirement Investor (e.g., differential compensation
based on such neutral factors as the difference in time and analysis
necessary to provide prudent advice with respect to different types of
investments would be permissible).
[[Page 21985]]
(e) Disclosures. The written contract must specifically:
(1) Identify and disclose any Material Conflicts of Interest;
(2) Inform the Retirement Investor that the Retirement Investor has
the right to obtain complete information about all the fees currently
associated with the Assets in which it is invested, including all of
the direct and indirect fees paid payable to the Adviser, Financial
Institution, and any Affiliates; and
(3) Disclose to the Retirement Investor whether the Financial
Institution offers Proprietary Products or receives Third Party
Payments with respect to the purchase, sale or holding of any Asset,
and of the address of the Web site required by Section III(c) that
discloses the compensation arrangements entered into by Advisers and
the Financial Institution.
(f) Prohibited Contractual Provisions. The written contract shall
not contain the following:
(1) Exculpatory provisions disclaiming or otherwise limiting
liability of the Adviser or Financial Institution for a violation of
the contract's terms; and
(2) A provision under which the Plan, IRA or Retirement Investor
waives or qualifies its right to bring or participate in a class action
or other representative action in court in a dispute with the Adviser
or Financial Institution.
Section III--Disclosure Requirements
(a) Transaction Disclosure.
(1) Disclosure. Prior to the execution of the purchase of the Asset
by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, the Adviser
furnishes to the Retirement Investor a chart that provides, with
respect to each Asset recommended, the Total Cost to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, of investing in the Asset
for 1-, 5- and 10-year periods expressed as a dollar amount, assuming
an investment of the dollar amount recommended by the Adviser and
reasonable assumptions about investment performance that are disclosed.
The disclosure chart required by this section need not be provided
with respect to a subsequent recommendation to purchase the same
investment product if the chart was previously provided to the
Retirement Investor within the past twelve months and the Total Cost
has not materially changed.
(2) Total Cost. The ``Total Cost'' of investing in an Asset means
the sum of the following, as applicable:
(A) Acquisition costs. Any costs of acquiring the Asset that are
paid by direct charge to the Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or IRA, or that reduce the amount invested in the Asset (e.g., any
loads, commissions, or mark-ups on Assets bought from dealers, and
account opening fees, if applicable).
(B) Ongoing costs. Any ongoing (e.g., annual) costs attributable to
fees and expenses charged for the operation of an Asset that is a
pooled investment fund (e.g., mutual fund, bank collective investment
fund, insurance company pooled separate account) that reduces the
Asset's rate of return (e.g., amounts attributable to a mutual fund
expense ratio and account fees). This includes amounts paid by the
pooled investment fund to intermediaries, such as sub-TA fees, sub-
accounting fees, etc.
(C) Disposition costs. Any costs of disposing of or redeeming an
interest in the Asset that are paid by direct charge to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, or that reduce the amounts
received by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA (e.g.,
surrender fees, back-end loads, etc., that are always applicable (i.e.,
do not sunset), mark-downs on assets sold to dealers, and account
closing fees, if applicable).
(D) Others. Any costs not described in (A)-(C) that reduce the
Asset's rate of return, are paid by direct charge to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, or reduce the amounts
received by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA (e.g.,
contingent fees, such as back-end loads that phase out over time (with
such terms explained beneath the table)).
(3) Model Chart. Appendix II to this exemption contains a model
chart that may be used to provide the information required under this
Section III(a). Use of the model chart is not mandatory. However, use
of an appropriately completed model chart will be deemed to satisfy the
requirements of this Section III(a).
(b) Annual Disclosure. The Adviser or Financial Institution
provides the following written information to the Retirement Investor,
annually, within 45 days of the end of the applicable year, in a
succinct single disclosure:
(1) A list identifying each Asset purchased or sold during the
applicable period and the price at which the Asset was purchased or
sold;
(2) A statement of the total dollar amount of all fees and expenses
paid by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA (directly
and indirectly) with respect to each Asset purchased, held or sold
during the applicable period; and
(3) A statement of the total dollar amount of all compensation
received by the Adviser and Financial Institution, directly or
indirectly, from any party, as a result of each Asset sold, purchased
or held by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA during
the applicable period.
(c) Web page.
(1) The Financial Institution maintains a Web page, freely
accessible to the public, which shows the following information:
(A) The direct and indirect material compensation payable to the
Adviser, Financial Institution and any Affiliate for services provided
in connection with each Asset (or, if uniform across a class of Assets,
the class of Assets) that a Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or an IRA is able to purchase, hold, or sell through the Adviser or
Financial Institution, and that a Plan, participant or beneficiary
account, or an IRA has purchased, held, or sold within the last 365
days. The compensation may be expressed as a monetary amount, formula
or percentage of the assets involved in the purchase, sale or holding;
and
(B) The source of the compensation, and how the compensation varies
within and among Assets.
(2) The Financial Institution's Web page provides access to the
information in (1)(A) and (B) in a machine readable format.
Section IV--Range of Investment Options
(a) General. The Financial Institution offers for purchase, sale or
holding, and the Adviser makes available to the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA for purchase, sale or holding, a range of
Assets that is broad enough to enable the Adviser to make
recommendations with respect to all of the asset classes reasonably
necessary to serve the Best Interests of the Retirement Investor in
light of its investment objectives, risk tolerance, and specific
financial circumstances.
(b) Limited Range of Investment Options. Section (a)
notwithstanding, a Financial Institution may limit the Assets available
for purchase, sale or holding based on whether the Assets are
Proprietary Products, generate Third Party Payments, or for other
reasons, and still rely on the exemption, provided that:
(1) The Financial Institution makes a specific written finding that
the limitations it has placed on the Assets made available to an
Adviser for purchase, sale or holding by Plans, participant and
beneficiary accounts, and IRAs do not prevent the Adviser
[[Page 21986]]
from providing advice that is in the Best Interest of the Retirement
Investor (i.e., advice that reflects the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person
would exercise based on the investment objectives, risk tolerance,
financial circumstances, and needs of the Retirement Investor, without
regard to the financial or other interests of the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate, Related Entity, or other party) or
otherwise adhering to the Impartial Conduct Standards;
(2) Any compensation received in connection with a purchase, sale
or holding of the Asset by a Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or an IRA, is reasonable in relation to the value of the specific
services provided to the Retirement Investor in exchange for the
payments and not in excess of the services' fair market value;
(3) Before giving investment recommendations to Retirement
Investors, the Adviser or Financial Institution gives the Retirement
Investor clear written notice of the limitations placed on the Assets
that the Adviser may offer for purchase, sale or holding by a Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or an IRA. Notice is insufficient
if it merely states that the Financial Institution or Adviser ``may''
limit investment recommendations based on whether the Assets are
Proprietary Products or generate Third Party Payments, or for other
reasons, without specific disclosure of the extent to which
recommendations are, in fact, limited on that basis; and
(4) The Adviser notifies the Retirement Investor if the Adviser
does not recommend a sufficiently broad range of Assets to meet the
Retirement Investor's needs.
(c) ERISA plan participants and beneficiaries. Some Advisers and
Financial Institutions provide advice to participants in ERISA-covered
participant directed individual account Plans in which the menu of
investment options is selected by an Independent Plan fiduciary. In
such cases, provided the Adviser and Financial Institution did not
provide investment advice to the Plan fiduciary regarding the
composition of the menu, the Adviser and Financial Institution do not
have to comply with Section IV(a)-(c) in connection with their advice
to individual participants and beneficiaries on the selection of Assets
from the menu provided. This exception is not available for advice with
respect to investments within open brokerage windows or otherwise
outside the Plan's designated investment options.
Section V--Disclosure to the Department and Recordkeeping
(a) EBSA Disclosure. Before receiving compensation in reliance on
the exemption in Section I, the Financial Institution notifies the
Department of Labor of the intention to rely on this class exemption.
The notice will remain in effect until revoked in writing by the
Financial Institution. The notice need not identify any Plan or IRA.
(b) Data Request. The Financial Institution maintains the data that
is subject to request pursuant to Section IX in a manner that is
accessible for examination by the Department for six (6) years from the
date of the transaction subject to relief hereunder. No party, other
than the Financial Institution responsible for complying with this
paragraph (b), will be subject to the taxes imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), if applicable, if the data is not maintained or not
available for examination as required by paragraph (b).
(c) Recordkeeping. The Financial Institution maintains for a period
of six (6) years, in a manner that is accessible for examination, the
records necessary to enable the persons described in paragraph (d) of
this Section to determine whether the conditions of this exemption have
been met, except that:
(1) If such records are lost or destroyed, due to circumstances
beyond the control of the Financial Institution, then no prohibited
transaction will be considered to have occurred solely on the basis of
the unavailability of those records; and
(2) No party, other than the Financial Institution responsible for
complying with this paragraph (c), will be subject to the civil penalty
that may be assessed under ERISA section 502(i) or the taxes imposed by
Code section 4975(a) and (b), if applicable, if the records are not
maintained or are not available for examination as required by
paragraph (d), below.
(d) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (d)(2) of this Section, and
notwithstanding any provisions of ERISA section 504(a)(2) and (b), the
records referred to in paragraph (c) of this Section are
unconditionally available at their customary location for examination
during normal business hours by:
(A) Any authorized employee or representative of the Department or
the Internal Revenue Service;
(B) Any fiduciary of a Plan that engaged in a purchase, sale or
holding of an Asset described in this exemption, or any authorized
employee or representative of such fiduciary;
(C) Any contributing employer and any employee organization whose
members are covered by a Plan described in paragraph (d)(1)(B), or any
authorized employee or representative of these entities; or
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of a Plan described in paragraph
(B), IRA owner, or the authorized representative of such participant,
beneficiary or owner; and
(2) None of the persons described in paragraph (d)(1)(B)-(D) of
this Section are authorized to examine privileged trade secrets or
privileged commercial or financial information, of the Financial
Institution, or information identifying other individuals.
(3) Should the Financial Institution refuse to disclose information
on the basis that the information is exempt from disclosure, the
Financial Institution must, by the close of the thirtieth (30th) day
following the request, provide a written notice advising the requestor
of the reasons for the refusal and that the Department may request such
information.
Section VI--Insurance and Annuity Contract Exemption
(a) In general. In addition to prohibiting fiduciaries from
receiving compensation from third parties and compensation that varies
on the basis of the fiduciaries' investment advice, ERISA and the
Internal Revenue Code prohibit the purchase by a Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA of an insurance or annuity product from an
insurance company that is a service provider to the Plan or IRA. This
exemption permits a Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA to
purchase an Asset that is an insurance or annuity contract in
accordance with an Adviser's advice, from a Financial Institution that
is an insurance company and that is a service provider to the Plan or
IRA. This exemption is provided because purchases of insurance and
annuity products are often prohibited purchases and sales involving
insurance companies that have a pre-existing party in interest
relationship to the Plan or IRA.
(b) Covered transaction. The restrictions of ERISA section
406(a)(1)(A) and (D), and the sanctions imposed by Code section 4975(a)
and (b), by reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), shall not
apply to a fiduciary's causing the purchase of an Asset that is an
insurance or annuity contract by a non-participant-directed Plan
subject to Title I of ERISA that has fewer than 100 participants,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, from a Financial
Institution that is an
[[Page 21987]]
insurance company and that is a party in interest or disqualified
person, if:
(1) The transaction is effected by the insurance company in the
ordinary course of its business as an insurance company;
(2) The combined total of all fees and compensation received by the
insurance company and any Affiliate is not in excess of reasonable
compensation under the circumstances;
(3) The purchase is for cash only; and
(4) The terms of the purchase are at least as favorable to the
Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA as the terms generally
available in an arm's length transaction with an unrelated party.
(c) Exclusion: The exemption in this Section VI does not apply if
the Plan is covered by Title I of ERISA, and (i) the Adviser, Financial
Institution or any Affiliate is the employer of employees covered by
the Plan, or (ii) the Adviser and Financial Institution is a named
fiduciary or plan administrator (as defined in ERISA section 3(16)(A))
with respect to the Plan, or an affiliate thereof, that was selected to
provide advice to the plan by a fiduciary who is not Independent.
Section VII--Exemption for Pre-Existing Transactions
(a) In general. ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code prohibit
Advisers, Financial Institutions and their Affiliates and Related
Entities from receiving variable or third-party compensation as a
result of the Adviser's and Financial Institution's advice to a Plan,
participant or beneficiary, or IRA owner. Some Advisers and Financial
Institutions did not consider themselves fiduciaries within the meaning
of 29 CFR 2510-3.21 before the applicability date of the amendment to
29 CFR 2510-3.21 (the Applicability Date). Other Advisers and Financial
Institutions entered into transactions involving Plans, participant or
beneficiary accounts, or IRAs before the Applicability Date, in
accordance with the terms of a prohibited transaction exemption that
has since been amended. This exemption permits Advisers, Financial
Institutions, and their Affiliates and Related Entities, to receive
compensation, such as 12b-1 fees, in connection with the purchase, sale
or holding of an Asset by a Plan, participant or beneficiary account,
or an IRA, as a result of the Adviser's and Financial Institution's
advice, that occurred prior to the Applicability Date, as described and
limited below.
(b) Covered transaction. Subject to the applicable conditions
described below, the restrictions of ERISA section 406(a)(1)(D) and
406(b) and the sanctions imposed by Code section 4975(a) and (b), by
reason of Code section 4975(c)(1)(D), (E) and (F), shall not apply to
the receipt of compensation by an Adviser, Financial Institution, and
any Affiliate and Related Entity, for services provided in connection
with the purchase, holding or sale of an Asset, as a result of the
Adviser's and Financial Institution's advice, that was purchased, sold,
or held by a Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or an IRA before
the Applicability Date if:
(1) The compensation is not excluded pursuant to Section I(c) of
the Best Interest Contract Exemption;
(2) The compensation is received pursuant to an agreement,
arrangement or understanding that was entered into prior to the
Applicability Date;
(3) The Adviser and Financial Institution do not provide additional
advice to the Plan regarding the purchase, sale or holding of the Asset
after the Applicability Date; and
(4) The purchase or sale of the Asset was not a non-exempt
prohibited transaction pursuant to ERISA section 406 and Code section
4975 on the date it occurred.
Section VIII--Definitions
For purposes of these exemptions:
(a) ``Adviser'' means an individual who:
(1) Is a fiduciary of a Plan or IRA solely by reason of the
provision of investment advice described in ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii)
or Code section 4975(e)(3)(B), or both, and the applicable regulations,
with respect to the Assets involved in the transaction;
(2) Is an employee, independent contractor, agent, or registered
representative of a Financial Institution; and
(3) Satisfies the applicable federal and state regulatory and
licensing requirements of insurance, banking, and securities laws with
respect to the covered transaction.
(b) ``Affiliate'' of an Adviser or Financial Institution means--
(1) Any person directly or indirectly through one or more
intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with the Adviser or Financial Institution. For this purpose,
``control'' means the power to exercise a controlling influence over
the management or policies of a person other than an individual;
(2) Any officer, director, employee, agent, registered
representative, relative (as defined in ERISA section 3(15)), member of
family (as defined in Code section 4975(e)(6)) of, or partner in, the
Adviser or Financial Institution; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of which the Adviser or
Financial Institution is an officer, director or employee or in which
the Adviser or Financial Institution is a partner.
(c) An ``Asset,'' for purposes of this exemption, includes only the
following investment products: Bank deposits, certificates of deposit
(CDs), shares or interests in registered investment companies, bank
collective funds, insurance company separate accounts, exchange-traded
REITs, exchange-traded funds, corporate bonds offered pursuant to a
registration statement under the Securities Act of 1933, agency debt
securities as defined in FINRA Rule 6710(l) or its successor, U.S.
Treasury securities as defined in FINRA Rule 6710(p) or its successor,
insurance and annuity contracts, guaranteed investment contracts, and
equity securities within the meaning of 17 CFR 230.405 that are
exchange-traded securities within the meaning of 17 CFR 242.600.
Excluded from this definition is any equity security that is a security
future or a put, call, straddle, or other option or privilege of buying
an equity security from or selling an equity security to another
without being bound to do so.
(d) Investment advice is in the ``Best Interest'' of the Retirement
Investor when the Adviser and Financial Institution providing the
advice act with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a prudent person would exercise
based on the investment objectives, risk tolerance, financial
circumstances, and needs of the Retirement Investor, without regard to
the financial or other interests of the Adviser, Financial Institution
or any Affiliate, Related Entity, or other party.
(e) ``Financial Institution'' means the entity that employs the
Adviser or otherwise retains such individual as an independent
contractor, agent or registered representative and that is:
(1) Registered as an investment adviser under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b-1 et seq.) or under the laws of the
state in which the adviser maintains its principal office and place of
business;
(2) A bank or similar financial institution supervised by the
United States or state, or a savings association (as defined in section
3(b)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(1)),
but only if the advice resulting in the compensation is provided
through a trust department of the bank or similar financial institution
or savings association which is subject to periodic examination and
review by federal or state banking authorities;
[[Page 21988]]
(3) An insurance company qualified to do business under the laws of
a state, provided that such insurance company:
(A) Has obtained a Certificate of Authority from the insurance
commissioner of its domiciliary state which has neither been revoked
nor suspended,
(B) Has undergone and shall continue to undergo an examination by
an Independent certified public accountant for its last completed
taxable year or has undergone a financial examination (within the
meaning of the law of its domiciliary state) by the state's insurance
commissioner within the preceding 5 years, and
(C) Is domiciled in a state whose law requires that actuarial
review of reserves be conducted annually by an Independent firm of
actuaries and reported to the appropriate regulatory authority; or
(4) A broker or dealer registered under the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.).
(f) ``Independent'' means a person that:
(1) Is not the Adviser, the Financial Institution or any Affiliate
relying on the exemption,
(2) Does not receive compensation or other consideration for his or
her own account from the Adviser, the Financial Institution or
Affiliate; and
(3) Does not have a relationship to or an interest in the Adviser,
the Financial Institution or Affiliate that might affect the exercise
of the person's best judgment in connection with transactions described
in this exemption.
(g) ``Individual Retirement Account'' or ``IRA'' means any trust,
account or annuity described in Code section 4975(e)(1)(B) through (F),
including, for example, an individual retirement account described in
section 408(a) of the Code and a health savings account described in
section 223(d) of the Code.
(h) A ``Material Conflict of Interest'' exists when an Adviser or
Financial Institution has a financial interest that could affect the
exercise of its best judgment as a fiduciary in rendering advice to a
Retirement Investor regarding an Asset.
(i) ``Plan'' means any employee benefit plan described in section
3(3) of the Act and any plan described in section 4975(e)(1)(A) of the
Code.
(j) ``Proprietary Product'' means a product that is managed by the
Financial Institution or any of its Affiliates.
(k) ``Related Entity'' means any entity other than an Affiliate in
which the Adviser or Financial Institution has an interest which may
affect the exercise of its best judgment as a fiduciary.
(l) ``Retirement Investor'' means--
(1) A participant or beneficiary of a Plan subject to Title I of
ERISA with authority to direct the investment of assets in his or her
Plan account or to take a distribution,
(2) The beneficial owner of an IRA acting on behalf of the IRA, or
(3) A plan sponsor as described in ERISA section 3(16)(B) (or any
employee, officer or director thereof), of a non-participant-directed
Plan subject to Title I of ERISA that has fewer than 100 participants,
to the extent it acts as a fiduciary with authority to make investment
decisions for the Plan.
(m) ``Third-Party Payments'' mean sales charges when not paid
directly by the Plan, participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, 12b-1
fees and other payments paid to the Financial Institution or an
Affiliate or Related Entity by a third party as a result of the
purchase, sale or holding of an Asset by a Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA.
Section IX--Data Request
Upon request by the Department, a Financial Institution that relies
on the exemption in Section I shall provide, within a reasonable time,
but in no event longer than six (6) months, after receipt of the
request, the following information for the preceding six (6) year
period:
(a) Inflows. At the Financial Institution level, for each Asset
purchased, for each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number and identity of shares/units bought;
(2) The aggregate dollar amount invested and the cost to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA associated with the
purchase;
(3) The revenue received by the Financial Institution and any
Affiliate in connection with the purchase of each Asset disaggregated
by source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual
fund adviser) and the reason the compensation was paid.
(b) Outflows. At the Financial Institution level for each Asset
sold, for each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number of and identity of shares/units sold;
(2) The aggregate dollar amount received and the cost to the Plan,
participant or beneficiary account, or IRA, associated with the sale;
(3) The revenue received by the Financial Institution and any
Affiliate in connection with the sale of each Asset disaggregated by
source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual
fund adviser) and the reason the compensation was paid.
(c) Holdings. At the Financial Institution level for each Asset
held at any time during each quarter:
(1) The aggregate number and identity of shares/units held at the
end of such quarter;
(2) The aggregate cost incurred by the Plan, participant or
beneficiary account, or IRA, during such quarter in connection with the
holdings;
(3) The revenue received by the Financial Institution and any
Affiliate in connection with the holding of each Asset during such
quarter for each Asset disaggregated by source; and
(4) The identity of each revenue source (e.g., mutual fund, mutual
fund adviser) and the reason the compensation was paid.
(d) Returns. At the Retirement Investor level:
(1) The identity of the Adviser;
(2) The beginning-of-quarter value of the Retirement Investor's
Portfolio;
(3) The end-of-quarter value of the Retirement Investor's
Portfolio; and
(4) Each external cash flow to or from the Retirement Investor's
Portfolio during the quarter and the date on which it occurred.
For purposes of this subparagraph (d), ``Portfolio'' means the
Retirement Investor's combined holding of assets held in a Plan account
or IRA advised by the Adviser.
(e) Public Disclosure. The Department reserves the right to
publicly disclose information provided by the Financial Institution
pursuant to subparagraph (d). If publicly disclosed, such information
would be aggregated at the Adviser level, and the Department would not
disclose any individually identifiable financial information regarding
Retirement Investor accounts.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 14th day of April, 2015.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administration,
Department of Labor.
[[Page 21989]]
Appendix I Financial Institution ABC--Web site Disclosure Model Form
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transactional Ongoing
Provider, name, -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of investment sub-type Charges to Compensation to Compensation to Charges to Compensation to Compensation to Affiliate Special rules
investor firm adviser investor firm adviser
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-Proprietary Mutual Fund XYZ MF Large Cap [ ]% [ ]% [ ]% of [ ]% [ ]% [ ]% of N/A............. Breakpoints (as
(Load Fund). Fund, Class A sales load as dealer transactional expense ratio. 12b-1 fee, ongoing fees. applicable)
Class B Class C. applicable. concession. fee Extent revenue sharing Extent Contingent
considered in (paid by fund/ considered in deferred shares
annual bonus. affiliate). annual bonus. charge (as
applicable)
Proprietary Mutual Fund (No ABC MF Large Cap No upfront charge N/A............. N/A............. [ ]% [ ]% [ ]% of [ ]% N/A
load). Fund. expense ratio. asset-based ongoing fees asset-based
annual fee for Extent investment
shareholder considered in advisory fee
servicing (paid annual bonus. paid by fund to
by fund/ affiliate of
affiliate). Financial
Institution.
Equities, ETFs, Fixed Income. ................ $[ ] $[ ] [ ]% of N/A............. N/A............. N/A Extent N/A............. N/A
commission per commission per commission considered in
transaction. transaction. Extent annual bonus.
considered in
annual bonus.
Annuities (Fixed and Insurance No upfront charge $[ ] [ ]% of [ ]% $[ ] [ ]% of N/A............. Surrender charge
Variable). Company A. on amount commission commission M&E fee [ Ongoing ongoing fees
invested. (paid by Extent ]% trailing Extent
insurer). considered in underlying commission considered in
annual bonus. expense ratio. (paid by annual bonus.
underlying
investment
providers).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix II Financial Institution XZY--Transaction Disclosure Model
Chart
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total cost of your investment if
held for:
Your investment -------------------------------------
1 year 5 years 10 years
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asset 1 ................. .......... ........... ...........
Asset 2 ................. .......... ........... ...........
Asset 3 ................. .......... ........... ...........
Account fees ................. .......... ........... ...........
--------------------------------------------------------
Total ................. .......... ........... ...........
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2015-08832 Filed 4-15-15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P