Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 86-128 for Securities Transactions Involving Employee Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers; Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of PTE 75-1, Exemptions From Prohibitions Respecting Certain Classes of Transactions Involving Employee Benefits Plans and Certain Broker-Dealers, Reporting Dealers and Banks, 22021-22035 [2015-08838]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D–11327]
ZRIN 1210–ZA25
Proposed Amendment to and
Proposed Partial Revocation of
Prohibited Transaction Exemption
(PTE) 86–128 for Securities
Transactions Involving Employee
Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers;
Proposed Amendment to and
Proposed Partial Revocation of PTE
75–1, Exemptions From Prohibitions
Respecting Certain Classes of
Transactions Involving Employee
Benefits Plans and Certain BrokerDealers, Reporting Dealers and Banks
Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Department of
Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed amendments
to and proposed partial revocation of
PTEs 86–128 and 75–1.
AGENCY:
This document contains a
notice of pendency before the
Department of Labor of proposed
amendments to Prohibited Transaction
Exemptions (PTEs) 86–128 and 75–1,
exemptions from certain prohibited
transaction provisions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986 (the Code). The ERISA and Code
provisions at issue generally prohibit
fiduciaries with respect to employee
benefit plans and individual retirement
accounts (IRAs) from engaging in selfdealing in connection with transactions
involving plans and IRAs. The
exemptions allow fiduciaries to receive
compensation in connection with
certain securities transactions entered
into by plans and IRAs. The proposed
amendments would increase the
safeguards of the exemptions. This
document also contains a notice of
pendency before the Department of the
proposed revocation of PTE 86–128
with respect to transactions involving
investment advice fiduciaries and IRAs,
and of PTE 75–1, Part II(2), and PTE 75–
1, Parts I(b) and I(c), as duplicative in
light of existing or newly proposed
relief. The amendments and revocations
would affect participants and
beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners and
certain fiduciaries of plans and IRAs.
DATES:
Comments: Written comments must
be received by the Department on or
before July 6, 2015.
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SUMMARY:
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Applicability: The Department
proposes to make this amendment and
partial revocation applicable eight
months after the publication of the final
amendment and partial revocation in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: All written comments
concerning the proposed amendments
to the class exemptions 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–11327), 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–11327), 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:
Brian Shiker, Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Suite 400, Washington,
DC 20210, (202) 693–8824 (not a tollfree number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department is proposing the
amendments to and partial revocation of
PTEs 86–128 and 75–1 on its own
motion, pursuant to ERISA section
408(a) and Code section 4975(c)(2), and
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22021
in accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (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
These proposed amendments and
revocations are being published in the
same issue of the Federal Register as the
Department’s proposed regulation that
would amend the definition of a
‘‘fiduciary’’ of an employee benefit plan
or an IRA under ERISA and the Internal
Revenue Code (Proposed Regulation).
The Proposed Regulation specifies when
an entity 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 that was adopted in
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.
PTEs 86–128 and 75–1, Part II(2),
permit fiduciaries to receive fees in
connection with certain securities
transactions entered into by plans and
IRAs in accordance with the fiduciaries’
advice. In the absence of an exemption,
ERISA and the Code generally prohibit
fiduciaries from using their authority to
affect or increase their own
compensation. These proposed
amendments would affect the scope of
the exemptions and conditions under
which fiduciaries may receive such
compensation.
The Secretary of Labor may grant and
amend administrative exemptions from
the prohibited transaction provisions of
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
ERISA and the Code.1 Before granting
an amendment to an exemption, the
Department must find that the amended
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of plans, their
participants and beneficiaries and IRA
owners, and protective of the rights of
participants and beneficiaries of such
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.
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Summary of the Major Provisions
PTE 86–128 currently provides an
exemption for certain fiduciaries and
their affiliates to receive a fee from a
plan or IRA for effecting or executing
securities transactions as an agent on
behalf of the plan or IRA. It also allows
a fiduciary to act in an ‘‘agency cross
transaction’’—as an agent both for the
plan or IRA and for another party—and
receive reasonable compensation from
the other party. The exemption
generally requires compliance with
certain conditions such as advance
disclosures to and approval by an
independent fiduciary, although such
conditions are not currently applicable
to transactions involving IRAs.
This proposed amendment to PTE 86–
128 would increase the safeguards of the
exemption in a number of ways. The
amendment would require fiduciaries
relying on the exemption to adhere to
certain ‘‘Impartial Conduct Standards,’’
including acting in the best interest of
the plans and IRAs when providing
advice, and would define the types of
payments that are permitted under the
exemption. The amendment would
restrict relief under this exemption to
IRA fiduciaries that have discretionary
authority or control over the
management of the IRA’s assets (i.e.,
investment managers) and would take
the additional step of imposing the
exemption’s conditions on investment
management fiduciaries when they
engage in transactions with IRAs. The
proposal would revoke relief for
fiduciaries who provide investment
advice to IRAs. A new exemption for
receipt of compensation by fiduciaries
who provide investment advice to IRAs,
plan participants, and certain small
1 Regulations at 29 CFR 2570.30 to 2570.52
describe the procedures for applying for an
administrative exemption under ERISA. 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 issue administrative
exemptions under Code section 4975 to the
Secretary of Labor.
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plans is proposed elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register in the
‘‘Best Interest Contract Exemption.’’ In
the Department’s view, the provisions of
the Best Interest Contract Exemption
better protect the interests of IRAs with
respect to investment advice regarding
securities transactions.
This proposed amendment also would
add a new transaction to the exemption
for certain fiduciaries to act as
principals (as opposed to agents for
third parties) in selling mutual fund
shares to plans and IRAs and to receive
commissions for doing so. An
exemption for this transaction is
currently available in PTE 75–1, Part
II(2), with few applicable safeguards.
Several changes are proposed with
respect to PTE 75–1. The Department is
proposing to revoke PTE 75–1, Part II(2),
as that exemption would be
incorporated within PTE 86–128 subject
to additional safeguards. Part I(b) and (c)
of PTE 75–1 also would be revoked.
These provisions of PTE 75–1 provide
relief for certain non-fiduciary services
to plans and IRAs. If these provisions
are revoked, persons seeking to engage
in such transactions should look to 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, for relief.
Finally, this document proposes to
amend the remaining exemption of PTE
75–1, Part II, to revise the recordkeeping
requirement of that exemption.
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 12866 and 13563
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
the agencies will periodically review
their existing significant regulations to
make the agencies’ regulatory programs
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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
‘‘economically significant’’ regulatory
actions); (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 amendment, and OMB has
reviewed this regulatory action.
Background
As explained more fully in the
preamble to the Department’s proposed
regulation on the definition of fiduciary
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 stringent
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.2 In
2 ERISA
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section 404(a).
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addition, they must refrain from
engaging in ‘‘prohibited transactions,’’
which ERISA forbids because of the
dangers posed by the fiduciaries’
conflicts of interest with respect to the
transactions.3 When fiduciaries violate
ERISA’s fiduciary duties or the
prohibited transaction rules, they may
be held personally liable for the breach.4
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 illegal
transactions are subject to an excise tax
enforced by the Internal Revenue
Service. Unlike participants in plans
covered by Title I of ERISA, under the
Code, IRA owners cannot bring suit
against fiduciaries under ERISA for
violation of the prohibited transaction
rules and fiduciaries are not personally
liable to IRA owners for the losses
caused by their misconduct. Elsewhere
in this issue of the Federal Register,
however, the Department is proposing
two new class exemptions that would
create contractual obligations for the
adviser to adhere to certain standards
(the Impartial Conduct Standards). IRA
owners would have a right to enforce
these new contractual rights.
Under this statutory framework, the
determination of who is a ‘‘fiduciary’’ is
of central importance. Many of ERISA’s
protections, duties, and liabilities hinge
on fiduciary status. In relevant part,
section 3(21)(A) of ERISA and section
4975(e)(3) of the Code provide that a
person is a fiduciary with respect to a
plan or IRA to the extent he or she (1)
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; (2) 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, (3) has any discretionary
authority or discretionary responsibility
in the administration of such plan or
IRA.
3 ERISA section 406. ERISA also prohibits certain
transactions between a plan and a ‘‘party in
interest.’’
4 ERISA section 409; see also ERISA section 405.
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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 or her own
interest or his or her own account.
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. Accordingly,
a fiduciary may not cause 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.
The Department understands that
investment professionals are often
compensated on a commission basis for
effecting or executing securities
transactions for plans, plan participants,
and IRA owners. Because such
payments vary based on the advice
provided, the Department views a
fiduciary that recommends to a plan or
IRA a securities transaction and then
receives a commission for itself or a
related party as violating the prohibited
transaction provisions of ERISA section
406(b) and Code section 4975(c)(1)(E).
PTE 86–128 5 provides an exemption
from these prohibited transactions
provisions for certain types of
fiduciaries to use their authority to
cause a plan or IRA to pay a fee to the
fiduciary, or its affiliate, for effecting or
executing securities transactions as
agent for the plan. The exemption
further provides relief for these types of
fiduciaries to act as agent in an ‘‘agency
cross transaction’’ for both a plan or IRA
and one or more other parties to the
transaction, and for such fiduciaries or
their affiliates to receive fees from the
other party(ies) in connection with the
agency cross transaction. An agency
cross transaction is defined in the
exemption as a securities transaction in
which the same person acts as agent for
both any seller and any buyer for the
purchase or sale of a security.
As originally granted, the exemption
in PTE 86–128 could be used only by
fiduciaries who were not discretionary
trustees, plan administrators, or
employers of any employees covered by
the plan.6 PTE 86–128 was amended in
2002 to permit use of the exemption by
discretionary trustees, and their
5 PTE 86–128, 51 FR 41686 (November 18, 1986),
replaced PTE 79–1, 44 FR 5963 (January 30, 1979)
and PTE 84–46, 49 FR 22157 (May 25, 1984).
6 Plan trustees, plan administrators and
employers were permitted to rely on the exemption
if they returned or credited to the plan all profits
(recapture of profits) earned in connection with the
transactions covered by the exemption.
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22023
affiliates, without meeting the
‘‘recapture of profits’’ provisions,
subject to certain additional
requirements.7 Additionally, in 2011 the
Department clarified that PTE 86–128
provides relief for covered transactions
engaged in by fiduciaries who provide
investment advice.8
If granted, this proposed amendment
would make additional changes,
discussed below, to PTE 86–128, as well
as a re-ordering of the sections of the
exemption.9 The Department notes that
the relief provided under PTE 86–128 is
limited to ERISA section 406(b) and
Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F), for
self-dealing and other conflict of interest
transactions involving fiduciaries. Relief
from the prohibitions of ERISA section
406(a)(1)(C) or Code section
4975(c)(1)(C), for the provision of
services to a plan, would be available
only by meeting the requirements of the
statutory exemptions of ERISA section
408(b)(2) and Code section 4975(d)(2)
and the Department’s regulations in 29
CFR 2550.408b–2.10
Description of the Proposed
Amendments
I. Impartial Conduct Standards
This proposal would amend PTE 86–
128 to require fiduciaries engaging in
the exempted transactions to adhere to
certain Impartial Conduct Standards.
The Impartial Conduct Standards are set
forth in a new proposed Section II. The
standards would only be applicable to
the extent they are applicable to the
fiduciary’s actions.
Under the first conduct standard,
fiduciaries would be required to act in
the plan’s or IRA’s best interest when
providing investment advice to the plan
or IRA, or managing the plan’s or IRA’s
assets. Best interest is defined as acting
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
7 67
FR 64137 (October 17, 2002).
Advisory Opinion 2011–08A (June 21,
8 See
2011).
9 This proposal would move the definitions from
Section I to Section VII. The other sections are reordered accordingly. Additionally, within the
definitions section, the following definitions are
new or revised: Independent (Section VII(f)), plan
(Section VII(j)), individual retirement account
(Section VII(k)), Related Entity (Section VII(l)), Best
Interest (Section VII(m)), and Commission (VII(n)).
10 These statutory exemptions provide relief for
making reasonable arrangements between a plan
and a party in interest (disqualified person) for,
among other things, services necessary for operation
of the plan, if no more than reasonable
compensation is paid therefore. ERISA section
408(b)(2) and Code section 4975(d)(2) do not
provide relief from ERISA section 406(b) or Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F).
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circumstances, and the needs of the
plan or IRA. Further, under the best
interest standard, fiduciaries must act
without regard to their own financial or
other interests or those of any affiliates
or other party. Under this standard,
fiduciaries must put the plan’s or IRA’s
interests ahead of the fiduciaries’ own
financial interests or those of any other
party.
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 those
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 requirement that is set forth in
Section II(a). 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. Failure to
satisfy the best interest standard would
render the exemption unavailable to the
fiduciary with respect to compensation
received in connection with the
transaction.
The second conduct standard requires
that all compensation received by the
fiduciary and its affiliates in connection
with the applicable transaction be
reasonable in relation to the total
services provided to the plan or IRA.
The third conduct standard requires that
statements about recommended
investments, fees, material conflicts of
interest, and any other matters relevant
to a plan’s or IRA’s investment
decisions, are not misleading. The
Department notes in this regard that a
fiduciary’s failure to disclose a material
conflict of interest may be considered a
misleading statement. Transactions that
violate the requirements are not likely to
be in the interests of or protective of
plans, their participants and
beneficiaries, and IRA owners.
Unlike the new exemption proposals
published elsewhere in the Federal
Register, these proposed amendments
do not require fiduciaries to
contractually warrant compliance with
applicable federal and state laws.
However, the Department notes that
significant violations of applicable
federal or state law could also amount
to violations of the Impartial Conduct
Standards, such as the best interest
standard, in which case, these
exemptions, as amended, would be
deemed unavailable for transactions
occurring in connection with such
violations.
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II. IRAs
Currently, Section IV(a) of PTE 86–
128 contains an exception from the
conditions of the exemption for covered
transactions engaged in on behalf of
individual retirement accounts
described in 29 CFR 2510.3–2(d) (IRAs),
and plans, other than training programs,
that cover no employees within the
meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–3. The
exception was included in response to
comments received on the original
proposal of PTE 86–128’s predecessor,
PTE 79–1, suggesting that such plans
and IRAs did not need the protection
provided by the conditions of the
exemption because the participants of
such plans and IRAs directly exercise
control over their accounts.
Additionally, the comments suggested
that imposing the conditions on these
plans and IRAs would result in
unnecessary costs.11
Upon reconsideration of the issue,
however, the Department has
determined that these policy reasons do
not support a continued exception from
the conditions of PTE 86–128 for IRAs.
Since PTE 86–128 was granted, the
amount of assets held in IRAs has grown
dramatically. The financial services
marketplace has become more complex,
and compensation structures and the
types of products offered have changed
significantly beyond what the
Department contemplated at the time.
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 all the more critical that
appropriate safeguards in an exemption
apply to IRAs.
The Department therefore is
proposing to revise the exemption in
several ways with respect to
transactions involving IRAs. First, if the
amendment is adopted, fiduciaries that
exercise discretionary authority or
control with respect to IRAs as
described in Code section 4975(e)(3)(A)
(i.e., investment managers) will be
required, among other things, to make
the disclosures and receive approvals
that are currently required by the
exemption with respect to other types of
plans. The Department believes that
compliance with these conditions will
enhance the ability of the authorizing
fiduciary, which, in the case of an IRA
would be the IRA owner, to monitor fees
and compensation paid in connection
with their accounts.
Further, if the amendment is adopted,
the exemption will no longer provide
relief to IRA fiduciaries engaging in the
11 See preamble to PTE 79–1, 44 FR 5963, 5964
(Jan. 30, 1979).
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covered transactions if they are
fiduciaries due to the provision of
investment advice for a fee as described
in Code section 4975(e)(3)(B). This
change is reflected in a proposed new
Section I(c), setting forth the scope of
the exemption, which will apply on a
prospective basis. Elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, the
Department has proposed a new
exemption that specifically provides
relief for the receipt by such fiduciaries
of a broad range of types of
compensation (Best Interest Contract
Exemption). The Best Interest Contract
Exemption was crafted to protect the
interests of retail retirement investors—
plan participants and beneficiaries, IRA
owners and small plan sponsors—that
rely on fiduciary investment advisers to
engage in securities transactions, and it
contains safeguards specifically crafted
for these investors. The exemption
requires the investment advice fiduciary
to contractually acknowledge fiduciary
status, commit to adhere to basic
standards of impartial conduct, adopt
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to minimize the harmful
impact of conflicts of interest, and
disclose basic information on their
conflicts of interest and on the cost of
their advice. As a result, the exemption
ensures that IRA owners have a
contract-based claim to hold their
fiduciary investment advisers
accountable if they violate basic
obligations of prudence and loyalty.
The proposed definition of IRA in
Section I(c) is ‘‘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.’’ The Department notes that this
is not identical to the definition
currently in Section IV(a), the exception
for IRAs, which is ‘‘individual
retirement accounts meeting the
conditions of 29 CFR 2510.3–2(d), or
plans, other than training programs, that
cover no employees within the meaning
of 29 CFR 2510.3–3.’’ However, this new
definition is identical to the definition
of IRA used in the proposed Best
Interest Contract Exemption.
Accordingly, the Best Interest Contract
Exemption will be available for
transactions involving IRAs that are
excluded from this exemption.
III. The Mutual Fund Exemption of PTE
75–1, Part II
PTE 75–1, granted October 31, 1975,12
provides an exemption for broker12 40
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dealers, reporting dealers and banks to
engage in certain classes of transactions
with employee benefit plans and IRAs.
The exemption has five parts, two of
which (Part II and Part V) were
amended in 2006.13
Part II of PTE 75–1 is captioned
‘‘Principal transactions.’’ Part II(1) of the
exemption permits the purchase or sale
of a security between an employee
benefit plan or IRA and a broker-dealer
registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et.
seq.), a reporting dealer who makes
primary markets in securities of the
United States Government or of any
agency of the United States Government
and reports daily to the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York its positions with
respect to Government securities and
borrowings thereon, or a bank
supervised by the United States or a
State. The exemption provided in Part
II(1) does not extend to the fiduciary
self-dealing and conflicts of interest
prohibitions of ERISA and the Code.
PTE 75–1, Part II(2), contains a special
exemption for mutual fund purchases
(the mutual fund exemption) between
fiduciaries and plans or IRAs. Although
it does provide relief for fiduciary selfdealing and conflicts of interest, the
exemption is only available if the
fiduciary who decides on behalf of the
plan or IRA to enter into the transaction
is not a principal underwriter for, or
affiliated with, the mutual fund.
In 2004, when proposing to amend
Part II of PTE 75–1,14 the Department
sought public comments on the current
utility of the mutual fund exemption.
The Department was uncertain if the
mutual fund exemption continued to
provide meaningful relief to fiduciaries,
insofar as many sales of mutual fund
shares are made to and from the mutual
fund itself. It was the Department’s
understanding that any broker-dealer
involvement in these mutual fund
transactions was as agent on behalf of a
plan or IRA. Under such circumstances,
the transactions would not appear to be
properly characterized as ‘‘principal’’
transactions.
The Department received three
comments on the continuing utility of
the mutual fund exemption. The
commenters stated that the mutual fund
exemption continued to be widely used
by the public. As background, the
commenters noted that mutual fund
transactions had some characteristics of
principal transactions as well as agency
transactions. In 1975, when the mutual
fund exemption was originally granted,
mutual funds typically entered into
13 71
14 69
FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
FR 23216 (April 28, 2004).
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distribution agreements with principal
underwriters, and the underwriters in
turn entered into selling agreements
designated as ‘‘dealer’’ agreements, with
retail broker-dealers. However, sales of
mutual funds under these dealer
agreements exhibited many of the
economic characteristics of agency
transactions. For example, commenters
stated that the selling broker-dealer was
not at risk because it could not
inventory mutual fund shares.
Additionally, as mutual funds were
required to be sold at net asset value
(NAV), the broker-dealer usually
received a fixed sales commission for
effecting the transaction, rather than a
negotiable dealer mark-up.
These commenters indicated that
these features were still commonplace
in mutual fund transactions.
Additionally, the commenters indicated
that this exemption was commonly
understood to provide relief for the
receipt of commissions by such brokerdealer fiduciaries in connection with
the transactions.15 In issuing the final
amendment to PTE 75–1, Part II, the
Department acknowledged these
comments and stated that additional
time was needed to fully consider the
issues raised in these comments.
Pending further action by the
Department, the mutual fund exemption
has remained in effect.16
After further consideration of these
comments, the Department concurs that
the relief provided by the mutual fund
exemption remains relevant to brokerdealer fiduciaries that use their
authority to cause plans and IRAs to
purchase mutual fund shares. The
Department believes that the transaction
described in PTE 75–1, Part II(2), is
most accurately described as a ‘‘riskless
principal’’ transaction, in which the
fiduciary that is providing investment
advice purchases shares on its own
account for the purpose of covering a
purchase order previously received from
a plan or IRA, and then sells the shares
to the plan or IRA to satisfy the order.
However, the existing mutual fund
exemption needs to be revised in a
manner that would make it consistent
15 Although PTE 75–1, Part II, is silent on the
payment of commissions, the commenters point to
the preamble to the proposal of PTE 77–9 (41 FR
56760, December 29, 1976)(final exemption
superseded by PTE 84–24, 49 FR 13208, April 3,
1984, as amended, 71 FR 5887, February 3, 2006)
which states that PTE 75–1, Part II, covers ‘‘the
purchase and sale of mutual fund shares by a plan
from or to a broker-dealer which is a plan fiduciary,
provided that such broker-dealer is not a principal
underwriter for, or affiliated with, such mutual
fund, and the receipt of commissions by such
fiduciary/broker-dealer in connection with the
purchase of mutual fund shares by plans.’’
16 71 FR 5883, 5885 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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with more recent exemptions that
similarly provide broad relief from
fiduciary self-dealing and conflicts of
interest. PTE 86–128 covers transactions
that are the most similar to those
covered in the mutual fund exemption
in that the relief it provides permits a
fiduciary to use its authority to receive
a commission for effecting or executing
a plan’s or IRA’s securities transactions
as agent for the plan or IRA, subject to
a number of specific requirements
designed to protect the interests of plan
participants and beneficiaries and IRA
owners.
The Department is therefore
proposing a new Section I(b) of PTE 86–
128 that would provide relief for the
transaction currently covered in PTE
75–1, Part II(2). New Section I(b) would
permit a broker-dealer fiduciary to use
its authority to cause a plan (or IRA, as
applicable) to purchase shares of a
mutual fund from the broker-dealer
fiduciary, acting as principal, where the
shares were acquired solely to cover the
plan’s prior order, and for the receipt of
a commission by such fiduciary in
connection with the transaction.17
Consistent with the exemption
originally provided for this transaction
in PTE 75–1, Part II(2), relief is not
available if such fiduciary is a principal
underwriter for, or affiliated with, such
investment company. The Department
intends that, with respect to this new
proposed transaction, the compensation
to the broker-dealer will be limited to
the commission (i.e., sales load)
disclosed by the mutual fund, but may
be paid either by the plan or the mutual
fund.
To provide certainty with respect to
the payments permitted by the
exemption in both Section I(a) and
newly proposed Section I(b), the
Department is proposing a new defined
term ‘‘Commission.’’ This term, used in
Section I(b), will also replace the
language currently in the exemption
that permits a fiduciary to cause a plan
or IRA to pay a ‘‘fee for effecting or
executing securities transactions.’’ The
term ‘‘Commission’’ is defined to mean
a brokerage commission or sales load
paid for the service of effecting or
executing the transaction, but not a 12b–
1 fee, revenue sharing payment,
17 Section I(b) would provide relief from the
restrictions of ERISA section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D)
and 406(b) and the taxes imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(A), (D), (E) and (F). The proposed new
covered transaction, as a principal transaction,
involves the purchase and sale of shares between
a plan and a party in interest, and the transfer of
a plan asset to a party in interest, which would
violate the cited provisions of ERISA section 406(a)
and Code section 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D) in the
absence of an exemption.
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marketing fee, administrative fee, subTA fee, or sub-accounting fee. Further,
based on the language of Section I(a)(1),
the term ‘‘Commission’’ as used in that
section is limited to payments directly
from the plan or IRA.18 On the other
hand, the Commission payment
described in Section I(b) is not limited
to payments directly from the plan or
IRA and includes payments from the
mutual fund. The Department
understands that sales load payments in
connection with mutual fund
transactions are commonly made by the
mutual fund.
The proposed new covered
transaction in Section I(b) would be
subject to the general prohibition in PTE
86–128 on churning, and the new
proposed Impartial Conduct Standards
in Section II. In addition, the
Department is also proposing a new
Section IV to PTE 86–128 which sets
forth conditions applicable solely to the
proposed new covered transaction. The
proposed new Section IV incorporates
conditions currently applicable to PTE
75–1, Part II(2).
Specifically, the conditions applicable
to the proposed new covered transaction
in Section I(b), as set forth in proposed
Section IV, are: (1) The fiduciary
customarily sells securities for its own
account in the ordinary course of its
business as a broker-dealer; (2) the
transaction is at least as favorable to the
plan or IRA as an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated party
would be; and (3) unless rendered
inapplicable by Section V of the
exemption, the requirements of Sections
III(a) through III(f), III(h) and III(i) (if
applicable), and III(j) are satisfied with
respect to the transaction. The
Department seeks comments as to
whether any of the conditions described
in Section IV(c) should be revised as
applied to the proposed new covered
transaction. The exceptions contained
in Section V would be applicable to this
proposed new covered transaction as
well.19
Relief is not proposed in the new
Section I(b) for sales by a plan or IRA
18 Section I(a)(2) of the proposed amended
exemption clarifies that relief for plan fiduciaries
acting as agents in agency cross transactions is
limited to compensation paid in the form of
Commissions, although the Commission may be
paid by the other party to the transaction.
19 The condition set forth in Section V(c)(1)(B) of
the exemption requires the disclosure of
information that the person seeking authorization
‘‘reasonably believes to be necessary’’ for the
authorizing fiduciary to determine whether the
authorization should be made. This condition is
followed by a list of required items. To improve
objectivity of the exemption, the Department is
proposing to delete the language ‘‘reasonably
believes to be necessary’’ from Section V(c)(1)(B)
but leave the list of specified items in place.
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to a fiduciary due to the Department’s
belief that it is not necessary for a plan
or IRA to sell a mutual fund share to a
fiduciary that is acting as a principal.
The Department requests comment on
this limitation, as well as on its
understanding of this transaction and
the related fee payments.
Additionally, in connection with the
proposed new covered transaction, the
Department is proposing to revoke the
mutual fund exemption provisions from
PTE 75–1, Part II(2). The Department is
further proposing to revise the
recordkeeping provisions of Section (e)
of PTE 75–1, Part II. Section (e)
currently provides that records
demonstrating compliance with the
exemption must be maintained by the
plan or IRA involved in the transaction.
The proposed amendment would place
the responsibility for maintaining such
records on the broker-dealer, reporting
dealer, or bank engaging in the
transaction with such plan or IRA.
IV. Relief for Related Entities
Currently, PTE 86–128 provides relief
for a fiduciary to use its authority to
cause a plan or IRA to pay a fee to that
person for effecting or executing
securities transactions. The term
‘‘person’’ is defined to include the
person’s affiliates, which are: (1) Any
person directly or indirectly, through
one or more intermediaries, controlling,
controlled by, or under common control
with, the person; (2) any officer,
director, partner, employee, relative (as
defined in ERISA section 3(15)), brother,
sister, or spouse of a brother or sister,
of the person; and (3) any corporation or
partnership of which the person is an
officer, director or employee or in which
such person is a partner.
The Department understands that in
some cases, fiduciaries are concerned
that the relief provided by the
exemption to persons (including their
affiliates) is too narrow. In this regard,
it is a prohibited transaction for a
fiduciary to use the ‘‘authority, control,
or responsibility which makes such a
person a fiduciary to cause a plan to pay
an additional fee to such fiduciary (or to
a person in which such fiduciary has an
interest which may affect the exercise of
such fiduciary’s best judgment as a
fiduciary) to provide a service.’’ 20 The
concern expressed to the Department is
that the definition of affiliate is not
broad enough to cover all persons in
whom a fiduciary has an interest that
may affect its best judgment.
Specifically, it is not necessary for a
fiduciary to have control over or be
under control by an entity in order for
the fiduciary to have an interest in the
entity that may affect the exercise of the
fiduciary’s best judgment as a fiduciary.
To address this concern, the
amendment would add relief for
covered transactions when fees are paid
to a ‘‘related entity.’’ 21 The term
‘‘related entity’’ is defined as an entity,
other than an affiliate, in which a
fiduciary has an interest that may affect
the exercise of its best judgment as a
fiduciary. Additionally, Section II(b) of
the exemption would reflect this
additional relief to related entities.
Section II(b) would require that all
compensation received by the person
(i.e., the fiduciary and its affiliates) and
any related entity in connection with
the transaction is reasonable in relation
to the total services the person provides
to the plan or IRA.
The Department requests comment on
the necessity of incorporating relief for
related entities in PTE 86–128, and the
approach taken in this proposal to do
so.
V. The 2002 Amendment and
Clarification of Recapture of Profits
Exception of PTE 86–128
As explained above, discretionary
trustees were first permitted to rely on
PTE 86–128 without meeting the
‘‘recapture of profits’’ provision
pursuant to an amendment in 2002
(2002 Amendment). To effect this
change, the 2002 Amendment revised
Section III(a), which had provided that
‘‘[t]he person engaging in the covered
transaction [may not be] a trustee (other
than a nondiscretionary trustee), or an
administrator of the plan, or an
employer any of whose employees are
covered by the plan.’’ Under the
amendment, the reference to ‘‘trustee
(other than a nondiscretionary trustee)’’
was deleted from Section III(a). Further,
under the amendment, discretionary
trustees had to satisfy certain additional
conditions, set forth in Section III(h)
and (i), in order to rely on the
exemption. Section III(h) provides that
discretionary trustees may engage in the
covered transactions only with plans or
IRAs with total net assets of at least $50
million.22 Section III(i) requires
discretionary trustees to provide
additional disclosures.
The Department understands that
subsequent to the 2002 Amendment,
questions were raised as to whether
discretionary trustees were permitted to
rely on the ‘‘recapture of profits’’
21 See
re-ordered Section VII(m).
rules apply under Section III(h) for
pooled funds and groups of plans maintained by a
single employer or controlled group of employers.
22 Special
20 ERISA section 406(b); Code section
4975(c)(1)(E).
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provision of the exemption
(redesignated in this proposal as Section
V(b)) as an alternative to complying
with Sections III(h) and (i). This
provision allows persons identified in
Section III(a) to engage the covered
transactions if they return or credit to
the plan or IRA all profits. By deleting
the reference to discretionary trustees
from Section III(a), the Department
believes that the 2002 Amendment
inadvertently may have prevented
trustees of plans or IRAs from using the
recapture of profits approach, and
instead, has limited the exemption to
trustees that satisfy Section III(h) and (i).
As this result was not intended, the
Department proposes to modify the
exemption to permit all trustees,
regardless of associated plan or IRA
size, to utilize the exception as
originally permitted in PTE 86–128 for
the recapture of profits.
In order to achieve this result, the
Department has proposed amendments
to several different conditions of PTE
86–128. Section V(c), which is redesignated as Section V(b) in this
proposal, provides that Sections III(a)
and III(i) do not apply in any case where
the person engaging in the covered
transaction returns or credits to the plan
or IRA all profits earned by that person
in connection with the securities
transaction associated with the covered
transaction. In addition, the Department
proposes to reinsert a reference to
trustees (other than nondiscretionary
trustees) in Section III(a) along with the
existing references to plan
administrators and employers. Finally, a
sentence has been added to the end of
Section III(a) stating: ‘‘Notwithstanding
the foregoing, this condition does not
apply to a trustee that satisfies Section
III(h) and (i).’’ The purpose of these
proposed amendments is to clarify that
trustees may engage in covered
transactions subject to the recapture of
profits limitations in Section V(b) of the
exemption.
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VI. Recordkeeping Requirements
A proposed new Section VI to PTE
86–128 would require the fiduciary
engaging in a transaction covered by the
exemption to maintain records
necessary to enable certain persons
(described in proposed Section VI(b)) to
determine whether the conditions of
this exemption have been met. The
proposed recordkeeping requirement is
consistent with other existing class
exemptions as well as the recordkeeping
provisions of the other notices of
proposed exemption published in this
issue of the Federal Register.
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Description of the Proposed Revocation
of PTE 75–1, Part I(b) and (c), and II(2),
and Proposed Amendment to and
Restatement of PTE 75–1, Part II
Lastly, the Department proposes to
revoke Part I(b) and I(c) of PTE 75–1,
and Part II(2) of PTE 75–1. Part I(b) of
PTE 75–1 provides relief from ERISA
section 406 and the taxes imposed by
Code section 4975(a) and (b), for the
effecting of securities transactions,
including clearance, settlement or
custodial functions incidental to
effecting the transactions, by parties in
interest or disqualified persons other
than fiduciaries. Part I(c) of PTE 75–1
provides relief from ERISA section 406
and Code section 4975(a) and (b) for the
furnishing of advice regarding securities
or other property to a plan or IRA by a
party in interest or disqualified person
under circumstances which do not make
the party in interest or disqualified
person a fiduciary with respect to the
plan or IRA.
PTE 75–1 was granted shortly after
ERISA’s passage in order to provide
certainty to the securities industry over
the nature and extent to which ordinary
and customary transactions between
broker-dealers and plans or IRAs would
be subject to the ERISA prohibited
transaction rules. Paragraphs (b) and (c)
in Part I of PTE 75–1, specifically,
served to provide exemptive relief for
certain non-fiduciary services provided
by broker-dealers in securities
transactions. Code section 4975(d)(2),
ERISA section 408(b)(2) and regulations
thereunder, have clarified the scope of
relief for service providers to plans and
IRAs.23 The Department believes that
the relief provided in Parts I(b) and I(c)
of PTE 75–1 duplicates the relief
available under the statutory
exemptions. Therefore, the Department
is proposing the revocation of these
parts.
As noted earlier, the exemption in
PTE 75–1, Part II(2), would, under this
proposal, be incorporated into PTE 86–
128. Accordingly, the Department is
proposing herein the revocation of PTE
75–1, Part II(2). In connection with the
proposed revocation of PTE 75–1, Part
II(2), the Department is proposing to
amend Section (e) of the remaining
exemption in PTE 75–1, Part II, the
recordkeeping provisions of the
exemption, to place the recordkeeping
responsibility on the broker-dealer,
reporting dealer, or bank engaging in
transactions with the plan or IRA, as
opposed to the plan or IRA itself.
23 See 29 CFR 2550.408b-2, 42 FR 32390 (June 24,
1977) and Reasonable Contract or Arrangement
under Section 408(b)(2)—Fee Disclosure, Final
Rule, 77 FR 5632 (Feb. 3, 2012).
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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 the final regulation is published in
the Federal Register (Applicability
Date). The Department proposes to make
the amendments to and partial
revocation of this exemption, if granted,
applicable on the Applicability Date as
well.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
As part of its continuing effort to
reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department of Labor
conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the general public
and Federal 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 Proposed Amendment
to and Proposed Partial Revocation of
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE)
86–128 for Securities Transactions
Involving Employee Benefit Plans and
Broker-Dealers; Proposed Amendment
to and Partial Revocation of PTE 75–1,
Exemptions From Prohibitions
Respecting Certain Classes of
Transactions Involving Employee
Benefits Plans and Certain BrokerDealers, Reporting Dealers and Banks 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 proposed amendments to and
partial revocation of PTEs 86–128 and
75–1 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:
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• 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
Amendments 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, as
amended, PTE 86–128 would require
financial firms to make certain
disclosures to plan fiduciaries in order
to receive relief from ERISA’s and the
Code’s prohibited transaction rules for
the receipt of commissions and to
engage in riskless principal transactions
involving mutual fund shares. Financial
firms relying on either PTE 86–128 or
PTE 75–1, as amended, would be
required to maintain records necessary
to prove that the conditions of these
exemptions have been met. These
requirements are information collection
requests (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:
• 38% of disclosures will be
distributed electronically via means
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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 legal authorizations and disclosures,
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, and $129.94 for a
legal professional; and 24
• Approximately 2,800 financial
institutions 25 will take advantage of this
exemption and they will use this
exemption in conjunction with
transactions involving 25.6 percent of
their client plans.26
Disclosures and Consent Forms
In order to receive commissions in
conjunction with the purchase of
mutual fund shares or securities
products, sections III(b) and III(d) of
PTE 86–128 as amended require
financial institutions to obtain advance
written authorization from a plan
fiduciary independent of the financial
institutions (the authorizing fiduciary)
and furnish the authorizing fiduciary
with information necessary to determine
whether an authorization should be
made, including a copy of the
exemption, a form for termination, a
description of the financial institution’s
brokerage placement practices, and any
other reasonably available information
24 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).
25 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.
26 This is a weighted average of the Department’s
estimates of the share of DB plans and DC plans
with broker-dealer relationships. The Department
welcomes comment on this estimate.
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regarding the matter that the authorizing
fiduciary requests.
Section III(c) requires financial
institutions to obtain annual written
reauthorization or provide the
authorizing fiduciary with an annual
termination form explaining that the
authorization is terminable at will,
without penalty to the plan, and that
failure to return the form will result in
continued authorization for the
financial institution to engage in
covered transactions on behalf of the
plan. Furthermore, Section III(e)
requires the financial institution to
provide the authorizing fiduciary with
either (a) a confirmation slip for each
individual securities transaction within
10 days of the transaction containing the
information described in Rule 10b–
10(a)(1–7) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, 17 CFR 240.10b–
10 or (b) a quarterly report containing
certain financial information including
the total of all transaction-related
charges incurred by the plan. The
Department assumes that financial
institutions will meet this requirement
for 40 percent of plans through the
provision of a confirmation slip, which
already is provided to their clients in
the normal course of business, while
financial institutions will meet this
requirement for 60 percent of plans
through provision of the quarterly
report.
Finally, Section III(f) requires the
financial institution to provide the
authorizing fiduciary with an annual
summary of the confirmation slips or
quarterly reports. The summary must
contain the following information: The
total of all securities transaction-related
charges incurred by the plan during the
period in connection with the covered
securities transactions, the amount of
the securities transaction-related
charges retained by the authorized
person and the amount of these charges
paid to other persons for execution or
other services; a description of the
financial institution’s brokerage
placement practices if such practices
have materially changed during the
period covered by the summary; and a
portfolio turnover ratio calculated in a
manner reasonable designed to provide
the authorizing fiduciary the
information needed to assist in
discharging its duty of prudence.
Section III(i) states that a financial
institution that is a discretionary plan
trustee who qualifies to use the
exemption must provide the authorizing
fiduciary with an annual report showing
separately the commissions paid to
affiliated brokers and non-affiliated
brokers, on both a total dollar basis and
a cents-per-share basis.
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Legal Costs
According to the 2012 Form 5500,
approximately 677,000 plans exist in
the United States that could enter into
relationships with financial institutions.
Of these plans, the Department assumes
that 6.5 percent are new plans or plans
entering into relationships with new
financial institutions and, as stated
previously, 25.6 percent of these plans
will engage in transactions covered
under this PTE. The Department
estimates that granting written
authorization to the financial
institutions will require one hour of
legal time for each of the approximately
11,000 plans entering into new
relationships with financial institutions
each year. The Department also
estimates that it will take one hour of
legal time for each of the approximately
2,800 financial institutions to produce
the annual termination form. This legal
work results in a total of approximately
14,000 hours annually at an equivalent
cost of $1.8 million.
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Production and Distribution of Required
Disclosures
The Department estimates that
approximately 173,000 plans have
relationships with financial institutions
and are likely to engage in transactions
covered under this exemption. Of these
173,000 plans, approximately 11,000 are
new clients to the financial institutions
each year.
The Department estimates that 11,000
plans will send financial institutions a
two page authorization letter each year.
Prior to obtaining authorization,
financial institutions will send the same
11,000 plans a seven page preauthorization disclosure. Paper copies
of the authorization letter and the preauthorization disclosure will be mailed
for 62 percent of the plans and
distributed electronically for the
remaining 38 percent. The Department
estimates that electronic distribution
will result in a de minimis cost, while
paper distribution will cost
approximately $10,000. Paper
distribution of the letter and disclosure
will also require two minutes of clerical
preparation time resulting in a total of
500 hours at an equivalent cost of
approximately $14,000.
The Department estimates that all of
the 173,000 plans will receive a twopage annual termination form from
financial institutions; 38 percent will be
distributed electronically and 62
percent will be mailed. The Department
estimates that electronic distribution
will result in a de minimis cost, while
the paper distribution will cost $63,000.
Paper distribution will also require two
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22029
minutes of clerical preparation time
resulting in a total of 4,000 hours at an
equivalent cost of $109,000.
The Department estimates that 60
percent of plans (approximately
104,000) will receive quarterly two-page
transaction reports from financial
institutions four times per year; 38
percent will be distributed
electronically and 62 percent will be
mailed. The Department estimates that
electronic distribution will result in a de
minimis cost, while paper distribution
will cost $152,000. Paper distribution
will also require two minutes of clerical
preparation time resulting in a total of
9,000 hours at an equivalent cost of
$261,000.
The Department estimates that all of
the 173,000 plans will receive a fivepage annual statement with a two-page
summary of commissions paid from
financial institutions; 38 percent will be
distributed electronically and 62
percent will be mailed. The Department
assumes that these disclosures will be
distributed with the annual termination
form, resulting in no further hour
burden or postage cost. Electronic
distribution will result in a de minimis
cost, while the paper distribution will
cost $38,000 in materials costs.
Finally, the Department estimates that
it will cost financial institutions $3 per
plan, for each of the 173,000 plans, to
track all the transactions data necessary
to populate the quarterly transaction
reports, the annual statements, and the
report of commissions paid. This results
in an IT tracking cost of $520,000.
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 per year 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 VI(b) of PTE 86–128 and
Section (f) of PTE 75–1, Part II, provide
that parties 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 party 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.
Recordkeeping Requirement
Section VI of PTE 86–128, as
amended, and condition (e) of PTE 75–
1, Part II, as amended, would require
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, participants and
beneficiaries and IRA owners to
determine whether the conditions of
this exemption have been met.
The Department assumes that each
financial institution will maintain these
records on behalf of their client plans in
their normal course of business.
Therefore, the Department has estimated
that the additional time needed to
maintain records consistent with the
exemption will only require about onehalf 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
Overall, the Department estimates that
in order to meet the conditions of this
amended class exemption, over 14,000
financial institutions and plans will
produce 958,000 disclosures and notices
annually. These disclosures and notices
will result in almost 29,000 burden
hours annually, at an equivalent cost of
$2.4 million. This exemption will also
result in a total annual cost burden of
almost $783,000.
These paperwork burden estimates
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: Revision of a
Currently Approved Information
Collection.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Titles: (1) Proposed Amendment to
and Partial Revocation of Prohibited
Transaction Exemption (PTE) 86–128
for Securities Transactions Involving
Employee Benefit Plans and BrokerDealers; Proposed Amendment to and
Partial Revocation of PTE 75–1, and (2)
Proposed Investment Advice
Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210–0059.
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Overall Summary
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 75 / Monday, April 20, 2015 / Proposed Rules
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
14.059.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 957,880.
Frequency of Response: Initially,
Annually, When engaging in exempted
transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 28,795 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$782,647.
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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 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 a 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 plan
participants and beneficiaries and IRA
owners;
(3) If granted, an exemption is
applicable to a particular transaction
only if the transaction satisfies the
conditions specified in the exemption;
and
(4) These amended exemptions, 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.
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Written Comments
The Department invites all interested
persons to submit written comments on
the proposed amendments and
proposed revocations to the address and
within the time period set forth above.
All comments received will be made a
part of the public record for this
proceeding and will be available for
examination on the Department’s
Internet Web site. Comments should
state the reasons for the writer’s interest
in the proposed amendment and
revocation. Comments received will be
available for public inspection at the
above address.
Proposed Amendment to PTE 86–128
Under section 408(a) of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
as amended (ERISA) and section
4975(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended (the Code), and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76
FR 66637, 66644 (October 27, 2011)),
the Department proposes to amend and
restate PTE 86–128 as set forth below:
Section I. Covered Transactions
(a) Securities Transactions
Exemptions. If each of the conditions of
Sections II and III of this exemption is
either satisfied or not applicable under
Section V, the restrictions of ERISA
section 406(b) and the taxes imposed by
Code section 4975(a) and (b) by reason
of Code section 4975(c)(1)(E) or (F) shall
not apply to—(1) A plan fiduciary’s
using its authority to cause a plan to pay
a Commission to that person or a
Related Entity as agent for the plan, but
only to the extent that such transactions
are not excessive, under the
circumstances, in either amount or
frequency; and (2) A plan fiduciary’s
acting as the agent in an agency cross
transaction for both the plan and one or
more other parties to the transaction and
the receipt by such person of a
Commission from one or more other
parties to the transaction.
(b) Mutual Fund Transactions
Exemption. If each condition of Sections
II and IV is either satisfied or not
applicable under Section V, the
restrictions of ERISA sections
406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(D) and 406(b) and
the taxes imposed by Code section
4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code
section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D), (E) and (F),
shall not apply to a plan fiduciary’s
using its authority to cause the plan to
purchase shares of an open end
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940
(15 U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq.) (Mutual Fund)
from such fiduciary, acting as principal,
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and to the receipt of a Commission by
such person in connection with such
transaction, but only to the extent that
such transactions are not excessive,
under the circumstances, in either
amount or frequency; provided that, the
fiduciary (1) is a broker-dealer registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.), and (2) is
not a principal underwriter for, or
affiliated with, such Mutual Fund,
within the meaning of sections 2(a)(29)
and 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company
Act of 1940.
(c) Scope of these Exemptions. The
exemptions set forth in Section I(a) and
(b) do not apply to a transaction if (1)
the plan is an Individual Retirement
Account and (2) the fiduciary engaging
in the transaction is a fiduciary by
reason of the provision of investment
advice for a fee, described in Code
section 4975(e)(3)(B) and the applicable
regulations.
Section II. Impartial Conduct
Standards
If the fiduciary engaging in the
covered transaction is a fiduciary within
the meaning of ERISA section
3(21)(A)(i) or (ii), or Code section
4975(e)(3)(A) or (B), with respect to the
assets involved in the transaction, the
following conditions must be satisfied
with respect to such transaction to the
extent they are applicable to the
fiduciary’s actions:
(a) When exercising fiduciary
authority described in ERISA section
3(21)(A)(i) or (ii), or Code section
4975(e)(3)(A) or (B), with respect to the
assets involved in the transaction, the
fiduciary acts in the Best Interest of the
plan.
(b) All compensation received by the
person and any Related Entity in
connection with the transaction is
reasonable in relation to the total
services the person and any Related
Entity provide to the plan.
(c) The fiduciary’s statements about
recommended investments, fees,
material conflicts of interest, and any
other matters relevant to a plan’s
investment decisions, are not
misleading. For this purpose, a
fiduciary’s failure to disclose a Material
Conflict of Interest relevant to the
services the fiduciary is providing or
other actions it is taking in relation to
a plan’s investment decisions is deemed
to be a misleading statement
III. Conditions Applicable to
Transactions Described in Section I(a)
Except to the extent otherwise
provided in Section V of this
exemption, Section I of this exemption
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applies only if the following conditions
are satisfied:
(a) The person engaging in the
covered transaction is not a trustee
(other than a nondiscretionary trustee),
an administrator of the plan, or an
employer any of whose employees are
covered by the plan. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, this condition does not
apply to a trustee that satisfies Section
III(h) and (i).
(b) The covered transaction is
performed under a written authorization
executed in advance by a fiduciary of
each plan whose assets are involved in
the transaction, which plan fiduciary is
independent of the person engaging in
the covered transaction. The
authorization is terminable at will by
the plan, without penalty to the plan,
upon receipt by the authorized person
of written notice of termination.
(c) The authorized person obtains
annual reauthorization to engage in
transactions pursuant to the exemption
in the method set forth in Section III(b).
Alternatively, the authorized person
may supply a form expressly providing
an election to terminate the
authorization described in Section III(b)
with instructions on the use of the form
to the authorizing fiduciary no less than
annually. The instructions for such form
must include the following information:
(1) The authorization is terminable at
will by the plan, without penalty to the
plan, when the authorized person
receives (via first class mail, personal
delivery, or email) from the authorizing
fiduciary or other plan official having
authority to terminate the authorization,
a written notice of the intent of the plan
to terminate authorization; and
(2) Failure to return the form or some
other written notification of the plan’s
intent to terminate the authorization
within thirty (30) days from the date the
termination form is sent to the
authorizing fiduciary will result in the
continued authorization of the
authorized person to engage in the
covered transactions on behalf of the
plan.
(d) Within three months before an
initial authorization is made pursuant to
Section III(b), the authorizing fiduciary
is furnished with a copy of this
exemption, the form for termination of
authorization described in Section III(c),
a description of the person’s brokerage
placement practices, and any other
reasonably available information
regarding the matter that the authorizing
fiduciary requests.
(e) The person engaging in a covered
transaction furnishes the authorizing
fiduciary with either:
(1) A confirmation slip for each
securities transaction underlying a
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Jkt 235001
covered transaction within ten business
days of the securities transaction
containing the information described in
Rule 10b–10(a)(1–7) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
(2) at least once every three months
and not later than 45 days following the
period to which it relates, a report
disclosing:
(A) A compilation of the information
that would be provided to the plan
pursuant to Section III(e)(1) during the
three-month period covered by the
report;
(B) the total of all securities
transaction-related charges incurred by
the plan during such period in
connection with such covered
transactions; and
(C) the amount of the securities
transaction-related charges retained by
such person, and the amount of such
charges paid to other persons for
execution or other services. For
purposes of this paragraph (e), the
words ‘‘incurred by the plan’’ shall be
construed to mean ‘‘incurred by the
pooled fund’’ when such person engages
in covered transactions on behalf of a
pooled fund in which the plan
participates.
(f) The authorizing fiduciary is
furnished with a summary of the
information required under Section
III(e)(1) at least once per year. The
summary must be furnished within 45
days after the end of the period to which
it relates, and must contain the
following:
(1) The total of all securities
transaction-related charges incurred by
the plan during the period in
connection with covered securities
transactions.
(2) The amount of the securities
transaction-related charges retained by
the authorized person and the amount
of these charges paid to other persons
for execution or other services.
(3) A description of the brokerage
placement practices of the person that is
engaging in the covered transaction, if
such practices have materially changed
during the period covered by the
summary.
(4)(A) A portfolio turnover ratio,
calculated in a manner which is
reasonably designed to provide the
authorizing fiduciary with the
information needed to assist in making
a prudent determination regarding the
amount of turnover in the portfolio. The
requirements of this paragraph (f)(4)(A)
will be met if the ‘‘annualized portfolio
turnover ratio,’’ calculated in the
manner described in paragraph (f)(4)(B),
is contained in the summary.
(B) The ‘‘annualized portfolio
turnover ratio’’ shall be calculated as a
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22031
percentage of the plan assets consisting
of securities or cash over which the
authorized person had discretionary
investment authority, or with respect to
which such person rendered, or had any
responsibility to render, investment
advice within the meaning of ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii), (the portfolio) at any
time or times (management period(s))
during the period covered by the report.
First, the ‘‘portfolio turnover ratio’’ (not
annualized) is obtained by dividing (i)
the lesser of the aggregate dollar
amounts of purchases or sales of
portfolio securities during the
management period(s) by (ii) the
monthly average of the market value of
the portfolio securities during all
management period(s). Such monthly
average is calculated by totaling the
market values of the portfolio securities
as of the beginning and end of each
management period and as of the end of
each month that ends within such
period(s), and dividing the sum by the
number of valuation dates so used. For
purposes of this calculation, all debt
securities whose maturities at the time
of acquisition were one year or less are
excluded from both the numerator and
the denominator. The ‘‘annualized
portfolio turnover ratio’’ is then derived
by multiplying the ‘‘portfolio turnover
ratio’’ by an annualizing factor. The
annualizing factor is obtained by
dividing (iii) the number twelve by (iv)
the aggregate duration of the
management period(s) expressed in
months (and fractions thereof).
Examples of the use of this formula are
provided in Section VII.
(C) The information described in this
paragraph (f)(4) is not required to be
furnished in any case where the
authorized person has not exercised
discretionary authority over trading in
the plan’s account, nor provided
investment advice within the meaning
of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii), during the
period covered by the report.
For purposes of this paragraph (f), the
words ‘‘incurred by the plan’’ shall be
construed to mean ‘‘incurred by the
pooled fund’’ when such person engages
in covered transactions on behalf of a
pooled fund in which the plan
participates.
(g) If an agency cross transaction to
which Section V(a) does not apply is
involved, the following conditions must
also be satisfied:
(1) The information required under
Section III(d) or Section V(c)(1)(B) of
this exemption includes a statement to
the effect that with respect to agency
cross transactions, the person effecting
or executing the transactions will have
a potentially conflicting division of
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loyalties and responsibilities regarding
the parties to the transactions;
(2) The summary required under
Section III(f) of this exemption includes
a statement identifying the total number
of agency cross transactions during the
period covered by the summary and the
total amount of all commissions or other
remuneration received or to be received
from all sources by the person engaging
in the transactions in connection with
the transactions during the period;
(3) The person effecting or executing
the agency cross transaction has the
discretionary authority to act on behalf
of, and/or provide investment advice to,
either (A) one or more sellers or (B) one
or more buyers with respect to the
transaction, but not both.
(4) The agency cross transaction is a
purchase or sale, for no consideration
other than cash payment against prompt
delivery of a security for which market
quotations are readily available; and
(5) The agency cross transaction is
executed or effected at a price that is at
or between the independent bid and
independent ask prices for the security
prevailing at the time of the transaction.
(h) Except pursuant to Section V(b), a
trustee (other than a non-discretionary
trustee) may engage in a covered
transaction only with a plan that has
total net assets with a value of at least
$50 million and in the case of a pooled
fund, the $50 million requirement will
be met if 50 percent or more of the units
of beneficial interest in such pooled
fund are held by plans having total net
assets with a value of at least $50
million.
For purposes of the net asset tests
described above, where a group of plans
is maintained by a single employer or
controlled group of employers, as
defined in ERISA section 407(d)(7), the
$50 million net asset requirement may
be met by aggregating the assets of such
plans, if the assets are pooled for
investment purposes in a single master
trust.
(i) The trustee described in Section
III(h) engaging in a covered transaction
furnishes, at least annually, to the
authorizing fiduciary of each plan the
following:
(1) The aggregate brokerage
commissions, expressed in dollars, paid
by the plan to brokerage firms affiliated
with the trustee;
(2) the aggregate brokerage
commissions, expressed in dollars, paid
by the plan to brokerage firms
unaffiliated with the trustee;
(3) the average brokerage
commissions, expressed as cents per
share, paid by the plan to brokerage
firms affiliated with the trustee; and
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Jkt 235001
(4) the average brokerage
commissions, expressed as cents per
share, paid by the plan (to brokerage
firms unaffiliated with the trustee.
For purposes of this paragraph (i), the
words ‘‘paid by the plan’’ shall be
construed to mean ‘‘paid by the pooled
fund’’ when the trustee engages in
covered transactions on behalf of a
pooled fund in which the plan
participates.
(j) In the case of securities
transactions involving shares of Mutual
Funds, other than exchange traded
funds, at the time of the transaction, the
shares are purchased or sold at net asset
value (NAV) plus a commission, in
accordance with applicable securities
laws and regulations.
Section IV. Conditions Applicable to
Transactions Described in Section I(b)
Section I(b) of this exemption applies
only if the following conditions are
satisfied:
(a) The fiduciary engaging in the
covered transaction customarily
purchases and sells securities for its
own account in the ordinary course of
its business as a broker-dealer.
(b) At the time the transaction is
entered into, the terms are at least as
favorable to the plan as the terms
generally available in an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated party.
(c) Except to the extent otherwise
provided in Section V, the requirements
of Section III(a) through III(f), III(h) and
III(i) (if applicable), and III(j) are
satisfied with respect to the transaction.
Section V. Exceptions From Conditions
(a) Certain agency cross transactions.
Section III of this exemption does not
apply in the case of an agency cross
transaction, provided that the person
effecting or executing the transaction:
(1) Does not render investment advice
to any plan for a fee within the meaning
of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) with
respect to the transaction;
(2) is not otherwise a fiduciary who
has investment discretion with respect
to any plan assets involved in the
transaction, see 29 CFR 2510.3–21(d);
and
(3) does not have the authority to
engage, retain or discharge any person
who is or is proposed to be a fiduciary
regarding any such plan assets.
(b) Recapture of profits. Sections III(a)
and III(i) do not apply in any case where
the person who is engaging in a covered
transaction returns or credits to the plan
all profits earned by that person and any
Related Entity in connection with the
securities transactions associated with
the covered transaction.
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(c) Special rules for pooled funds. In
the case of a person engaging in a
covered transaction on behalf of an
account or fund for the collective
investment of the assets of more than
one plan (a pooled fund):
(1) Sections III(b), (c) and (d) of this
exemption do not apply if—
(A) the arrangement under which the
covered transaction is performed is
subject to the prior and continuing
authorization, in the manner described
in this paragraph (c)(1), of a plan
fiduciary with respect to each plan
whose assets are invested in the pooled
fund who is independent of the person.
The requirement that the authorizing
fiduciary be independent of the person
shall not apply in the case of a plan
covering only employees of the person,
if the requirements of Section V(c)(2)(A)
and (B) are met.
(B) The authorizing fiduciary is
furnished with any information that is
reasonably necessary to determine
whether the authorization should be
given or continued, not less than 30
days prior to implementation of the
arrangement or material change thereto,
including (but not limited to) a
description of the person’s brokerage
placement practices, and, where
requested any other reasonably available
information regarding the matter upon
the reasonable request of the authorizing
fiduciary at any time.
(C) In the event an authorizing
fiduciary submits a notice in writing to
the person engaging in or proposing to
engage in the covered transaction
objecting to the implementation of,
material change in, or continuation of,
the arrangement, the plan on whose
behalf the objection was tendered is
given the opportunity to terminate its
investment in the pooled fund, without
penalty to the plan, within such time as
may be necessary to effect the
withdrawal in an orderly manner that is
equitable to all withdrawing plans and
to the nonwithdrawing plans. In the
case of a plan that elects to withdraw
under this subparagraph (c)(1)(C), the
withdrawal shall be effected prior to the
implementation of, or material change
in, the arrangement; but an existing
arrangement need not be discontinued
by reason of a plan electing to
withdraw.
(D) In the case of a plan whose assets
are proposed to be invested in the
pooled fund subsequent to the
implementation of the arrangement and
that has not authorized the arrangement
in the manner described in Section
V(c)(1)(B) and (C), the plan’s investment
in the pooled fund is subject to the prior
written authorization of an authorizing
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fiduciary who satisfies the requirements
of subparagraph (c)(1)(A).
(2) Section III(a) of this exemption, to
the extent that it prohibits the person
from being the employer of employees
covered by a plan investing in a pool
managed by the person, does not apply
if—
(A) The person is an ‘‘investment
manager’’ as defined in section 3(38) of
ERISA, and
(B) Either (i) the person returns or
credits to the pooled fund all profits
earned by the person and any Related
Entity in connection with all covered
transactions engaged in by the fund, or
(ii) the pooled fund satisfies the
requirements of paragraph V(c)(3).
(3) A pooled fund satisfies the
requirements of this paragraph for a
fiscal year of the fund if—
(A) On the first day of such fiscal
year, and immediately following each
acquisition of an interest in the pooled
fund during the fiscal year by any plan
covering employees of the person, the
aggregate fair market value of the
interests in such fund of all plans
covering employees of the person does
not exceed twenty percent of the fair
market value of the total assets of the
fund; and
(B) The aggregate brokerage
commissions received by the person and
any Related Entity, in connection with
covered transactions engaged in by the
person on behalf of all pooled funds in
which a plan covering employees of the
person participates, do not exceed five
percent of the total brokerage
commissions received by the person and
any Related Entity from all sources in
such fiscal year.
Section VI. Recordkeeping
Requirements
(a) The plan fiduciary engaging in the
covered transactions maintains or
causes to be maintained for a period of
six years, in a manner that is accessible
for audit and examination, the records
necessary to enable the persons
described in Section VI(b) to determine
whether the conditions of this
exemption have been met, except that:
(1) If the records necessary to enable
the persons described in Section VI(b)
below to determine whether the
conditions of the exemption have been
met are lost or destroyed, due to
circumstances beyond the control of the
such plan fiduciary, then no prohibited
transaction will be considered to have
occurred solely on the basis of the
unavailability of those records; and
(2) No party in interest, other than
such plan fiduciary who is responsible
for record-keeping, shall be subject to
the civil penalty that may be assessed
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under ERISA section 502(i) or the taxes
imposed by Code section 4975(a) and (b)
if the records are not maintained or are
not available for examination as
required by paragraph (b) below; and
(b)(1) Except as provided below in
subparagraph (2) and notwithstanding
any provisions of ERISA section
504(a)(2) and (b), the records referred to
in the above paragraph are
unconditionally available at their
customary location for examination
during normal business hours by—
(A) Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department or the
Internal Revenue Service;
(B) Any fiduciary of the plan or any
duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary;
(C) Any contributing employer and
any employee organization whose
members are covered by the plan, or any
authorized employee or representative
of these entities; or
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of
the plan or the duly authorized
representative of such participant or
beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in
subparagraph (1)(B)–(D) above shall be
authorized to examine trade secrets or
commercial or financial information of
such fiduciary which is privileged or
confidential.
(3) Should such plan fiduciary refuse
to disclose information on the basis that
such information is exempt from
disclosure, such plan fiduciary shall, by
the close of the thirtieth (30th) day
following the request, provide a written
notice advising that person of the
reasons for the refusal and that the
Department may request such
information.
Section VII. Definitions
The following definitions apply to
this exemption:
(a) The term ‘‘person’’ includes the
person and affiliates of the person.
(b) An ‘‘affiliate’’ of a person includes
the following:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly,
through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under
common control with, the person;
(2) Any officer, director, partner,
employee, relative (as defined in ERISA
section 3(15)), brother, sister, or spouse
of a brother or sister, of the person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of
which the person is an officer, director
or employee or in which such person is
a partner.
A person is not an affiliate of another
person solely because one of them has
investment discretion over the other’s
assets. The term ‘‘control’’ means the
power to exercise a controlling
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influence over the management or
policies of a person other than an
individual.
(c) An ‘‘agency cross transaction’’ is a
securities transaction in which the same
person acts as agent for both any seller
and any buyer for the purchase or sale
of a security.
(d) The term ‘‘covered transaction’’
means an action described in Section I
of this exemption.
(e) The term ‘‘effecting or executing a
securities transaction’’ means the
execution of a securities transaction as
agent for another person and/or the
performance of clearance, settlement,
custodial or other functions ancillary
thereto.
(f) A plan fiduciary is ‘‘independent’’
of a person if it (1) is not the person, (2)
does not receive compensation or other
consideration for his or her own account
from the person, and (3) does not have
a relationship to or an interest in the
person that might affect the exercise of
the person’s best judgment in
connection with transactions described
in this exemption. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, if the plan is an individual
retirement account not subject to title I
of ERISA, and is beneficially owned by
an employee, officer, director or partner
of the person engaging in covered
transactions with the IRA pursuant to
this exemption, such beneficial owner is
deemed ‘‘independent’’ for purposes of
this definition.
(g) The term ‘‘profit’’ includes all
charges relating to effecting or executing
securities transactions, less reasonable
and necessary expenses including
reasonable indirect expenses (such as
overhead costs) properly allocated to the
performance of these transactions under
generally accepted accounting
principles.
(h) The term ‘‘securities transaction’’
means the purchase or sale of securities.
(i) The term ‘‘nondiscretionary
trustee’’ of a plan means a trustee or
custodian whose powers and duties
with respect to any assets of the plan are
limited to (1) the provision of
nondiscretionary trust services to the
plan, and (2) duties imposed on the
trustee by any provision or provisions of
ERISA or the Code. The term
‘‘nondiscretionary trust services’’ means
custodial services and services ancillary
to custodial services, none of which
services are discretionary. For purposes
of this exemption, a person does not fail
to be a nondiscretionary trustee solely
by reason of having been delegated, by
the sponsor of a master or prototype
plan, the power to amend such plan.
(j) The term ‘‘plan’’ means an
employee benefit plan described in
ERISA section 3(3) and any plan
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described in Code section 4975(e)(1)
(including an Individual Retirement
Account as defined in VII(k)).
(k) The terms ‘‘Individual Retirement
Account’’ or ‘‘IRA’’ mean 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.
(l) The term ‘‘Related Entity’’ means
an entity, other than an affiliate, in
which a person has an interest which
may affect the person’s exercise of its
best judgment as a fiduciary.
(m) A fiduciary acts in the ‘‘Best
Interest’’ of the plan when the fiduciary
acts 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 plan,
without regard to the financial or other
interests of the fiduciary, its affiliate, a
Related Entity or any other party.
(n) The term ‘‘Commission’’ means a
brokerage commission or sales load paid
for the service of effecting or executing
the transaction, but not a 12b–1 fee,
revenue sharing payment, marketing fee,
administrative fee, sub-TA fee or subaccounting fee.
(o) A ‘‘Material Conflict of Interest’’
exists when person has a financial
interest that could affect the exercise of
its best judgment as a fiduciary in
rendering advice to a Plan or IRA.
Section VIII. Examples Illustrating the
Use of the Annualized Portfolio
Turnover Ratio Described in Section
III(f)(4)(B)
(a) M, an investment manager
affiliated with a broker dealer that M
uses to effect securities transactions for
the accounts that it manages, exercises
investment discretion over the account
of plan P for the period January 1, 2014,
though June 30, 2014, after which the
relationship between M and P ceases.
The market values of P’s account with
A at the relevant times (excluding debt
securities having a maturity of one year
or less at the time of acquisition) are:
Market value
($ millions)
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Date
January 1, 2014 ..............
January 31, 2014 ............
February 28, 2014 ..........
March 31, 2014 ..............
April 30, 2014 .................
May 31, 2014 ..................
June 30, 2014 .................
Sum of market value ......
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20:05 Apr 17, 2015
10.4
10.2
9.9
10.0
10.6
11.5
12.0
74.6
Jkt 235001
Aggregate purchases during the 6month period were $850,000; aggregate
sales were $1,000,000, excluding in
each case debt securities having a
maturity of one year or less at the time
of acquisition.
For purposes of Section III(f)(4) of this
exemption, M computes the annualized
portfolio turnover as follows:
A = $850,000 (lesser of purchases or
sales)
B = $10,657,143 ($74.6 million
divided by 7, i.e., number of valuation
dates)
Annualizing factor = C/D = 12/6 = 2
Annualized portfolio turnover ratio =
2 × (850,000/10,657,143) = 0.160 = 16.0
percent
(b) Same facts as (a), except that M
manages the portfolio through July 15,
2014, and, in addition, resumes
management of the portfolio on
November 10, 2014, through the end of
the year. The additional relevant
valuation dates and portfolio values are:
Market value
($ millions)
Dates
July 15, 2014 ..................
November 10, 2014 ........
November 30, 2014 ........
December 31, 2014 ........
Sum of market values ....
12.2
9.4
9.6
9.8
41.0
During the periods July 1, 2014,
through July 15, 2014, and November
10, 2014, through December 31, 2014,
there were an additional $650,000 of
purchases and $400,000 of sales. Thus,
total purchases were $1,500,000 (i.e.,
$850,000 + $650,000) and total sales
were $1,400,000 (i.e., $1,000,000 +
$400,000) for the management periods.
M now computes the annualized
portfolio turnover as follows:
A = $1,400,000 (lesser of aggregate
purchases or sales)
B = $10,509,091 ($10,509,091 ($115.6
million divided by 11)
Annualizing factor = C/D = 12/ (6.5 +
1.67) = 1.47
Annualized portfolio turnover ratio =
1.47 × (1,400,000/10,509,091) = 0.196 =
19.6 percent.
Proposed Revocation of Parts I(b), I(c)
and II(2) of PTE 75–1 and Restatement
of PTE 75–1
The Department is proposing to
revoke Parts I(b), I(c) and II(2) of PTE
75–1. In connection with the proposed
revocation of Part II(2), the Department
is republishing Part II of PTE 75–1. Part
II of PTE 75–1 shall read as follows:
The restrictions of section 406(a) of
the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (the Act) and the
taxes imposed by section 4975(a) and (b)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986
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(the Code), by reason of section
4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Code,
shall not apply to any purchase or sale
of a security between an employee
benefit plan and a broker-dealer
registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et
seq.), a reporting dealer who makes
primary markets in securities of the
United States Government or of any
agency of the United States Government
(Government securities) and reports
daily to the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York its positions with respect to
Government securities and borrowings
thereon, or a bank supervised by the
United States or a State if the following
conditions are met:
(a) In the case of such broker-dealer,
it customarily purchases and sells
securities for its own account in the
ordinary course of its business as a
broker-dealer.
(b) In the case of such reporting dealer
or bank, it customarily purchases and
sells Government securities for its own
account in the ordinary course of its
business and such purchase or sale
between the plan and such reporting
dealer or bank is a purchase or sale of
Government securities.
(c) Such transaction is at least as
favorable to the plan as an arm’s length
transaction with an unrelated party
would be, and it was not, at the time of
such transaction, a prohibited
transaction within the meaning of
section 503(b) of the Code.
(d) Neither the broker-dealer,
reporting dealer, bank, nor any affiliate
thereof has or exercises any
discretionary authority or control
(except as a directed trustee) with
respect to the investment of the plan
assets involved in the transaction, or
renders investment advice (within the
meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3–21(c)) with
respect to those assets.
(e) The broker-dealer, reporting
dealer, or bank engaging in the covered
transaction maintains or causes to be
maintained for a period of six years
from the date of such transaction such
records as are necessary to enable the
persons described in paragraph (f) of
this exemption to determine whether
the conditions of this exemption have
been met, except that:
(1) No party in interest other than the
broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank
engaging in the covered transaction,
shall be subject to the civil penalty,
which may be assessed under section
502(i) of the Act, or to the taxes imposed
by section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code,
if such records are not maintained, or
are not available for examination as
required by paragraph (f) below; and
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(2) A prohibited transaction will not
be deemed to have occurred if, due to
circumstances beyond the control of the
broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank,
such records are lost or destroyed prior
to the end of such six year period.
(f)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in subsections (a)(2) and (b) of
section 504 of the Act, the records
referred to in paragraph (e) are
unconditionally available for
examination during normal business
hours by:
A. Any duly authorized employee or
representative of the Department or the
Internal Revenue Service;
B. Any fiduciary of the plan or any
duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary;
C. Any contributing employer and any
employee organization whose members
are covered by the plan, or any
authorized employee or representative
of these entities; or
D. Any participant or beneficiary of
the plan or the duly authorized
representative of such participant or
beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in
subparagraph (1)(B)–(D) above shall be
authorized to examine trade secrets or
commercial or financial information of
the broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or
bank which is privileged or
confidential.
(3) Should such broker-dealer,
reporting dealer, or bank refuse to
disclose information on the basis that
such information is exempt from
disclosure, the broker-dealer, reporting
dealer, or bank shall, by the close of the
thirtieth (30th) day following the
request, provide a written notice
advising that person of the reasons for
the refusal and that the Department may
request such information.
For purposes of this exemption, the
terms ‘‘broker-dealer,’’ ‘‘reporting
dealer’’ and ‘‘bank’’ shall include such
persons and any affiliates thereof, and
the term ‘‘affiliate’’ shall be defined in
the same manner as that term is defined
in 29 CFR 2510.3–21(e) and 26 CFR
54.4975–9(e).
Signed at Washington, DC, this 14th day of
April, 2015.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
[FR Doc. 2015–08838 Filed 4–15–15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D–11820]
ZRIN 1210–ZA25
Proposed Amendments to Class
Exemptions 75–1, 77–4, 80–83 and 83–
1
Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), U.S.
Department of Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed amendments
to class exemptions.
AGENCY:
This document contains a
notice of pendency before the
Department of Labor of proposed
amendments to prohibited transaction
exemptions (PTEs) 75–1, 77–4, 80–83
and 83–1. Generally, the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code
(the Code) prohibit fiduciaries with
respect to employee benefit plans and
individual retirement accounts (IRAs)
from engaging in self-dealing, including
using their authority, control or
responsibility to affect or increase their
own compensation. These existing
exemptions generally permit fiduciaries
to receive compensation or other
benefits as a result of the use of their
fiduciary authority, control or
responsibility in connection with
investment transactions involving plans
or IRAs. The proposed amendments
would require the fiduciaries to satisfy
uniform Impartial Conduct Standards in
order to obtain the relief available under
each exemption. The proposed
amendments would affect participants
and beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners,
and fiduciaries with respect to such
plans and IRAs.
DATES: Comments: Written comments
must be received by the Department on
or before July 6, 2015.
Applicability: The Department
proposes to make these amendments
applicable eight months after
publication of the final exemption in the
Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: All written comments
concerning the proposed amendments
to the class exemptions 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.
SUMMARY:
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22035
Email to: e-OED@ dol.gov.
Fax to: (202) 693–8474.
Mail: Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (Attention: D–
11820), 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–11820), 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:
Brian Shiker, Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, (202) 693–8854
(this is not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Department is proposing the
amendments to the class exemptions 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, subpart B (76 FR 66637 (October
27, 2011)).
Executive Summary
Purpose of Regulatory Action
The Department is proposing these
amendments to existing class
exemptions in connection with its
proposed regulation defining a fiduciary
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 specifies when an
entity 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
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 75 (Monday, April 20, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 22021-22035]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-08838]
[[Page 22021]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D-11327]
ZRIN 1210-ZA25
Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 86-128 for Securities
Transactions Involving Employee Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers;
Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of PTE 75-1,
Exemptions From Prohibitions Respecting Certain Classes of Transactions
Involving Employee Benefits Plans and Certain Broker-Dealers, Reporting
Dealers and Banks
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), Department of
Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed amendments to and proposed partial
revocation of PTEs 86-128 and 75-1.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains a notice of pendency before the
Department of Labor of proposed amendments to Prohibited Transaction
Exemptions (PTEs) 86-128 and 75-1, exemptions from certain prohibited
transaction provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974 (ERISA) and the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). The
ERISA and Code provisions at issue generally prohibit fiduciaries with
respect to employee benefit plans and individual retirement accounts
(IRAs) from engaging in self-dealing in connection with transactions
involving plans and IRAs. The exemptions allow fiduciaries to receive
compensation in connection with certain securities transactions entered
into by plans and IRAs. The proposed amendments would increase the
safeguards of the exemptions. This document also contains a notice of
pendency before the Department of the proposed revocation of PTE 86-128
with respect to transactions involving investment advice fiduciaries
and IRAs, and of PTE 75-1, Part II(2), and PTE 75-1, Parts I(b) and
I(c), as duplicative in light of existing or newly proposed relief. The
amendments and revocations would affect participants and beneficiaries
of plans, IRA owners and certain fiduciaries of plans and IRAs.
DATES:
Comments: Written comments must be received by the Department on or
before July 6, 2015.
Applicability: The Department proposes to make this amendment and
partial revocation applicable eight months after the publication of the
final amendment and partial revocation in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: All written comments concerning the proposed amendments to
the class exemptions 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-11327), 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-11327), 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: Brian Shiker, Office of Exemption
Determinations, Employee Benefits Security Administration, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., Suite 400,
Washington, DC 20210, (202) 693-8824 (not a toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Department is proposing the amendments
to and partial revocation of PTEs 86-128 and 75-1 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, subpart B
(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
These proposed amendments and revocations are being published in
the same issue of the Federal Register as the Department's proposed
regulation that would amend the definition of a ``fiduciary'' of an
employee benefit plan or an IRA under ERISA and the Internal Revenue
Code (Proposed Regulation). The Proposed Regulation specifies when an
entity 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
that was adopted in 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.
PTEs 86-128 and 75-1, Part II(2), permit fiduciaries to receive
fees in connection with certain securities transactions entered into by
plans and IRAs in accordance with the fiduciaries' advice. In the
absence of an exemption, ERISA and the Code generally prohibit
fiduciaries from using their authority to affect or increase their own
compensation. These proposed amendments would affect the scope of the
exemptions and conditions under which fiduciaries may receive such
compensation.
The Secretary of Labor may grant and amend administrative
exemptions from the prohibited transaction provisions of
[[Page 22022]]
ERISA and the Code.\1\ Before granting an amendment to an exemption,
the Department must find that the amended exemption is administratively
feasible, in the interests of plans, their participants and
beneficiaries and IRA owners, and protective of the rights of
participants and beneficiaries of such 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.
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\1\ Regulations at 29 CFR 2570.30 to 2570.52 describe the
procedures for applying for an administrative exemption under ERISA.
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 issue administrative exemptions under Code section 4975
to the Secretary of Labor.
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Summary of the Major Provisions
PTE 86-128 currently provides an exemption for certain fiduciaries
and their affiliates to receive a fee from a plan or IRA for effecting
or executing securities transactions as an agent on behalf of the plan
or IRA. It also allows a fiduciary to act in an ``agency cross
transaction''--as an agent both for the plan or IRA and for another
party--and receive reasonable compensation from the other party. The
exemption generally requires compliance with certain conditions such as
advance disclosures to and approval by an independent fiduciary,
although such conditions are not currently applicable to transactions
involving IRAs.
This proposed amendment to PTE 86-128 would increase the safeguards
of the exemption in a number of ways. The amendment would require
fiduciaries relying on the exemption to adhere to certain ``Impartial
Conduct Standards,'' including acting in the best interest of the plans
and IRAs when providing advice, and would define the types of payments
that are permitted under the exemption. The amendment would restrict
relief under this exemption to IRA fiduciaries that have discretionary
authority or control over the management of the IRA's assets (i.e.,
investment managers) and would take the additional step of imposing the
exemption's conditions on investment management fiduciaries when they
engage in transactions with IRAs. The proposal would revoke relief for
fiduciaries who provide investment advice to IRAs. A new exemption for
receipt of compensation by fiduciaries who provide investment advice to
IRAs, plan participants, and certain small plans is proposed elsewhere
in this issue of the Federal Register in the ``Best Interest Contract
Exemption.'' In the Department's view, the provisions of the Best
Interest Contract Exemption better protect the interests of IRAs with
respect to investment advice regarding securities transactions.
This proposed amendment also would add a new transaction to the
exemption for certain fiduciaries to act as principals (as opposed to
agents for third parties) in selling mutual fund shares to plans and
IRAs and to receive commissions for doing so. An exemption for this
transaction is currently available in PTE 75-1, Part II(2), with few
applicable safeguards.
Several changes are proposed with respect to PTE 75-1. The
Department is proposing to revoke PTE 75-1, Part II(2), as that
exemption would be incorporated within PTE 86-128 subject to additional
safeguards. Part I(b) and (c) of PTE 75-1 also would be revoked. These
provisions of PTE 75-1 provide relief for certain non-fiduciary
services to plans and IRAs. If these provisions are revoked, persons
seeking to engage in such transactions should look to 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, for relief.
Finally, this document proposes to amend the remaining exemption of
PTE 75-1, Part II, to revise the recordkeeping requirement of that
exemption.
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
12866 and 13563 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 the
agencies will periodically review their existing significant
regulations to make the agencies' 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 ``economically significant''
regulatory actions); (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 amendment, and OMB has reviewed this regulatory action.
Background
As explained more fully in the preamble to the Department's
proposed regulation on the definition of fiduciary 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 stringent 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.\2\ In
[[Page 22023]]
addition, they must refrain from engaging in ``prohibited
transactions,'' which ERISA forbids because of the dangers posed by the
fiduciaries' conflicts of interest with respect to the transactions.\3\
When fiduciaries violate ERISA's fiduciary duties or the prohibited
transaction rules, they may be held personally liable for the
breach.\4\ In addition, violations of the prohibited transaction rules
are subject to excise taxes under the Code.
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\2\ ERISA section 404(a).
\3\ ERISA section 406. ERISA also prohibits certain transactions
between a plan and a ``party in interest.''
\4\ ERISA section 409; see also ERISA section 405.
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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 illegal transactions are subject to an
excise tax enforced by the Internal Revenue Service. Unlike
participants in plans covered by Title I of ERISA, under the Code, IRA
owners cannot bring suit against fiduciaries under ERISA for violation
of the prohibited transaction rules and fiduciaries are not personally
liable to IRA owners for the losses caused by their misconduct.
Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, however, the
Department is proposing two new class exemptions that would create
contractual obligations for the adviser to adhere to certain standards
(the Impartial Conduct Standards). IRA owners would have a right to
enforce these new contractual rights.
Under this statutory framework, the determination of who is a
``fiduciary'' is of central importance. Many of ERISA's protections,
duties, and liabilities hinge on fiduciary status. In relevant part,
section 3(21)(A) of ERISA and section 4975(e)(3) of the Code provide
that a person is a fiduciary with respect to a plan or IRA to the
extent he or she (1) 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; (2) 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, (3) has any discretionary authority or
discretionary responsibility in the administration of such plan or IRA.
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 or her own interest or his or her own account. 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. Accordingly, a fiduciary may not cause 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.
The Department understands that investment professionals are often
compensated on a commission basis for effecting or executing securities
transactions for plans, plan participants, and IRA owners. Because such
payments vary based on the advice provided, the Department views a
fiduciary that recommends to a plan or IRA a securities transaction and
then receives a commission for itself or a related party as violating
the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA section 406(b) and Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E).
PTE 86-128 \5\ provides an exemption from these prohibited
transactions provisions for certain types of fiduciaries to use their
authority to cause a plan or IRA to pay a fee to the fiduciary, or its
affiliate, for effecting or executing securities transactions as agent
for the plan. The exemption further provides relief for these types of
fiduciaries to act as agent in an ``agency cross transaction'' for both
a plan or IRA and one or more other parties to the transaction, and for
such fiduciaries or their affiliates to receive fees from the other
party(ies) in connection with the agency cross transaction. An agency
cross transaction is defined in the exemption as a securities
transaction in which the same person acts as agent for both any seller
and any buyer for the purchase or sale of a security.
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\5\ PTE 86-128, 51 FR 41686 (November 18, 1986), replaced PTE
79-1, 44 FR 5963 (January 30, 1979) and PTE 84-46, 49 FR 22157 (May
25, 1984).
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As originally granted, the exemption in PTE 86-128 could be used
only by fiduciaries who were not discretionary trustees, plan
administrators, or employers of any employees covered by the plan.\6\
PTE 86-128 was amended in 2002 to permit use of the exemption by
discretionary trustees, and their affiliates, without meeting the
``recapture of profits'' provisions, subject to certain additional
requirements.\7\ Additionally, in 2011 the Department clarified that
PTE 86-128 provides relief for covered transactions engaged in by
fiduciaries who provide investment advice.\8\
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\6\ Plan trustees, plan administrators and employers were
permitted to rely on the exemption if they returned or credited to
the plan all profits (recapture of profits) earned in connection
with the transactions covered by the exemption.
\7\ 67 FR 64137 (October 17, 2002).
\8\ See Advisory Opinion 2011-08A (June 21, 2011).
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If granted, this proposed amendment would make additional changes,
discussed below, to PTE 86-128, as well as a re-ordering of the
sections of the exemption.\9\ The Department notes that the relief
provided under PTE 86-128 is limited to ERISA section 406(b) and Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F), for self-dealing and other conflict of
interest transactions involving fiduciaries. Relief from the
prohibitions of ERISA section 406(a)(1)(C) or Code section
4975(c)(1)(C), for the provision of services to a plan, would be
available only by meeting the requirements of the statutory exemptions
of ERISA section 408(b)(2) and Code section 4975(d)(2) and the
Department's regulations in 29 CFR 2550.408b-2.\10\
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\9\ This proposal would move the definitions from Section I to
Section VII. The other sections are re-ordered accordingly.
Additionally, within the definitions section, the following
definitions are new or revised: Independent (Section VII(f)), plan
(Section VII(j)), individual retirement account (Section VII(k)),
Related Entity (Section VII(l)), Best Interest (Section VII(m)), and
Commission (VII(n)).
\10\ These statutory exemptions provide relief for making
reasonable arrangements between a plan and a party in interest
(disqualified person) for, among other things, services necessary
for operation of the plan, if no more than reasonable compensation
is paid therefore. ERISA section 408(b)(2) and Code section
4975(d)(2) do not provide relief from ERISA section 406(b) or Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E) and (F).
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Description of the Proposed Amendments
I. Impartial Conduct Standards
This proposal would amend PTE 86-128 to require fiduciaries
engaging in the exempted transactions to adhere to certain Impartial
Conduct Standards. The Impartial Conduct Standards are set forth in a
new proposed Section II. The standards would only be applicable to the
extent they are applicable to the fiduciary's actions.
Under the first conduct standard, fiduciaries would be required to
act in the plan's or IRA's best interest when providing investment
advice to the plan or IRA, or managing the plan's or IRA's assets. Best
interest is defined as acting 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
[[Page 22024]]
circumstances, and the needs of the plan or IRA. Further, under the
best interest standard, fiduciaries must act without regard to their
own financial or other interests or those of any affiliates or other
party. Under this standard, fiduciaries must put the plan's or IRA's
interests ahead of the fiduciaries' own financial interests or those of
any other party.
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 those 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 requirement that is set forth
in Section II(a). 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. Failure to satisfy the
best interest standard would render the exemption unavailable to the
fiduciary with respect to compensation received in connection with the
transaction.
The second conduct standard requires that all compensation received
by the fiduciary and its affiliates in connection with the applicable
transaction be reasonable in relation to the total services provided to
the plan or IRA. The third conduct standard requires that statements
about recommended investments, fees, material conflicts of interest,
and any other matters relevant to a plan's or IRA's investment
decisions, are not misleading. The Department notes in this regard that
a fiduciary's failure to disclose a material conflict of interest may
be considered a misleading statement. Transactions that violate the
requirements are not likely to be in the interests of or protective of
plans, their participants and beneficiaries, and IRA owners.
Unlike the new exemption proposals published elsewhere in the
Federal Register, these proposed amendments do not require fiduciaries
to contractually warrant compliance with applicable federal and state
laws. However, the Department notes that significant violations of
applicable federal or state law could also amount to violations of the
Impartial Conduct Standards, such as the best interest standard, in
which case, these exemptions, as amended, would be deemed unavailable
for transactions occurring in connection with such violations.
II. IRAs
Currently, Section IV(a) of PTE 86-128 contains an exception from
the conditions of the exemption for covered transactions engaged in on
behalf of individual retirement accounts described in 29 CFR 2510.3-
2(d) (IRAs), and plans, other than training programs, that cover no
employees within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3-3. The exception was
included in response to comments received on the original proposal of
PTE 86-128's predecessor, PTE 79-1, suggesting that such plans and IRAs
did not need the protection provided by the conditions of the exemption
because the participants of such plans and IRAs directly exercise
control over their accounts. Additionally, the comments suggested that
imposing the conditions on these plans and IRAs would result in
unnecessary costs.\11\
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\11\ See preamble to PTE 79-1, 44 FR 5963, 5964 (Jan. 30, 1979).
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Upon reconsideration of the issue, however, the Department has
determined that these policy reasons do not support a continued
exception from the conditions of PTE 86-128 for IRAs. Since PTE 86-128
was granted, the amount of assets held in IRAs has grown dramatically.
The financial services marketplace has become more complex, and
compensation structures and the types of products offered have changed
significantly beyond what the Department contemplated at the time. 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 all the more critical that appropriate
safeguards in an exemption apply to IRAs.
The Department therefore is proposing to revise the exemption in
several ways with respect to transactions involving IRAs. First, if the
amendment is adopted, fiduciaries that exercise discretionary authority
or control with respect to IRAs as described in Code section
4975(e)(3)(A) (i.e., investment managers) will be required, among other
things, to make the disclosures and receive approvals that are
currently required by the exemption with respect to other types of
plans. The Department believes that compliance with these conditions
will enhance the ability of the authorizing fiduciary, which, in the
case of an IRA would be the IRA owner, to monitor fees and compensation
paid in connection with their accounts.
Further, if the amendment is adopted, the exemption will no longer
provide relief to IRA fiduciaries engaging in the covered transactions
if they are fiduciaries due to the provision of investment advice for a
fee as described in Code section 4975(e)(3)(B). This change is
reflected in a proposed new Section I(c), setting forth the scope of
the exemption, which will apply on a prospective basis. Elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register, the Department has proposed a new
exemption that specifically provides relief for the receipt by such
fiduciaries of a broad range of types of compensation (Best Interest
Contract Exemption). The Best Interest Contract Exemption was crafted
to protect the interests of retail retirement investors--plan
participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners and small plan sponsors--
that rely on fiduciary investment advisers to engage in securities
transactions, and it contains safeguards specifically crafted for these
investors. The exemption requires the investment advice fiduciary to
contractually acknowledge fiduciary status, commit to adhere to basic
standards of impartial conduct, adopt policies and procedures
reasonably designed to minimize the harmful impact of conflicts of
interest, and disclose basic information on their conflicts of interest
and on the cost of their advice. As a result, the exemption ensures
that IRA owners have a contract-based claim to hold their fiduciary
investment advisers accountable if they violate basic obligations of
prudence and loyalty.
The proposed definition of IRA in Section I(c) is ``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.'' The Department notes that this is not
identical to the definition currently in Section IV(a), the exception
for IRAs, which is ``individual retirement accounts meeting the
conditions of 29 CFR 2510.3-2(d), or plans, other than training
programs, that cover no employees within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3-
3.'' However, this new definition is identical to the definition of IRA
used in the proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption. Accordingly, the
Best Interest Contract Exemption will be available for transactions
involving IRAs that are excluded from this exemption.
III. The Mutual Fund Exemption of PTE 75-1, Part II
PTE 75-1, granted October 31, 1975,\12\ provides an exemption for
broker-
[[Page 22025]]
dealers, reporting dealers and banks to engage in certain classes of
transactions with employee benefit plans and IRAs. The exemption has
five parts, two of which (Part II and Part V) were amended in 2006.\13\
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\12\ 40 FR 50845 (Oct. 31, 1975).
\13\ 71 FR 5883 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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Part II of PTE 75-1 is captioned ``Principal transactions.'' Part
II(1) of the exemption permits the purchase or sale of a security
between an employee benefit plan or IRA and a broker-dealer registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et. seq.), a
reporting dealer who makes primary markets in securities of the United
States Government or of any agency of the United States Government and
reports daily to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York its positions
with respect to Government securities and borrowings thereon, or a bank
supervised by the United States or a State. The exemption provided in
Part II(1) does not extend to the fiduciary self-dealing and conflicts
of interest prohibitions of ERISA and the Code.
PTE 75-1, Part II(2), contains a special exemption for mutual fund
purchases (the mutual fund exemption) between fiduciaries and plans or
IRAs. Although it does provide relief for fiduciary self-dealing and
conflicts of interest, the exemption is only available if the fiduciary
who decides on behalf of the plan or IRA to enter into the transaction
is not a principal underwriter for, or affiliated with, the mutual
fund.
In 2004, when proposing to amend Part II of PTE 75-1,\14\ the
Department sought public comments on the current utility of the mutual
fund exemption. The Department was uncertain if the mutual fund
exemption continued to provide meaningful relief to fiduciaries,
insofar as many sales of mutual fund shares are made to and from the
mutual fund itself. It was the Department's understanding that any
broker-dealer involvement in these mutual fund transactions was as
agent on behalf of a plan or IRA. Under such circumstances, the
transactions would not appear to be properly characterized as
``principal'' transactions.
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\14\ 69 FR 23216 (April 28, 2004).
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The Department received three comments on the continuing utility of
the mutual fund exemption. The commenters stated that the mutual fund
exemption continued to be widely used by the public. As background, the
commenters noted that mutual fund transactions had some characteristics
of principal transactions as well as agency transactions. In 1975, when
the mutual fund exemption was originally granted, mutual funds
typically entered into distribution agreements with principal
underwriters, and the underwriters in turn entered into selling
agreements designated as ``dealer'' agreements, with retail broker-
dealers. However, sales of mutual funds under these dealer agreements
exhibited many of the economic characteristics of agency transactions.
For example, commenters stated that the selling broker-dealer was not
at risk because it could not inventory mutual fund shares.
Additionally, as mutual funds were required to be sold at net asset
value (NAV), the broker-dealer usually received a fixed sales
commission for effecting the transaction, rather than a negotiable
dealer mark-up.
These commenters indicated that these features were still
commonplace in mutual fund transactions. Additionally, the commenters
indicated that this exemption was commonly understood to provide relief
for the receipt of commissions by such broker-dealer fiduciaries in
connection with the transactions.\15\ In issuing the final amendment to
PTE 75-1, Part II, the Department acknowledged these comments and
stated that additional time was needed to fully consider the issues
raised in these comments. Pending further action by the Department, the
mutual fund exemption has remained in effect.\16\
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\15\ Although PTE 75-1, Part II, is silent on the payment of
commissions, the commenters point to the preamble to the proposal of
PTE 77-9 (41 FR 56760, December 29, 1976)(final exemption superseded
by PTE 84-24, 49 FR 13208, April 3, 1984, as amended, 71 FR 5887,
February 3, 2006) which states that PTE 75-1, Part II, covers ``the
purchase and sale of mutual fund shares by a plan from or to a
broker-dealer which is a plan fiduciary, provided that such broker-
dealer is not a principal underwriter for, or affiliated with, such
mutual fund, and the receipt of commissions by such fiduciary/
broker-dealer in connection with the purchase of mutual fund shares
by plans.''
\16\ 71 FR 5883, 5885 (Feb. 3, 2006).
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After further consideration of these comments, the Department
concurs that the relief provided by the mutual fund exemption remains
relevant to broker-dealer fiduciaries that use their authority to cause
plans and IRAs to purchase mutual fund shares. The Department believes
that the transaction described in PTE 75-1, Part II(2), is most
accurately described as a ``riskless principal'' transaction, in which
the fiduciary that is providing investment advice purchases shares on
its own account for the purpose of covering a purchase order previously
received from a plan or IRA, and then sells the shares to the plan or
IRA to satisfy the order.
However, the existing mutual fund exemption needs to be revised in
a manner that would make it consistent with more recent exemptions that
similarly provide broad relief from fiduciary self-dealing and
conflicts of interest. PTE 86-128 covers transactions that are the most
similar to those covered in the mutual fund exemption in that the
relief it provides permits a fiduciary to use its authority to receive
a commission for effecting or executing a plan's or IRA's securities
transactions as agent for the plan or IRA, subject to a number of
specific requirements designed to protect the interests of plan
participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners.
The Department is therefore proposing a new Section I(b) of PTE 86-
128 that would provide relief for the transaction currently covered in
PTE 75-1, Part II(2). New Section I(b) would permit a broker-dealer
fiduciary to use its authority to cause a plan (or IRA, as applicable)
to purchase shares of a mutual fund from the broker-dealer fiduciary,
acting as principal, where the shares were acquired solely to cover the
plan's prior order, and for the receipt of a commission by such
fiduciary in connection with the transaction.\17\ Consistent with the
exemption originally provided for this transaction in PTE 75-1, Part
II(2), relief is not available if such fiduciary is a principal
underwriter for, or affiliated with, such investment company. The
Department intends that, with respect to this new proposed transaction,
the compensation to the broker-dealer will be limited to the commission
(i.e., sales load) disclosed by the mutual fund, but may be paid either
by the plan or the mutual fund.
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\17\ Section I(b) would provide relief from the restrictions of
ERISA section 406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and 406(b) and the taxes imposed
by Code section 4975(a) and (b), by reason of Code section
4975(c)(1)(A), (D), (E) and (F). The proposed new covered
transaction, as a principal transaction, involves the purchase and
sale of shares between a plan and a party in interest, and the
transfer of a plan asset to a party in interest, which would violate
the cited provisions of ERISA section 406(a) and Code section
4975(c)(1)(A) and (D) in the absence of an exemption.
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To provide certainty with respect to the payments permitted by the
exemption in both Section I(a) and newly proposed Section I(b), the
Department is proposing a new defined term ``Commission.'' This term,
used in Section I(b), will also replace the language currently in the
exemption that permits a fiduciary to cause a plan or IRA to pay a
``fee for effecting or executing securities transactions.'' The term
``Commission'' is defined to mean a brokerage commission or sales load
paid for the service of effecting or executing the transaction, but not
a 12b-1 fee, revenue sharing payment,
[[Page 22026]]
marketing fee, administrative fee, sub-TA fee, or sub-accounting fee.
Further, based on the language of Section I(a)(1), the term
``Commission'' as used in that section is limited to payments directly
from the plan or IRA.\18\ On the other hand, the Commission payment
described in Section I(b) is not limited to payments directly from the
plan or IRA and includes payments from the mutual fund. The Department
understands that sales load payments in connection with mutual fund
transactions are commonly made by the mutual fund.
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\18\ Section I(a)(2) of the proposed amended exemption clarifies
that relief for plan fiduciaries acting as agents in agency cross
transactions is limited to compensation paid in the form of
Commissions, although the Commission may be paid by the other party
to the transaction.
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The proposed new covered transaction in Section I(b) would be
subject to the general prohibition in PTE 86-128 on churning, and the
new proposed Impartial Conduct Standards in Section II. In addition,
the Department is also proposing a new Section IV to PTE 86-128 which
sets forth conditions applicable solely to the proposed new covered
transaction. The proposed new Section IV incorporates conditions
currently applicable to PTE 75-1, Part II(2).
Specifically, the conditions applicable to the proposed new covered
transaction in Section I(b), as set forth in proposed Section IV, are:
(1) The fiduciary customarily sells securities for its own account in
the ordinary course of its business as a broker-dealer; (2) the
transaction is at least as favorable to the plan or IRA as an arm's
length transaction with an unrelated party would be; and (3) unless
rendered inapplicable by Section V of the exemption, the requirements
of Sections III(a) through III(f), III(h) and III(i) (if applicable),
and III(j) are satisfied with respect to the transaction. The
Department seeks comments as to whether any of the conditions described
in Section IV(c) should be revised as applied to the proposed new
covered transaction. The exceptions contained in Section V would be
applicable to this proposed new covered transaction as well.\19\
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\19\ The condition set forth in Section V(c)(1)(B) of the
exemption requires the disclosure of information that the person
seeking authorization ``reasonably believes to be necessary'' for
the authorizing fiduciary to determine whether the authorization
should be made. This condition is followed by a list of required
items. To improve objectivity of the exemption, the Department is
proposing to delete the language ``reasonably believes to be
necessary'' from Section V(c)(1)(B) but leave the list of specified
items in place.
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Relief is not proposed in the new Section I(b) for sales by a plan
or IRA to a fiduciary due to the Department's belief that it is not
necessary for a plan or IRA to sell a mutual fund share to a fiduciary
that is acting as a principal. The Department requests comment on this
limitation, as well as on its understanding of this transaction and the
related fee payments.
Additionally, in connection with the proposed new covered
transaction, the Department is proposing to revoke the mutual fund
exemption provisions from PTE 75-1, Part II(2). The Department is
further proposing to revise the recordkeeping provisions of Section (e)
of PTE 75-1, Part II. Section (e) currently provides that records
demonstrating compliance with the exemption must be maintained by the
plan or IRA involved in the transaction. The proposed amendment would
place the responsibility for maintaining such records on the broker-
dealer, reporting dealer, or bank engaging in the transaction with such
plan or IRA.
IV. Relief for Related Entities
Currently, PTE 86-128 provides relief for a fiduciary to use its
authority to cause a plan or IRA to pay a fee to that person for
effecting or executing securities transactions. The term ``person'' is
defined to include the person's affiliates, which are: (1) Any person
directly or indirectly, through one or more intermediaries,
controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, the person;
(2) any officer, director, partner, employee, relative (as defined in
ERISA section 3(15)), brother, sister, or spouse of a brother or
sister, of the person; and (3) any corporation or partnership of which
the person is an officer, director or employee or in which such person
is a partner.
The Department understands that in some cases, fiduciaries are
concerned that the relief provided by the exemption to persons
(including their affiliates) is too narrow. In this regard, it is a
prohibited transaction for a fiduciary to use the ``authority, control,
or responsibility which makes such a person a fiduciary to cause a plan
to pay an additional fee to such fiduciary (or to a person in which
such fiduciary has an interest which may affect the exercise of such
fiduciary's best judgment as a fiduciary) to provide a service.'' \20\
The concern expressed to the Department is that the definition of
affiliate is not broad enough to cover all persons in whom a fiduciary
has an interest that may affect its best judgment. Specifically, it is
not necessary for a fiduciary to have control over or be under control
by an entity in order for the fiduciary to have an interest in the
entity that may affect the exercise of the fiduciary's best judgment as
a fiduciary.
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\20\ ERISA section 406(b); Code section 4975(c)(1)(E).
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To address this concern, the amendment would add relief for covered
transactions when fees are paid to a ``related entity.'' \21\ The term
``related entity'' is defined as an entity, other than an affiliate, in
which a fiduciary has an interest that may affect the exercise of its
best judgment as a fiduciary. Additionally, Section II(b) of the
exemption would reflect this additional relief to related entities.
Section II(b) would require that all compensation received by the
person (i.e., the fiduciary and its affiliates) and any related entity
in connection with the transaction is reasonable in relation to the
total services the person provides to the plan or IRA.
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\21\ See re-ordered Section VII(m).
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The Department requests comment on the necessity of incorporating
relief for related entities in PTE 86-128, and the approach taken in
this proposal to do so.
V. The 2002 Amendment and Clarification of Recapture of Profits
Exception of PTE 86-128
As explained above, discretionary trustees were first permitted to
rely on PTE 86-128 without meeting the ``recapture of profits''
provision pursuant to an amendment in 2002 (2002 Amendment). To effect
this change, the 2002 Amendment revised Section III(a), which had
provided that ``[t]he person engaging in the covered transaction [may
not be] a trustee (other than a nondiscretionary trustee), or an
administrator of the plan, or an employer any of whose employees are
covered by the plan.'' Under the amendment, the reference to ``trustee
(other than a nondiscretionary trustee)'' was deleted from Section
III(a). Further, under the amendment, discretionary trustees had to
satisfy certain additional conditions, set forth in Section III(h) and
(i), in order to rely on the exemption. Section III(h) provides that
discretionary trustees may engage in the covered transactions only with
plans or IRAs with total net assets of at least $50 million.\22\
Section III(i) requires discretionary trustees to provide additional
disclosures.
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\22\ Special rules apply under Section III(h) for pooled funds
and groups of plans maintained by a single employer or controlled
group of employers.
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The Department understands that subsequent to the 2002 Amendment,
questions were raised as to whether discretionary trustees were
permitted to rely on the ``recapture of profits''
[[Page 22027]]
provision of the exemption (redesignated in this proposal as Section
V(b)) as an alternative to complying with Sections III(h) and (i). This
provision allows persons identified in Section III(a) to engage the
covered transactions if they return or credit to the plan or IRA all
profits. By deleting the reference to discretionary trustees from
Section III(a), the Department believes that the 2002 Amendment
inadvertently may have prevented trustees of plans or IRAs from using
the recapture of profits approach, and instead, has limited the
exemption to trustees that satisfy Section III(h) and (i). As this
result was not intended, the Department proposes to modify the
exemption to permit all trustees, regardless of associated plan or IRA
size, to utilize the exception as originally permitted in PTE 86-128
for the recapture of profits.
In order to achieve this result, the Department has proposed
amendments to several different conditions of PTE 86-128. Section V(c),
which is re-designated as Section V(b) in this proposal, provides that
Sections III(a) and III(i) do not apply in any case where the person
engaging in the covered transaction returns or credits to the plan or
IRA all profits earned by that person in connection with the securities
transaction associated with the covered transaction. In addition, the
Department proposes to reinsert a reference to trustees (other than
nondiscretionary trustees) in Section III(a) along with the existing
references to plan administrators and employers. Finally, a sentence
has been added to the end of Section III(a) stating: ``Notwithstanding
the foregoing, this condition does not apply to a trustee that
satisfies Section III(h) and (i).'' The purpose of these proposed
amendments is to clarify that trustees may engage in covered
transactions subject to the recapture of profits limitations in Section
V(b) of the exemption.
VI. Recordkeeping Requirements
A proposed new Section VI to PTE 86-128 would require the fiduciary
engaging in a transaction covered by the exemption to maintain records
necessary to enable certain persons (described in proposed Section
VI(b)) to determine whether the conditions of this exemption have been
met. The proposed recordkeeping requirement is consistent with other
existing class exemptions as well as the recordkeeping provisions of
the other notices of proposed exemption published in this issue of the
Federal Register.
Description of the Proposed Revocation of PTE 75-1, Part I(b) and (c),
and II(2), and Proposed Amendment to and Restatement of PTE 75-1, Part
II
Lastly, the Department proposes to revoke Part I(b) and I(c) of PTE
75-1, and Part II(2) of PTE 75-1. Part I(b) of PTE 75-1 provides relief
from ERISA section 406 and the taxes imposed by Code section 4975(a)
and (b), for the effecting of securities transactions, including
clearance, settlement or custodial functions incidental to effecting
the transactions, by parties in interest or disqualified persons other
than fiduciaries. Part I(c) of PTE 75-1 provides relief from ERISA
section 406 and Code section 4975(a) and (b) for the furnishing of
advice regarding securities or other property to a plan or IRA by a
party in interest or disqualified person under circumstances which do
not make the party in interest or disqualified person a fiduciary with
respect to the plan or IRA.
PTE 75-1 was granted shortly after ERISA's passage in order to
provide certainty to the securities industry over the nature and extent
to which ordinary and customary transactions between broker-dealers and
plans or IRAs would be subject to the ERISA prohibited transaction
rules. Paragraphs (b) and (c) in Part I of PTE 75-1, specifically,
served to provide exemptive relief for certain non-fiduciary services
provided by broker-dealers in securities transactions. Code section
4975(d)(2), ERISA section 408(b)(2) and regulations thereunder, have
clarified the scope of relief for service providers to plans and
IRAs.\23\ The Department believes that the relief provided in Parts
I(b) and I(c) of PTE 75-1 duplicates the relief available under the
statutory exemptions. Therefore, the Department is proposing the
revocation of these parts.
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\23\ See 29 CFR 2550.408b-2, 42 FR 32390 (June 24, 1977) and
Reasonable Contract or Arrangement under Section 408(b)(2)--Fee
Disclosure, Final Rule, 77 FR 5632 (Feb. 3, 2012).
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As noted earlier, the exemption in PTE 75-1, Part II(2), would,
under this proposal, be incorporated into PTE 86-128. Accordingly, the
Department is proposing herein the revocation of PTE 75-1, Part II(2).
In connection with the proposed revocation of PTE 75-1, Part II(2), the
Department is proposing to amend Section (e) of the remaining exemption
in PTE 75-1, Part II, the recordkeeping provisions of the exemption, to
place the recordkeeping responsibility on the broker-dealer, reporting
dealer, or bank engaging in transactions with the plan or IRA, as
opposed to the plan or IRA itself.
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 the final
regulation is published in the Federal Register (Applicability Date).
The Department proposes to make the amendments to and partial
revocation of this exemption, if granted, applicable on the
Applicability Date as well.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, the Department of Labor conducts a preclearance consultation
program to provide the general public and Federal 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 Proposed
Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of Prohibited Transaction
Exemption (PTE) 86-128 for Securities Transactions Involving Employee
Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers; Proposed Amendment to and Partial
Revocation of PTE 75-1, Exemptions From Prohibitions Respecting Certain
Classes of Transactions Involving Employee Benefits Plans and Certain
Broker-Dealers, Reporting Dealers and Banks 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 proposed amendments to
and partial revocation of PTEs 86-128 and 75-1 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:
[[Page 22028]]
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 Amendments 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, as amended, PTE 86-128 would require
financial firms to make certain disclosures to plan fiduciaries in
order to receive relief from ERISA's and the Code's prohibited
transaction rules for the receipt of commissions and to engage in
riskless principal transactions involving mutual fund shares. Financial
firms relying on either PTE 86-128 or PTE 75-1, as amended, would be
required to maintain records necessary to prove that the conditions of
these exemptions have been met. These requirements are information
collection requests (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:
38% of disclosures will be distributed electronically 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 legal authorizations and disclosures, 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, and $129.94 for a
legal professional; and \24\
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\24\ 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 \25\ will take
advantage of this exemption and they will use this exemption in
conjunction with transactions involving 25.6 percent of their client
plans.\26\
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\25\ 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.
\26\ This is a weighted average of the Department's estimates of
the share of DB plans and DC plans with broker-dealer relationships.
The Department welcomes comment on this estimate.
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Disclosures and Consent Forms
In order to receive commissions in conjunction with the purchase of
mutual fund shares or securities products, sections III(b) and III(d)
of PTE 86-128 as amended require financial institutions to obtain
advance written authorization from a plan fiduciary independent of the
financial institutions (the authorizing fiduciary) and furnish the
authorizing fiduciary with information necessary to determine whether
an authorization should be made, including a copy of the exemption, a
form for termination, a description of the financial institution's
brokerage placement practices, and any other reasonably available
information regarding the matter that the authorizing fiduciary
requests.
Section III(c) requires financial institutions to obtain annual
written reauthorization or provide the authorizing fiduciary with an
annual termination form explaining that the authorization is terminable
at will, without penalty to the plan, and that failure to return the
form will result in continued authorization for the financial
institution to engage in covered transactions on behalf of the plan.
Furthermore, Section III(e) requires the financial institution to
provide the authorizing fiduciary with either (a) a confirmation slip
for each individual securities transaction within 10 days of the
transaction containing the information described in Rule 10b-10(a)(1-7)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 17 CFR 240.10b-10 or (b) a
quarterly report containing certain financial information including the
total of all transaction-related charges incurred by the plan. The
Department assumes that financial institutions will meet this
requirement for 40 percent of plans through the provision of a
confirmation slip, which already is provided to their clients in the
normal course of business, while financial institutions will meet this
requirement for 60 percent of plans through provision of the quarterly
report.
Finally, Section III(f) requires the financial institution to
provide the authorizing fiduciary with an annual summary of the
confirmation slips or quarterly reports. The summary must contain the
following information: The total of all securities transaction-related
charges incurred by the plan during the period in connection with the
covered securities transactions, the amount of the securities
transaction-related charges retained by the authorized person and the
amount of these charges paid to other persons for execution or other
services; a description of the financial institution's brokerage
placement practices if such practices have materially changed during
the period covered by the summary; and a portfolio turnover ratio
calculated in a manner reasonable designed to provide the authorizing
fiduciary the information needed to assist in discharging its duty of
prudence. Section III(i) states that a financial institution that is a
discretionary plan trustee who qualifies to use the exemption must
provide the authorizing fiduciary with an annual report showing
separately the commissions paid to affiliated brokers and non-
affiliated brokers, on both a total dollar basis and a cents-per-share
basis.
[[Page 22029]]
Legal Costs
According to the 2012 Form 5500, approximately 677,000 plans exist
in the United States that could enter into relationships with financial
institutions. Of these plans, the Department assumes that 6.5 percent
are new plans or plans entering into relationships with new financial
institutions and, as stated previously, 25.6 percent of these plans
will engage in transactions covered under this PTE. The Department
estimates that granting written authorization to the financial
institutions will require one hour of legal time for each of the
approximately 11,000 plans entering into new relationships with
financial institutions each year. The Department also estimates that it
will take one hour of legal time for each of the approximately 2,800
financial institutions to produce the annual termination form. This
legal work results in a total of approximately 14,000 hours annually at
an equivalent cost of $1.8 million.
Production and Distribution of Required Disclosures
The Department estimates that approximately 173,000 plans have
relationships with financial institutions and are likely to engage in
transactions covered under this exemption. Of these 173,000 plans,
approximately 11,000 are new clients to the financial institutions each
year.
The Department estimates that 11,000 plans will send financial
institutions a two page authorization letter each year. Prior to
obtaining authorization, financial institutions will send the same
11,000 plans a seven page pre-authorization disclosure. Paper copies of
the authorization letter and the pre-authorization disclosure will be
mailed for 62 percent of the plans and distributed electronically for
the remaining 38 percent. The Department estimates that electronic
distribution will result in a de minimis cost, while paper distribution
will cost approximately $10,000. Paper distribution of the letter and
disclosure will also require two minutes of clerical preparation time
resulting in a total of 500 hours at an equivalent cost of
approximately $14,000.
The Department estimates that all of the 173,000 plans will receive
a two-page annual termination form from financial institutions; 38
percent will be distributed electronically and 62 percent will be
mailed. The Department estimates that electronic distribution will
result in a de minimis cost, while the paper distribution will cost
$63,000. Paper distribution will also require two minutes of clerical
preparation time resulting in a total of 4,000 hours at an equivalent
cost of $109,000.
The Department estimates that 60 percent of plans (approximately
104,000) will receive quarterly two-page transaction reports from
financial institutions four times per year; 38 percent will be
distributed electronically and 62 percent will be mailed. The
Department estimates that electronic distribution will result in a de
minimis cost, while paper distribution will cost $152,000. Paper
distribution will also require two minutes of clerical preparation time
resulting in a total of 9,000 hours at an equivalent cost of $261,000.
The Department estimates that all of the 173,000 plans will receive
a five-page annual statement with a two-page summary of commissions
paid from financial institutions; 38 percent will be distributed
electronically and 62 percent will be mailed. The Department assumes
that these disclosures will be distributed with the annual termination
form, resulting in no further hour burden or postage cost. Electronic
distribution will result in a de minimis cost, while the paper
distribution will cost $38,000 in materials costs.
Finally, the Department estimates that it will cost financial
institutions $3 per plan, for each of the 173,000 plans, to track all
the transactions data necessary to populate the quarterly transaction
reports, the annual statements, and the report of commissions paid.
This results in an IT tracking cost of $520,000.
Recordkeeping Requirement
Section VI of PTE 86-128, as amended, and condition (e) of PTE 75-
1, Part II, as amended, would require 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, participants and beneficiaries
and IRA owners to determine whether the conditions of this exemption
have been met.
The Department assumes that each financial institution will
maintain these records on behalf of their client plans in their normal
course of business. 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 per year 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 VI(b) of PTE 86-128 and Section (f) of PTE 75-
1, Part II, provide that parties 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
party 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 amended class exemption, over 14,000 financial
institutions and plans will produce 958,000 disclosures and notices
annually. These disclosures and notices will result in almost 29,000
burden hours annually, at an equivalent cost of $2.4 million. This
exemption will also result in a total annual cost burden of almost
$783,000.
These paperwork burden estimates are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: Revision of a Currently Approved Information
Collection.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Titles: (1) Proposed Amendment to and Partial Revocation of
Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 86-128 for Securities
Transactions Involving Employee Benefit Plans and Broker-Dealers;
Proposed Amendment to and Partial Revocation of PTE 75-1, and (2)
Proposed Investment Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210-0059.
[[Page 22030]]
Affected Public: Business or other for-profit.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 14.059.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 957,880.
Frequency of Response: Initially, Annually, When engaging in
exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 28,795 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $782,647.
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 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 a 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 plan participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners;
(3) If granted, an exemption is applicable to a particular
transaction only if the transaction satisfies the conditions specified
in the exemption; and
(4) These amended exemptions, 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 amendments and proposed revocations to the
address and within the time period set forth above. All comments
received will be made a part of the public record for this proceeding
and will be available for examination on the Department's Internet Web
site. Comments should state the reasons for the writer's interest in
the proposed amendment and revocation. Comments received will be
available for public inspection at the above address.
Proposed Amendment to PTE 86-128
Under section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974, as amended (ERISA) and section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), and in accordance with the
procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644
(October 27, 2011)), the Department proposes to amend and restate PTE
86-128 as set forth below:
Section I. Covered Transactions
(a) Securities Transactions Exemptions. If each of the conditions
of Sections II and III of this exemption is either satisfied or not
applicable under Section V, the restrictions of ERISA section 406(b)
and the taxes imposed by Code section 4975(a) and (b) by reason of Code
section 4975(c)(1)(E) or (F) shall not apply to--(1) A plan fiduciary's
using its authority to cause a plan to pay a Commission to that person
or a Related Entity as agent for the plan, but only to the extent that
such transactions are not excessive, under the circumstances, in either
amount or frequency; and (2) A plan fiduciary's acting as the agent in
an agency cross transaction for both the plan and one or more other
parties to the transaction and the receipt by such person of a
Commission from one or more other parties to the transaction.
(b) Mutual Fund Transactions Exemption. If each condition of
Sections II and IV is either satisfied or not applicable under Section
V, the restrictions of ERISA sections 406(a)(1)(A), 406(a)(1)(D) and
406(b) and the taxes imposed by Code section 4975(a) and (b), by reason
of Code section 4975(c)(1)(A), (D), (E) and (F), shall not apply to a
plan fiduciary's using its authority to cause the plan to purchase
shares of an open end investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq.) (Mutual Fund)
from such fiduciary, acting as principal, and to the receipt of a
Commission by such person in connection with such transaction, but only
to the extent that such transactions are not excessive, under the
circumstances, in either amount or frequency; provided that, the
fiduciary (1) is a broker-dealer registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.), and (2) is not a
principal underwriter for, or affiliated with, such Mutual Fund, within
the meaning of sections 2(a)(29) and 2(a)(3) of the Investment Company
Act of 1940.
(c) Scope of these Exemptions. The exemptions set forth in Section
I(a) and (b) do not apply to a transaction if (1) the plan is an
Individual Retirement Account and (2) the fiduciary engaging in the
transaction is a fiduciary by reason of the provision of investment
advice for a fee, described in Code section 4975(e)(3)(B) and the
applicable regulations.
Section II. Impartial Conduct Standards
If the fiduciary engaging in the covered transaction is a fiduciary
within the meaning of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(i) or (ii), or Code
section 4975(e)(3)(A) or (B), with respect to the assets involved in
the transaction, the following conditions must be satisfied with
respect to such transaction to the extent they are applicable to the
fiduciary's actions:
(a) When exercising fiduciary authority described in ERISA section
3(21)(A)(i) or (ii), or Code section 4975(e)(3)(A) or (B), with respect
to the assets involved in the transaction, the fiduciary acts in the
Best Interest of the plan.
(b) All compensation received by the person and any Related Entity
in connection with the transaction is reasonable in relation to the
total services the person and any Related Entity provide to the plan.
(c) The fiduciary's statements about recommended investments, fees,
material conflicts of interest, and any other matters relevant to a
plan's investment decisions, are not misleading. For this purpose, a
fiduciary's failure to disclose a Material Conflict of Interest
relevant to the services the fiduciary is providing or other actions it
is taking in relation to a plan's investment decisions is deemed to be
a misleading statement
III. Conditions Applicable to Transactions Described in Section I(a)
Except to the extent otherwise provided in Section V of this
exemption, Section I of this exemption
[[Page 22031]]
applies only if the following conditions are satisfied:
(a) The person engaging in the covered transaction is not a trustee
(other than a nondiscretionary trustee), an administrator of the plan,
or an employer any of whose employees are covered by the plan.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, this condition does not apply to a
trustee that satisfies Section III(h) and (i).
(b) The covered transaction is performed under a written
authorization executed in advance by a fiduciary of each plan whose
assets are involved in the transaction, which plan fiduciary is
independent of the person engaging in the covered transaction. The
authorization is terminable at will by the plan, without penalty to the
plan, upon receipt by the authorized person of written notice of
termination.
(c) The authorized person obtains annual reauthorization to engage
in transactions pursuant to the exemption in the method set forth in
Section III(b). Alternatively, the authorized person may supply a form
expressly providing an election to terminate the authorization
described in Section III(b) with instructions on the use of the form to
the authorizing fiduciary no less than annually. The instructions for
such form must include the following information:
(1) The authorization is terminable at will by the plan, without
penalty to the plan, when the authorized person receives (via first
class mail, personal delivery, or email) from the authorizing fiduciary
or other plan official having authority to terminate the authorization,
a written notice of the intent of the plan to terminate authorization;
and
(2) Failure to return the form or some other written notification
of the plan's intent to terminate the authorization within thirty (30)
days from the date the termination form is sent to the authorizing
fiduciary will result in the continued authorization of the authorized
person to engage in the covered transactions on behalf of the plan.
(d) Within three months before an initial authorization is made
pursuant to Section III(b), the authorizing fiduciary is furnished with
a copy of this exemption, the form for termination of authorization
described in Section III(c), a description of the person's brokerage
placement practices, and any other reasonably available information
regarding the matter that the authorizing fiduciary requests.
(e) The person engaging in a covered transaction furnishes the
authorizing fiduciary with either:
(1) A confirmation slip for each securities transaction underlying
a covered transaction within ten business days of the securities
transaction containing the information described in Rule 10b-10(a)(1-7)
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934; or
(2) at least once every three months and not later than 45 days
following the period to which it relates, a report disclosing:
(A) A compilation of the information that would be provided to the
plan pursuant to Section III(e)(1) during the three-month period
covered by the report;
(B) the total of all securities transaction-related charges
incurred by the plan during such period in connection with such covered
transactions; and
(C) the amount of the securities transaction-related charges
retained by such person, and the amount of such charges paid to other
persons for execution or other services. For purposes of this paragraph
(e), the words ``incurred by the plan'' shall be construed to mean
``incurred by the pooled fund'' when such person engages in covered
transactions on behalf of a pooled fund in which the plan participates.
(f) The authorizing fiduciary is furnished with a summary of the
information required under Section III(e)(1) at least once per year.
The summary must be furnished within 45 days after the end of the
period to which it relates, and must contain the following:
(1) The total of all securities transaction-related charges
incurred by the plan during the period in connection with covered
securities transactions.
(2) The amount of the securities transaction-related charges
retained by the authorized person and the amount of these charges paid
to other persons for execution or other services.
(3) A description of the brokerage placement practices of the
person that is engaging in the covered transaction, if such practices
have materially changed during the period covered by the summary.
(4)(A) A portfolio turnover ratio, calculated in a manner which is
reasonably designed to provide the authorizing fiduciary with the
information needed to assist in making a prudent determination
regarding the amount of turnover in the portfolio. The requirements of
this paragraph (f)(4)(A) will be met if the ``annualized portfolio
turnover ratio,'' calculated in the manner described in paragraph
(f)(4)(B), is contained in the summary.
(B) The ``annualized portfolio turnover ratio'' shall be calculated
as a percentage of the plan assets consisting of securities or cash
over which the authorized person had discretionary investment
authority, or with respect to which such person rendered, or had any
responsibility to render, investment advice within the meaning of ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii), (the portfolio) at any time or times (management
period(s)) during the period covered by the report. First, the
``portfolio turnover ratio'' (not annualized) is obtained by dividing
(i) the lesser of the aggregate dollar amounts of purchases or sales of
portfolio securities during the management period(s) by (ii) the
monthly average of the market value of the portfolio securities during
all management period(s). Such monthly average is calculated by
totaling the market values of the portfolio securities as of the
beginning and end of each management period and as of the end of each
month that ends within such period(s), and dividing the sum by the
number of valuation dates so used. For purposes of this calculation,
all debt securities whose maturities at the time of acquisition were
one year or less are excluded from both the numerator and the
denominator. The ``annualized portfolio turnover ratio'' is then
derived by multiplying the ``portfolio turnover ratio'' by an
annualizing factor. The annualizing factor is obtained by dividing
(iii) the number twelve by (iv) the aggregate duration of the
management period(s) expressed in months (and fractions thereof).
Examples of the use of this formula are provided in Section VII.
(C) The information described in this paragraph (f)(4) is not
required to be furnished in any case where the authorized person has
not exercised discretionary authority over trading in the plan's
account, nor provided investment advice within the meaning of ERISA
section 3(21)(A)(ii), during the period covered by the report.
For purposes of this paragraph (f), the words ``incurred by the
plan'' shall be construed to mean ``incurred by the pooled fund'' when
such person engages in covered transactions on behalf of a pooled fund
in which the plan participates.
(g) If an agency cross transaction to which Section V(a) does not
apply is involved, the following conditions must also be satisfied:
(1) The information required under Section III(d) or Section
V(c)(1)(B) of this exemption includes a statement to the effect that
with respect to agency cross transactions, the person effecting or
executing the transactions will have a potentially conflicting division
of
[[Page 22032]]
loyalties and responsibilities regarding the parties to the
transactions;
(2) The summary required under Section III(f) of this exemption
includes a statement identifying the total number of agency cross
transactions during the period covered by the summary and the total
amount of all commissions or other remuneration received or to be
received from all sources by the person engaging in the transactions in
connection with the transactions during the period;
(3) The person effecting or executing the agency cross transaction
has the discretionary authority to act on behalf of, and/or provide
investment advice to, either (A) one or more sellers or (B) one or more
buyers with respect to the transaction, but not both.
(4) The agency cross transaction is a purchase or sale, for no
consideration other than cash payment against prompt delivery of a
security for which market quotations are readily available; and
(5) The agency cross transaction is executed or effected at a price
that is at or between the independent bid and independent ask prices
for the security prevailing at the time of the transaction.
(h) Except pursuant to Section V(b), a trustee (other than a non-
discretionary trustee) may engage in a covered transaction only with a
plan that has total net assets with a value of at least $50 million and
in the case of a pooled fund, the $50 million requirement will be met
if 50 percent or more of the units of beneficial interest in such
pooled fund are held by plans having total net assets with a value of
at least $50 million.
For purposes of the net asset tests described above, where a group
of plans is maintained by a single employer or controlled group of
employers, as defined in ERISA section 407(d)(7), the $50 million net
asset requirement may be met by aggregating the assets of such plans,
if the assets are pooled for investment purposes in a single master
trust.
(i) The trustee described in Section III(h) engaging in a covered
transaction furnishes, at least annually, to the authorizing fiduciary
of each plan the following:
(1) The aggregate brokerage commissions, expressed in dollars, paid
by the plan to brokerage firms affiliated with the trustee;
(2) the aggregate brokerage commissions, expressed in dollars, paid
by the plan to brokerage firms unaffiliated with the trustee;
(3) the average brokerage commissions, expressed as cents per
share, paid by the plan to brokerage firms affiliated with the trustee;
and
(4) the average brokerage commissions, expressed as cents per
share, paid by the plan (to brokerage firms unaffiliated with the
trustee.
For purposes of this paragraph (i), the words ``paid by the plan''
shall be construed to mean ``paid by the pooled fund'' when the trustee
engages in covered transactions on behalf of a pooled fund in which the
plan participates.
(j) In the case of securities transactions involving shares of
Mutual Funds, other than exchange traded funds, at the time of the
transaction, the shares are purchased or sold at net asset value (NAV)
plus a commission, in accordance with applicable securities laws and
regulations.
Section IV. Conditions Applicable to Transactions Described in Section
I(b)
Section I(b) of this exemption applies only if the following
conditions are satisfied:
(a) The fiduciary engaging in the covered transaction customarily
purchases and sells securities for its own account in the ordinary
course of its business as a broker-dealer.
(b) At the time the transaction is entered into, the terms are at
least as favorable to the plan as the terms generally available in an
arm's length transaction with an unrelated party.
(c) Except to the extent otherwise provided in Section V, the
requirements of Section III(a) through III(f), III(h) and III(i) (if
applicable), and III(j) are satisfied with respect to the transaction.
Section V. Exceptions From Conditions
(a) Certain agency cross transactions. Section III of this
exemption does not apply in the case of an agency cross transaction,
provided that the person effecting or executing the transaction:
(1) Does not render investment advice to any plan for a fee within
the meaning of ERISA section 3(21)(A)(ii) with respect to the
transaction;
(2) is not otherwise a fiduciary who has investment discretion with
respect to any plan assets involved in the transaction, see 29 CFR
2510.3-21(d); and
(3) does not have the authority to engage, retain or discharge any
person who is or is proposed to be a fiduciary regarding any such plan
assets.
(b) Recapture of profits. Sections III(a) and III(i) do not apply
in any case where the person who is engaging in a covered transaction
returns or credits to the plan all profits earned by that person and
any Related Entity in connection with the securities transactions
associated with the covered transaction.
(c) Special rules for pooled funds. In the case of a person
engaging in a covered transaction on behalf of an account or fund for
the collective investment of the assets of more than one plan (a pooled
fund):
(1) Sections III(b), (c) and (d) of this exemption do not apply
if--
(A) the arrangement under which the covered transaction is
performed is subject to the prior and continuing authorization, in the
manner described in this paragraph (c)(1), of a plan fiduciary with
respect to each plan whose assets are invested in the pooled fund who
is independent of the person. The requirement that the authorizing
fiduciary be independent of the person shall not apply in the case of a
plan covering only employees of the person, if the requirements of
Section V(c)(2)(A) and (B) are met.
(B) The authorizing fiduciary is furnished with any information
that is reasonably necessary to determine whether the authorization
should be given or continued, not less than 30 days prior to
implementation of the arrangement or material change thereto, including
(but not limited to) a description of the person's brokerage placement
practices, and, where requested any other reasonably available
information regarding the matter upon the reasonable request of the
authorizing fiduciary at any time.
(C) In the event an authorizing fiduciary submits a notice in
writing to the person engaging in or proposing to engage in the covered
transaction objecting to the implementation of, material change in, or
continuation of, the arrangement, the plan on whose behalf the
objection was tendered is given the opportunity to terminate its
investment in the pooled fund, without penalty to the plan, within such
time as may be necessary to effect the withdrawal in an orderly manner
that is equitable to all withdrawing plans and to the nonwithdrawing
plans. In the case of a plan that elects to withdraw under this
subparagraph (c)(1)(C), the withdrawal shall be effected prior to the
implementation of, or material change in, the arrangement; but an
existing arrangement need not be discontinued by reason of a plan
electing to withdraw.
(D) In the case of a plan whose assets are proposed to be invested
in the pooled fund subsequent to the implementation of the arrangement
and that has not authorized the arrangement in the manner described in
Section V(c)(1)(B) and (C), the plan's investment in the pooled fund is
subject to the prior written authorization of an authorizing
[[Page 22033]]
fiduciary who satisfies the requirements of subparagraph (c)(1)(A).
(2) Section III(a) of this exemption, to the extent that it
prohibits the person from being the employer of employees covered by a
plan investing in a pool managed by the person, does not apply if--
(A) The person is an ``investment manager'' as defined in section
3(38) of ERISA, and
(B) Either (i) the person returns or credits to the pooled fund all
profits earned by the person and any Related Entity in connection with
all covered transactions engaged in by the fund, or (ii) the pooled
fund satisfies the requirements of paragraph V(c)(3).
(3) A pooled fund satisfies the requirements of this paragraph for
a fiscal year of the fund if--
(A) On the first day of such fiscal year, and immediately following
each acquisition of an interest in the pooled fund during the fiscal
year by any plan covering employees of the person, the aggregate fair
market value of the interests in such fund of all plans covering
employees of the person does not exceed twenty percent of the fair
market value of the total assets of the fund; and
(B) The aggregate brokerage commissions received by the person and
any Related Entity, in connection with covered transactions engaged in
by the person on behalf of all pooled funds in which a plan covering
employees of the person participates, do not exceed five percent of the
total brokerage commissions received by the person and any Related
Entity from all sources in such fiscal year.
Section VI. Recordkeeping Requirements
(a) The plan fiduciary engaging in the covered transactions
maintains or causes to be maintained for a period of six years, in a
manner that is accessible for audit and examination, the records
necessary to enable the persons described in Section VI(b) to determine
whether the conditions of this exemption have been met, except that:
(1) If the records necessary to enable the persons described in
Section VI(b) below to determine whether the conditions of the
exemption have been met are lost or destroyed, due to circumstances
beyond the control of the such plan fiduciary, then no prohibited
transaction will be considered to have occurred solely on the basis of
the unavailability of those records; and
(2) No party in interest, other than such plan fiduciary who is
responsible for record-keeping, shall 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 the records are not maintained or are
not available for examination as required by paragraph (b) below; and
(b)(1) Except as provided below in subparagraph (2) and
notwithstanding any provisions of ERISA section 504(a)(2) and (b), the
records referred to in the above paragraph are unconditionally
available at their customary location for examination during normal
business hours by--
(A) Any duly authorized employee or representative of the
Department or the Internal Revenue Service;
(B) Any fiduciary of the plan or any duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary;
(C) Any contributing employer and any employee organization whose
members are covered by the plan, or any authorized employee or
representative of these entities; or
(D) Any participant or beneficiary of the plan or the duly
authorized representative of such participant or beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in subparagraph (1)(B)-(D) above
shall be authorized to examine trade secrets or commercial or financial
information of such fiduciary which is privileged or confidential.
(3) Should such plan fiduciary refuse to disclose information on
the basis that such information is exempt from disclosure, such plan
fiduciary shall, by the close of the thirtieth (30th) day following the
request, provide a written notice advising that person of the reasons
for the refusal and that the Department may request such information.
Section VII. Definitions
The following definitions apply to this exemption:
(a) The term ``person'' includes the person and affiliates of the
person.
(b) An ``affiliate'' of a person includes the following:
(1) Any person directly or indirectly, through one or more
intermediaries, controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with, the person;
(2) Any officer, director, partner, employee, relative (as defined
in ERISA section 3(15)), brother, sister, or spouse of a brother or
sister, of the person; and
(3) Any corporation or partnership of which the person is an
officer, director or employee or in which such person is a partner.
A person is not an affiliate of another person solely because one
of them has investment discretion over the other's assets. The term
``control'' means the power to exercise a controlling influence over
the management or policies of a person other than an individual.
(c) An ``agency cross transaction'' is a securities transaction in
which the same person acts as agent for both any seller and any buyer
for the purchase or sale of a security.
(d) The term ``covered transaction'' means an action described in
Section I of this exemption.
(e) The term ``effecting or executing a securities transaction''
means the execution of a securities transaction as agent for another
person and/or the performance of clearance, settlement, custodial or
other functions ancillary thereto.
(f) A plan fiduciary is ``independent'' of a person if it (1) is
not the person, (2) does not receive compensation or other
consideration for his or her own account from the person, and (3) does
not have a relationship to or an interest in the person that might
affect the exercise of the person's best judgment in connection with
transactions described in this exemption. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, if the plan is an individual retirement account not subject
to title I of ERISA, and is beneficially owned by an employee, officer,
director or partner of the person engaging in covered transactions with
the IRA pursuant to this exemption, such beneficial owner is deemed
``independent'' for purposes of this definition.
(g) The term ``profit'' includes all charges relating to effecting
or executing securities transactions, less reasonable and necessary
expenses including reasonable indirect expenses (such as overhead
costs) properly allocated to the performance of these transactions
under generally accepted accounting principles.
(h) The term ``securities transaction'' means the purchase or sale
of securities.
(i) The term ``nondiscretionary trustee'' of a plan means a trustee
or custodian whose powers and duties with respect to any assets of the
plan are limited to (1) the provision of nondiscretionary trust
services to the plan, and (2) duties imposed on the trustee by any
provision or provisions of ERISA or the Code. The term
``nondiscretionary trust services'' means custodial services and
services ancillary to custodial services, none of which services are
discretionary. For purposes of this exemption, a person does not fail
to be a nondiscretionary trustee solely by reason of having been
delegated, by the sponsor of a master or prototype plan, the power to
amend such plan.
(j) The term ``plan'' means an employee benefit plan described in
ERISA section 3(3) and any plan
[[Page 22034]]
described in Code section 4975(e)(1) (including an Individual
Retirement Account as defined in VII(k)).
(k) The terms ``Individual Retirement Account'' or ``IRA'' mean 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.
(l) The term ``Related Entity'' means an entity, other than an
affiliate, in which a person has an interest which may affect the
person's exercise of its best judgment as a fiduciary.
(m) A fiduciary acts in the ``Best Interest'' of the plan when the
fiduciary acts 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 plan, without regard to the financial
or other interests of the fiduciary, its affiliate, a Related Entity or
any other party.
(n) The term ``Commission'' means a brokerage commission or sales
load paid for the service of effecting or executing the transaction,
but not a 12b-1 fee, revenue sharing payment, marketing fee,
administrative fee, sub-TA fee or sub-accounting fee.
(o) A ``Material Conflict of Interest'' exists when person has a
financial interest that could affect the exercise of its best judgment
as a fiduciary in rendering advice to a Plan or IRA.
Section VIII. Examples Illustrating the Use of the Annualized Portfolio
Turnover Ratio Described in Section III(f)(4)(B)
(a) M, an investment manager affiliated with a broker dealer that M
uses to effect securities transactions for the accounts that it
manages, exercises investment discretion over the account of plan P for
the period January 1, 2014, though June 30, 2014, after which the
relationship between M and P ceases. The market values of P's account
with A at the relevant times (excluding debt securities having a
maturity of one year or less at the time of acquisition) are:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market value ($
Date millions)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
January 1, 2014...................................... 10.4
January 31, 2014..................................... 10.2
February 28, 2014.................................... 9.9
March 31, 2014....................................... 10.0
April 30, 2014....................................... 10.6
May 31, 2014......................................... 11.5
June 30, 2014........................................ 12.0
Sum of market value.................................. 74.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aggregate purchases during the 6-month period were $850,000;
aggregate sales were $1,000,000, excluding in each case debt securities
having a maturity of one year or less at the time of acquisition.
For purposes of Section III(f)(4) of this exemption, M computes the
annualized portfolio turnover as follows:
A = $850,000 (lesser of purchases or sales)
B = $10,657,143 ($74.6 million divided by 7, i.e., number of
valuation dates)
Annualizing factor = C/D = 12/6 = 2
Annualized portfolio turnover ratio = 2 x (850,000/10,657,143) =
0.160 = 16.0 percent
(b) Same facts as (a), except that M manages the portfolio through
July 15, 2014, and, in addition, resumes management of the portfolio on
November 10, 2014, through the end of the year. The additional relevant
valuation dates and portfolio values are:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Market value ($
Dates millions)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
July 15, 2014........................................ 12.2
November 10, 2014.................................... 9.4
November 30, 2014.................................... 9.6
December 31, 2014.................................... 9.8
Sum of market values................................. 41.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
During the periods July 1, 2014, through July 15, 2014, and
November 10, 2014, through December 31, 2014, there were an additional
$650,000 of purchases and $400,000 of sales. Thus, total purchases were
$1,500,000 (i.e., $850,000 + $650,000) and total sales were $1,400,000
(i.e., $1,000,000 + $400,000) for the management periods.
M now computes the annualized portfolio turnover as follows:
A = $1,400,000 (lesser of aggregate purchases or sales)
B = $10,509,091 ($10,509,091 ($115.6 million divided by 11)
Annualizing factor = C/D = 12/ (6.5 + 1.67) = 1.47
Annualized portfolio turnover ratio = 1.47 x (1,400,000/10,509,091)
= 0.196 = 19.6 percent.
Proposed Revocation of Parts I(b), I(c) and II(2) of PTE 75-1 and
Restatement of PTE 75-1
The Department is proposing to revoke Parts I(b), I(c) and II(2) of
PTE 75-1. In connection with the proposed revocation of Part II(2), the
Department is republishing Part II of PTE 75-1. Part II of PTE 75-1
shall read as follows:
The restrictions of section 406(a) of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974 (the Act) and the taxes imposed by section
4975(a) and (b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code), by
reason of section 4975(c)(1)(A) through (D) of the Code, shall not
apply to any purchase or sale of a security between an employee benefit
plan and a broker-dealer registered under the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.), a reporting dealer who makes primary
markets in securities of the United States Government or of any agency
of the United States Government (Government securities) and reports
daily to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York its positions with
respect to Government securities and borrowings thereon, or a bank
supervised by the United States or a State if the following conditions
are met:
(a) In the case of such broker-dealer, it customarily purchases and
sells securities for its own account in the ordinary course of its
business as a broker-dealer.
(b) In the case of such reporting dealer or bank, it customarily
purchases and sells Government securities for its own account in the
ordinary course of its business and such purchase or sale between the
plan and such reporting dealer or bank is a purchase or sale of
Government securities.
(c) Such transaction is at least as favorable to the plan as an
arm's length transaction with an unrelated party would be, and it was
not, at the time of such transaction, a prohibited transaction within
the meaning of section 503(b) of the Code.
(d) Neither the broker-dealer, reporting dealer, bank, nor any
affiliate thereof has or exercises any discretionary authority or
control (except as a directed trustee) with respect to the investment
of the plan assets involved in the transaction, or renders investment
advice (within the meaning of 29 CFR 2510.3-21(c)) with respect to
those assets.
(e) The broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank engaging in the
covered transaction maintains or causes to be maintained for a period
of six years from the date of such transaction such records as are
necessary to enable the persons described in paragraph (f) of this
exemption to determine whether the conditions of this exemption have
been met, except that:
(1) No party in interest other than the broker-dealer, reporting
dealer, or bank engaging in the covered transaction, shall be subject
to the civil penalty, which may be assessed under section 502(i) of the
Act, or to the taxes imposed by section 4975(a) and (b) of the Code, if
such records are not maintained, or are not available for examination
as required by paragraph (f) below; and
[[Page 22035]]
(2) A prohibited transaction will not be deemed to have occurred
if, due to circumstances beyond the control of the broker-dealer,
reporting dealer, or bank, such records are lost or destroyed prior to
the end of such six year period.
(f)(1) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in subsections
(a)(2) and (b) of section 504 of the Act, the records referred to in
paragraph (e) are unconditionally available for examination during
normal business hours by:
A. Any duly authorized employee or representative of the Department
or the Internal Revenue Service;
B. Any fiduciary of the plan or any duly authorized employee or
representative of such fiduciary;
C. Any contributing employer and any employee organization whose
members are covered by the plan, or any authorized employee or
representative of these entities; or
D. Any participant or beneficiary of the plan or the duly
authorized representative of such participant or beneficiary; and
(2) None of the persons described in subparagraph (1)(B)-(D) above
shall be authorized to examine trade secrets or commercial or financial
information of the broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank which is
privileged or confidential.
(3) Should such broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank refuse to
disclose information on the basis that such information is exempt from
disclosure, the broker-dealer, reporting dealer, or bank shall, by the
close of the thirtieth (30th) day following the request, provide a
written notice advising that person of the reasons for the refusal and
that the Department may request such information.
For purposes of this exemption, the terms ``broker-dealer,''
``reporting dealer'' and ``bank'' shall include such persons and any
affiliates thereof, and the term ``affiliate'' shall be defined in the
same manner as that term is defined in 29 CFR 2510.3-21(e) and 26 CFR
54.4975-9(e).
Signed at Washington, DC, this 14th day of April, 2015.
Phyllis C. Borzi,
Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administration,
Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2015-08838 Filed 4-15-15; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P