Fiduciary Duties Regarding Proxy Voting and Shareholder Rights, 81658-81695 [2020-27465]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 242 / Wednesday, December 16, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Parts 2509 and 2550
RIN 1210–AB91
Fiduciary Duties Regarding Proxy
Voting and Shareholder Rights
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of Labor
(Department) is amending the
‘‘Investment Duties’’ regulation to
address the application of the prudence
and exclusive purpose duties under the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA) to the exercise of
shareholder rights, including proxy
voting, the use of written proxy voting
policies and guidelines, and the
selection and monitoring of proxy
advisory firms. This document also
removes Interpretive Bulletin 2016–01
from the Code of Federal Regulations as
it no longer represents the view of the
Department regarding the proper
interpretation of ERISA with respect to
the exercise of shareholder rights by
fiduciaries of ERISA-covered plans.
DATES: Effective Date: The final rule is
effective on January 15, 2021.
Applicability Dates: See Section
B.3(vi) of this document and
§ 2550.404a–1(g) of the final rule for
compliance dates for § 2550.404a–
1(e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E), (e)(2)(iv), (e)(4)(ii)
of the final rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jason A. DeWitt, Office of Regulations
and Interpretations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, (202) 693–
8500. This is not a toll-free number.
Customer Service Information:
Individuals interested in obtaining
information from the Department of
Labor concerning ERISA and employee
benefit plans may call the Employee
Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA) Toll-Free Hotline, at 1–866–
444–EBSA (3272) or visit the
Department of Labor’s website
(www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
A. Background and Purpose of
Regulatory Action
Title I of the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA)
establishes minimum standards for the
operation of private-sector employee
benefit plans and includes fiduciary
responsibility rules governing the
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conduct of plan fiduciaries.1 In
connection with proxy voting, the
Department’s longstanding position is
that the fiduciary act of managing plan
assets includes the management of
voting rights (as well as other
shareholder rights) appurtenant to
shares of stock. In carrying out these
duties, ERISA mandates that fiduciaries
act ‘‘prudently’’ and ‘‘solely in the
interest’’ and ‘‘for the exclusive
purpose’’ of providing benefits to
participants and their beneficiaries.2
This regulatory project was
undertaken, in part, to confirm that,
when exercising shareholder rights,
ERISA plan fiduciaries may not
subordinate the interests of plan
participants and beneficiaries in
receiving financial benefits under a plan
to non-pecuniary objectives.3 This duty
of loyalty—a bedrock principle of
ERISA, with deep roots in the common
law of trusts—requires those serving as
fiduciaries to act with a single-minded
focus on the interests of beneficiaries.
The duty of prudence prevents a
fiduciary from choosing an investment
alternative that is financially less
beneficial than reasonably available
alternatives. The Supreme Court has
described the duty of loyalty as
requiring that fiduciaries act with an
‘‘eye single’’ to the interests of
participants and beneficiaries,4 and
appellate courts have described ERISA’s
fiduciary duties as ‘‘the highest known
to the law.’’ 5 The subject of this
rulemaking is how these ERISA
fiduciary duties apply to the exercise of
shareholder rights by ERISA-covered
plans, as a result of the Department’s
belief that confusion exists among some
fiduciaries and other stakeholders with
respect to the exercise of shareholder
rights, perhaps due in part to varied
statements the Department has made on
1 Throughout this preamble, the Department’s
discussion of plan fiduciaries includes named
fiduciaries under the plan, along with any persons
that named fiduciaries have designated to carry out
fiduciary responsibilities as permitted under ERISA
section 405(c)(1). Similarly, references to proxy
voting also encompass situations in which a
fiduciary directly casts a vote in a matter (e.g.,
voting in person at a shareholder meeting) rather
than by proxy.
2 ERISA section 404(a)(1). See also ERISA section
403(c)(1) (‘‘[T]he assets of a plan shall never inure
to the benefit of any employer and shall be held for
the exclusive purposes of providing benefits to
participants in the plan and their beneficiaries’’).
3 Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer, 573 U.S.
409, 421 (2014) (the ‘‘benefits’’ to be pursued by
ERISA fiduciaries as their ‘‘exclusive purpose’’ does
not include ‘‘nonpecuniary benefits’’) (emphasis in
original).
4 Pegram v. Herdrich, 530 U.S. 211, 235 (2000)
(quoting Donovan v. Bierwirth, 680 F.2d 263, 271
(2d Cir. 1982)).
5 See, e.g., Tibble v. Edison Int’l, 843 F.3d 1187,
1197 (9th Cir. 2016).
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the consideration of non-pecuniary or
non-financial factors over the years in
sub-regulatory guidance on these
activities.
The Department began interpreting
the duties of prudence and loyalty and
issuing sub-regulatory guidance in the
area of proxy voting and the exercise of
shareholder rights in the 1980s. The
Department issued an opinion letter to
Avon Products, Inc. in 1988 (the Avon
Letter), in which the Department took
the position that, while the fiduciary act
of managing plan assets that are shares
of corporate stock includes the voting of
proxies appurtenant to those shares, the
named fiduciary of a plan has a duty to
monitor decisions made and actions
taken by investment managers with
regard to proxy voting.6
Subsequent to the Avon Letter, the
Department issued additional guidance
concerning fiduciary duties in the
context of exercising shareholder rights.
In 1994, the Department issued its first
interpretive bulletin on proxy voting,
Interpretive Bulletin 94–2 (IB 94–2).7 IB
94–2 recognized that fiduciaries may
engage in shareholder activities
intended to monitor or influence
corporate management in situations
where the responsible fiduciary
concludes that, after taking into account
the costs involved, there is a reasonable
expectation that such shareholder
activities (by the plan alone or together
with other shareholders) will enhance
the value of the plan’s investment in the
corporation. The Department expected
that increased shareholder engagement
by pension funds—encouraged by the
new interpretive bulletin—would
improve corporate performance and
help ensure companies treated their
employees well.8 However, the
Department also reiterated its view that
ERISA does not permit fiduciaries, in
voting proxies or exercising other
shareholder rights, to subordinate the
6 Letter to Helmuth Fandl, Chairman of the
Retirement Board, Avon Products, Inc. 1988 WL
897696 (Feb. 23, 1988). Only a few commenters on
the proposal mentioned the Avon Letter, either
supporting the views taken in the letter as being
consistent with other professional codes of ethics or
asserting that the proposed rule reversed the intent
of the Avon Letter by establishing a presumption
that voting proxies is a cost to be minimized and
not an asset to be prudently managed.
7 59 FR 38860 (July 29, 1994).
8 See 1994 DOL Press Conference, at 2–4, 10, 15–
16; see also Leslie Wayne, U.S. Prodding
Companies to Activism on Portfolios, N.Y. Times
(July 29, 1994), www.nytimes.com/1994/07/29/
business/us-prodding-companies-to-activism-onportfolios.html (quoting official stating that the
Department is ‘‘trying to encourage corporations to
be activist owners,’’ and that ‘‘such activism is
consistent with your fiduciary duty and we expect
it will improve your corporate performance’’).
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economic interests of participants and
beneficiaries to unrelated objectives.
In October 2008, the Department
replaced IB 94–2 with Interpretive
Bulletin 2008–02 (IB 2008–02).9 The
Department’s intent was to update the
guidance in IB 94–2 and to reflect
interpretive positions issued by the
Department after 1994 on shareholder
engagement and socially-directed proxy
voting initiatives. IB 2008–02 stated that
fiduciaries’ responsibility for managing
proxies includes both deciding to vote
or not to vote.10 IB 2008–02 further
stated that the fiduciary duties
described at ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A)
and (B) require that in voting proxies
the responsible fiduciary shall consider
only those factors that relate to the
economic value of the plan’s investment
and shall not subordinate the interests
of the participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income to unrelated
objectives. In addition, IB 2008–02
stated that votes shall only be cast in
accordance with a plan’s economic
interests. IB 2008–02 explained that if
the responsible fiduciary reasonably
determines that the cost of voting
(including the cost of research, if
necessary, to determine how to vote) is
likely to exceed the expected economic
benefits of voting, the fiduciary has an
obligation to refrain from voting.11 The
Department also reiterated in IB 2008–
02 that any use of plan assets by a plan
fiduciary to further political or social
causes ‘‘that have no connection to
enhancing the economic value of the
plan’s investment’’ through proxy
voting or shareholder activism is a
violation of ERISA’s exclusive purpose
and prudence requirements.12
In 2016, the Department issued
Interpretive Bulletin 2016–01 (IB 2016–
01), which reinstated the language of IB
94–2 with certain modifications.13 IB
2016–01 reiterated and confirmed that
‘‘in voting proxies, the responsible
fiduciary [must] consider those factors
that may affect the value of the plan’s
investment and not subordinate the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries in their retirement income
to unrelated objectives.’’ 14 In further
interpreting ERISA’s duties, the
Department has stated that it has
rejected a construction of ERISA that
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9 73
FR 61731 (Oct. 17, 2008).
at 61732.
11 Id.
12 Id. at 61734.
13 81 FR 95879 (Dec. 29, 2016). In addition, the
Department issued a Field Assistance Bulletin to
provide guidance on IB 2016–01 on April 23, 2018.
See FAB 2018–01, at www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/
files/ebsa/employers-and-advisers/guidance/fieldassistance-bulletins/2018-01.pdf.
14 Id. at 95882.
10 Id.
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would render the statute’s tight limits
on the use of plan assets illusory and
that would permit plan fiduciaries to
expend trust assets to promote myriad
public policy preferences, including
through shareholder engagement
activities, voting proxies, or other
investment policies.15
On September 4, 2020, the
Department published in the Federal
Register a proposed rule to amend the
‘‘Investment Duties’’ regulation at 29
CFR 2550.404a-1 (Investment Duties
regulation) to address the prudence and
loyalty duties under sections
404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA
in the context of proxy voting and other
exercises of shareholder rights by the
responsible ERISA plan fiduciaries, the
use of written proxy voting policies and
guidelines, and the selection and
monitoring of proxy advisory firms.16
The Department explained its belief that
addressing the application of ERISA
fiduciary obligations with respect to
exercise of shareholder rights, including
proxy voting, through notice-andcomment regulatory action under the
Administrative Procedure Act was
appropriate and would benefit ERISA
plan fiduciaries and plan participants.
This regulatory project also was
initiated to respond to a number of other
issues. The Department was concerned,
for example, that the Avon Letter and
subsequent sub-regulatory guidance
from the Department has resulted in a
misplaced belief among some
stakeholders that fiduciaries must
always and in every case vote proxies,
subject to limited exceptions, in order to
fulfill their obligations under ERISA.17
15 See
id. at 95881.
16 85 FR 55219 (Sept. 4, 2020).
17 See, e.g., Barbara Novick, Revised and
Extended Remarks at Harvard Roundtable on
Corporate Governance Keynote Address ‘‘The
Goldilocks Dilemma’’ (Nov. 6, 2019),
www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/
publication/barbara-novick-remarks-harvardroundtable-corporate-governance-the-goldilocksdilemma-110619.pdf, at 15 (Avon Letter indicated
‘‘that asset managers should generally vote shares
as part of their fiduciary duty’’); see Former SEC
Commissioner Daniel M. Gallagher, Outsized Power
& Influence: The Role of Proxy Advisers,
Washington Legal Foundation (Aug. 2014), https://
s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/washlegal-uploads/
upload/legalstudies/workingpaper/GallagherWP814.pdf, at 3; Business Roundtable Comment Letter
on SEC Proposed Amendments to Rule 14a-8 (Feb.
3, 2020), www.sec.gov/comments/s7–22–19/s72219–
6742505–207780.pdf, at 2–3 (‘‘many institutional
investors historically interpreted SEC and
Department of Labor rules and guidance as
requiring institutional investors to vote every share
on every matter on a proxy’’) (citing Gallagher);
Manifest Information Services Ltd, Response to
ESMA Discussion Paper ‘An Overview of the Proxy
Advisory Industry: Considerations on Possible
Policy Options’ (June 2012), www.osc.gov.on.ca/
documents/en/Securities-Category2-Comments/
com_20120622_25–401_wilsons.pdf, at 37
(comment letter from European proxy voting agency
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Further, the Department was responding
to significant changes in the way ERISA
plans invest and changes in the
investment world more broadly since
the Department first issued guidance on
these topics in 1988. Widespread
shareholder activism and corporate
takeovers at that time created an intense
focus on shareholder voting by ERISA
plans and confusion as to how fiduciary
standards applied to such voting.
The Department described in the
proposal a variety of changes in proxy
voting policies and behavior, including
an increase in the percentage of
individual securities held by, and plan
assets managed by, institutional
investors, diminishing the scope of
proxy voting rights and obligations
attributable to individual securities held
by ERISA plans.18 At the same time,
since the 1980s, the type of investments
held by ERISA plans has changed, for
example through the development and
growth of exchange-traded funds,
sector-based equity products, hedge
funds, and passive investments. The
proportion of ERISA plan assets held in
alternative investments like hedge,
private equity, and venture capital
funds has grown significantly.19 When
issuing the proposed rule, the
Department cited evidence that
investors continue to add to the set of
factors considered in their review and
analysis of corporate practices.20
The Department also took note of the
issues and concerns identified during
the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission’s (SEC’s) ongoing proxy
reform initiative.21 Pursuant to the 2019
describing DOL proxy guidance as concerning
‘‘duties of . . . fiduciaries . . . to vote the shares
in companies held by their pension plans’’); Charles
M. Nathan, The Future of Institutional Share
Voting: Three Paradigms (July 23, 2010), https://
corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2010/07/23/the-future-ofinstitutional-share-voting-three-paradigms/ (‘‘the
current system for voting portfolio securities by
application of uniform voting policies . . . is
perceived as successfully addressing the commonly
understood fiduciary duty of institutional investors
to vote all of their portfolio securities on all
matters’’). See also U.S. Department of Labor,
Transcript of Press Conference on Corporate
Activist Role in Pension Planning (July 28, 1994),
at 15–16 (then-Secretary Robert Reich stating that
IB 94–2 ‘‘makes very clear that . . . pension fund
managers, trustees, [and] fiduciaries have an
obligation to vote proxies’’ unless the costs
‘‘substantially outweigh’’ the benefits) (1994 DOL
Press Conference).
18 85 FR 55219 at 55221–22 (Sept. 4, 2020).
19 See id., at 55222.
20 Kosmas Papadopoulos, The Long View: US
Proxy Voting Trends on E&S Issues from 2000 to
2018, Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate
Governance (Jan. 31, 2019), https://
corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2019/01/31/the-long-viewus-proxy-voting-trends-on-es-issues-from-2000-to2018, (2019 ISS Proxy Voting Trends).
21 See, e.g., Commission Guidance Regarding
Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment
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SEC Guidance, where an investment
adviser has the authority to vote on
behalf of its client, the investment
adviser, among other things, must have
a reasonable understanding of the
client’s objectives and must make voting
determinations that are in the best
interest of the client. Under this
guidance, for an investment adviser to
form a reasonable belief that its voting
determinations are in the best interest of
the client, the investment adviser
should conduct an investigation
reasonably designed to ensure that the
voting determination is not based on
materially inaccurate or incomplete
information. The 2019 SEC Guidance
also provides that investment advisers
that retain proxy advisory firms to
provide voting recommendations or
voting execution services should
consider additional steps to evaluate
whether the voting determinations are
consistent with the investment adviser’s
voting policies and procedures, and in
the client’s best interest before the votes
are cast. The 2019 SEC Guidance
provides that investment advisers
should consider whether the proxy
advisory firm has the capacity and
competency to adequately analyze the
matters for which the investment
adviser is responsible for voting. The
2019 SEC Guidance also explains that
an investment adviser’s decision
regarding whether to retain a proxy
advisory firm should also include a
reasonable review of the proxy advisory
firm’s policies and procedures regarding
how it identifies and addresses conflicts
of interest. Further, as part of the
investment adviser’s ongoing
compliance program, the investment
adviser must, no less frequently than
annually, review and document the
adequacy of its voting policies and
procedures.
The SEC also adopted regulatory
amendments that, among other things,
require proxy advisory firms that are
engaged in a solicitation to provide
specified disclosures, adopt written
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to ensure that proxy voting
advice is made available to securities
issuers, and provide proxy advisory firm
clients with a mechanism by which the
clients can reasonably be expected to
become aware of a securities issuer’s
views about the proxy voting advice, so
that the clients can take such views into
account as they vote proxies.22 The SEC
issued supplemental guidance to assist
Advisers, 84 FR 47420 (Sept. 10, 2019) (2019 SEC
Guidance).
22 See Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy
Voting Advice, 85 FR 55082 (Sept. 3, 2020) (2020
SEC Proxy Voting Advice Amendments).
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investment advisers in assessing how to
consider the additional information that
may become more readily available to
them as a result of these amendments,
including in circumstances when the
investment adviser uses a proxy
advisory firm’s electronic vote
management system that ‘‘prepopulates’’ the adviser’s proxies with
suggested voting recommendations and/
or for voting execution services.23
The proposal on proxy voting and
shareholder rights provided the
Department with a vehicle to coordinate
many of the fiduciary concepts
concerning investing according to the
pecuniary interests of plans with the
rules governing the use of plan
resources on proxy voting and the
exercise of other shareholder rights.24 A
more detailed discussion of the basis for
the rulemaking and the evidence
supporting the proposal can be found in
the preamble to the Department’s
proposal.25 As discussed throughout
this preamble, the final rule reflects
significant modifications to the proposal
based on the public record and
commenters’ feedback. The Department
continues to believe that enhancing the
effectiveness and efficiency of the proxy
voting process for ERISA plans is an
important goal. This process will be
improved to the extent ERISA plan
fiduciaries better understand how to
make informed decisions when
executing shareholder rights in
compliance with ERISA’s obligations of
prudence and loyalty—specifically that
the execution of such rights must be
conducted in a manner to ensure that
plan resources are not inappropriately
allocated. The Department also believes
that this rule is necessary to modernize
standards for ERISA plan fiduciaries in
this context, for example to recognize
that proxy voting advice businesses,
such as proxy advisory firms, now play
a more significant role in the proxy
voting process. It is not the
Department’s intention to judge the
value of any specific proposal to be
voted upon, for example, or to take a
position on the merits of any particular
topic. Rather, the Department intends
only to address the standards according
to which plan fiduciaries must make
such judgments, a goal that the
Department believes is more
appropriately advanced in light of
revisions made in the final rule.
23 See Supplement to Commission Guidance
Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities of
Investment Advisers, 85 FR 55155 (Sept. 3, 2020)
(2020 SEC Supplemental Guidance).
24 85 FR at 55219.
25 Id., beginning at 55221 and in the proposed
regulatory impact analysis beginning at 55227.
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The Department invited interested
persons to submit comments on the
proposed rule, and in response received
approximately 300 written comments
from a variety of parties, including plan
sponsors and fiduciaries, plan service
and investment providers (including
investment managers and proxy voting
firms), and employee benefit plan and
participant representatives. The
Department also received approximately
6,700 submissions in response to
petitions. The comments are available
for review on the ‘‘Public Comments’’
page under the ‘‘Laws and Regulations’’
tab of the Department’s Employee
Benefits Security Administration
website.26
B. Final Rule
After evaluating the full range of
public comments and extensive record
developed on the proposal, the final
rule as described below amends the
Investment Duties regulation to address
the prudence and loyalty duties under
sections 404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of
ERISA in the context of proxy voting
and other exercises of shareholder rights
by responsible ERISA plan fiduciaries.
The Department anticipates that actions
taken by the SEC as part of its proxy
reform initiative may result in changes
in practices among investment advisers
and proxy advisory firms that will help
address some of the Department’s
concerns about ERISA fiduciaries
properly discharging their duties with
respect to proxy voting activities and
appropriately selecting and overseeing
proxy advisory firms. However, the
Department continues to believe that
notice-and-comment rulemaking in this
area is appropriate, in part because the
Department’s existing sub-regulatory
guidance may have created a perception
that ERISA fiduciaries must vote proxies
on every proposal. In the Department’s
view, a regulation in this area will
address the misunderstanding that
exists on the part of some stakeholders
that ERISA fiduciaries are required to
vote all proxies and, to the extent that
proxies are voted, direct fiduciaries to
act in a manner consistent with the
economic interests of plans and plan
participants that does not subordinate
their interests to any non-pecuniary
objectives or promote goals unrelated to
the financial interests of participants
and beneficiaries.
Some commenters complained that
the 30-day comment period was too
short given the complexity of issues
involved, the magnitude of such
changes to the current marketplace
26 See www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/laws-andregulations/rules-and-regulations/public-comments.
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practices related to proxy voting and
other exercises of shareholder rights,
and the need to prepare supporting data.
Many commenters requested an
extension of the comment period and
that the Department schedule a public
hearing on the proposal and allow the
public record to remain open for posthearing comments from interested
parties. The Department has considered
these requests, but has determined that
it is neither necessary nor appropriate to
extend the public comment period, hold
a public hearing, or withdraw or
republish the proposed regulation. A
substantial and comprehensive public
comment record was developed on the
proposal sufficient to substantiate
promulgating a final rule. The scope and
depth of the public record that has been
developed itself belies arguments that a
30-day comment period was
insufficient. In addition, most issues
relevant to the proposal have been
analyzed and reviewed by the
Department and the public in the
context of three separate Interpretive
Bulletins issued in 1994, 2008, and 2016
and the public feedback that resulted.
Finally, public hearings are not required
under the Department’s general
rulemaking authority under section 505
of ERISA, nor under the Administrative
Procedure Act’s procedures for
rulemaking at 5 U.S.C. 553(c). In this
case, a public hearing is not necessary
to supplement an already
comprehensive public record.
Thus, this final rulemaking follows
the notice-and-comment process
required by the Administrative
Procedure Act, and fulfills the
Department’s mission to protect,
educate, and empower retirement
investors. This rule is considered to be
an Executive Order (E.O.) 13771
regulatory action. Details on the
estimated costs of this rule can be found
in the final rule’s economic analysis.
The Department has concluded that the
additions to the Investment Duties
regulation and the rule’s improvements
as compared to the Department’s
previous sub-regulatory guidance are
appropriate and warranted. The final
rule furthers the paramount goal of
ERISA plans to provide a secure
retirement for American workers.
Accordingly, after consideration of the
written comments received, the
Department has determined to adopt the
proposed regulation as modified and set
forth below. As explained more fully
below, the final regulation contains
several important changes from the
proposal in response to public
comments.
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1. General Public Comments and
Adoption of a Principles-Based
Approach
In response to the proposed rule, the
Department received a considerable
amount of support and opposition from
interested parties.
Commenters supporting the rule
argued that the proposed rule was
essential because the Department’s
existing sub-regulatory guidance has
created a perception that ERISA
fiduciaries must vote proxies on every
proposal. This rulemaking, according to
some commenters, would provide
certainty to plan fiduciaries and benefit
ERISA plan participants, by ensuring
that plan resources will be expended
only on proxy research and voting
matters that are necessary to protect the
economic interests of plan participants.
Commenters supporting the proposal
endorsed the Department’s view that
these rights must be exercised with a
singular focus in mind—the economic
interests of ERISA plan participants and
beneficiaries. They agreed that in a
rapidly changing investment landscape,
plan fiduciaries and asset managers
should not be influenced by nonfinancial interests. For example, some
commenters explained that it is the duty
of ERISA fiduciaries to reject attempts to
advance political or social objectives at
the expense of investment returns,
growth, and stability for individuals
saving for retirement, the very
population that the Department, through
ERISA, has been charged to protect. As
one commenter explained, ERISA
fiduciary duties are predicated on trust
law, and trusts must be managed to the
advantage of formally named
beneficiaries—in this case plan
participants and their beneficiaries—
and not to benefit corporate
management or vague notions of societal
good as determined by other parties.
Some commenters argued that proxy
advisory firms, which often assist with
proxy voting, have an outsized
influence on voting decisions and have
‘‘taken sides’’ politically and socially.
A number of commenters agreed in
general with the Department’s position
on these issues, and some provided
additional information substantiating
the need for, and propriety of, the
Department’s proposed approach to
managing proxy voting practices. Some
further argued that, although exercising
shareholder rights on the basis of
environmental, social, or governance
factors (commonly referred to as ‘‘ESG’’)
may be welcomed by some private
investors, proxy rights should be
exercised only for financial matters that
will help secure the retirement of plan
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participants in the case of ERISAcovered pension and other retirement
savings plans because when fiduciaries
exercise proxy rights for non-financial
reasons they are more likely to incur
additional, unnecessary risks for
investors that may not produce
corresponding economic value. A few
commenters supported the Department’s
assertion that the amount of ESG
shareholder proposals has increased
since 1988, as more such proposals are
being put forward by groups with
objectives other than increasing
shareholder returns. While some
commenters agreed with ESG
proponents on the importance of
environmental protections, social and
political issues, and transparency in
corporate governance, they nevertheless
expressed their concern that proxy
advisory firms, in particular, seem to
have increasing power to promote these
goals without the knowledge and
agreement of a corporation’s ‘‘real’’
owners, the shareholders, which
include ERISA plans. They agreed that
the Department has appropriately
undertaken in this rulemaking to
improve fiduciary oversight of these
firms. Finally, commenters supporting
the rule also said that any increased
costs associated with the rule would be
manageable, or, according to some
commenters, that the rule would
ultimately decrease plan costs and
compliance burdens.27
Other commenters, however, objected
to the Department’s proposed
rulemaking and raised a variety of legal
and practical concerns. Some
commenters who objected to the
proposal requested that the Department
withdraw the rule entirely, propose a
different rule that takes a more
principles-based approach to this
subject matter, or wait until the
Department analyzes the impact of its
rule concerning ‘‘Financial Factors in
Selecting Plan Investments.’’ 28
Alternatively, they argued that the
Department should wait until the SEC
establishes a track record of experience
with its new proxy advisor and
shareholder proposal rules, so that the
Department can better align its guidance
with the SEC’s rules. Additionally, some
commenters expressed the view that a
principles-based approach would be
consistent with the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (Advisers Act) and the
SEC’s Rule 206(4)–6 thereunder and
might help to reduce burdens for
27 One commenter suggested that the rule may
especially benefit fiduciaries of small plans, for
whom the cost and burden of voting all proxies may
be an impediment to sponsoring a plan.
28 See 85 FR 72846 (Nov. 13, 2020).
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fiduciaries in reconciling the
Department’s rule with the SEC’s
regulatory regime for investment
advisers.
Some commenters opposing the
proposed rule claimed that the
Department failed to establish that there
is in fact a problem with fiduciaries’
exercise of shareholder rights and
argued that the proposal, if finalized,
would upset decades of Departmental
precedent. These commenters further
said that the approach taken in the
proposal represented a burdensome and
costly solution to a perceived problem
without ‘‘real life’’ examples of any
plans or participants and beneficiaries
that have been harmed.
The Department does not believe that
it is necessary to establish specific
evidence of fiduciary
misunderstandings or injury to plans or
to plan participants in order to issue a
regulation addressing the application of
ERISA’s fiduciary duties to the exercise
of shareholder rights. Under the
Department’s authority to administer
ERISA, the Department may promulgate
rules that are preemptive in nature and
is not required to wait for widespread
harm to occur. The Department can
thereby guard against injuries to plans
and plan participants and beneficiaries
and ensure prospective protections.
Regardless, there are several reasons
for this rulemaking. First, the
Department is aware that some plan
fiduciaries and other parties have
incorporated, or have considered
incorporating, non-pecuniary factors
into their proxy voting decisions.
Further, as documented in the proposal,
there is a history of statements from
stakeholders and others evidencing
misunderstanding of the Department’s
sub-regulatory guidance.29 Finally,
commenters on the proposal confirmed
that fiduciaries may be over-relying on
proxy advisory firms as a result of such
confusion, by implementing advisory
firms’ voting recommendations without
attention to whether the firms’ policies
are consistent with the economic
interests of the plan. This final rule
confirms that such decisions on proxy
voting and other exercises of
shareholder rights must be made
pursuant to the duties of loyalty and
prudence mandated by ERISA.
Some commenters argued that unless
a number of clarifications and changes
were made in the final rule, for example
with respect to documentation and
other requirements, the rule would be
costly to implement and its standards
costly to execute. Some commenters
opposing the proposed rule argued that,
29 85
FR 55219, 55230 (Sept. 4, 2020).
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not only is the rule unnecessary, but it
would create new confusion for
fiduciaries as they implement their
duties under ERISA. According to these
commenters, the rule would undermine
fiduciaries’ ability to act in what they
believe to be the long-term economic
interest of their plans’ participants,
which is a core statutory duty of
fiduciaries to such participants. A few
commenters provided an example of a
potential ‘‘trap’’ that the proposal would
create for fiduciaries, in that the rule
would cause fiduciaries to not vote on
a proposal for fear of violating the rule,
but then later discover that they should
in fact have voted on the proposal,
effectively creating a breach of fiduciary
duties. They claimed that the proposal
was an example of ‘‘government
overreach’’ that could dangerously
impact the efficiency of the U.S. capital
markets and the stability of the global
economy.30 The opposing commenters
also argued that the proposal, if
finalized, would disenfranchise ERISA
plans, and thereby plan participants, as
investors, by reducing the power and
value of their shareholder rights,
including the right to vote proxies.31
Instead, voting power would be
30 A number of commenters asserted that the
proposal was a not-so-thinly-veiled, policy-based
judgment against the value of ESG shareholder
proposals. They argued that this judgment is not the
Department’s to make; rather, it is the role of plan
fiduciaries to make such judgments, and ESG
proposals are material to shareholder decisionmaking and an important part of the due diligence
of fiduciaries in constructing long-term, diversified
portfolios. The Department disagrees with these
commenters. This rulemaking project, similar to the
recently published final rule on ERISA fiduciaries’
consideration of financial factors in investment
decisions, recognizes, rather than ignores, the
economic literature and fiduciary investment
experience that show a particular ‘‘E,’’ ‘‘S,’’ or ‘‘G’’
consideration may present issues of material
business risk or opportunities to a specific company
that its officers and directors need to manage as part
of the company’s business plan and that qualified
investment professionals would treat as economic
considerations under generally accepted investment
theories. However, the Department recognizes that
other ‘‘E,’’ ‘‘S,’’ or ‘‘G’’ factors may be nonpecuniary and a fiduciary should not assume that
combining ESG factors into a single rating, index,
or score creates an amalgamated factor that is itself
pecuniary. Rather, this final rule and the financial
factors rule sought to make clear that, from a
fiduciary perspective, the relevant question is not
whether a factor under consideration is ’’ESG,’’ but
whether it is a pecuniary factor relevant to the
exercise of a shareholder right or to an evaluation
of the investment or investment course of action.
See 85 FR at 72857 (Nov. 13, 2020).
31 One commenter further warned that the rule
could result in voter suppression, not just
disenfranchisement, by preventing shareholders
from reaching a quorum, which the Department
itself acknowledged in the proposal would result in
economic detriment to ERISA plans’ holdings.
Some corporate bylaws, for example, require a
supermajority for certain votes, which may be
difficult to achieve if certain shareholders are
discouraged from voting.
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concentrated in the hands of non-ERISA
investors, such as hedge funds, foreign
investors, and other activist investors
whose motivations may be based on
short-term profits and non-economic
factors, as well as in the hands of
corporate management, as a result of the
proposal’s provision that, in these
commenters’ view, includes deference
to management views.
Commenters opposing the proposed
rule stated that, in voting on proposals,
investors, including ERISA plans,
generally decide matters that will hold
management accountable and materially
impact the long-term economic value of
corporations. Some commenters argued
that the proposal failed to recognize the
potential long-term performance and
economic impact of shareholder
proposals on topics such as board
independence and accountability—
including opportunities to change a
company’s board of directors, diversity,
approval of auditing firms, executive
compensation policies—from either an
individual investment or a wider
portfolio perspective. These
commenters disagreed with what they
viewed as the Department’s conclusion
that ESG shareholder activity generally
has little bearing on the value of
corporate shares. Rather, these
commenters claimed that a growing
body of evidence demonstrates an
increasing link between ESG activity,
including the impact of ESG issues on
a corporation’s brand and reputation,
and a corporation’s long-term value.
According to commenters, ESG factors
may not appear to be economic on their
face, yet all are fundamental corporate
matters that often are critical to how
companies strategize and manage risk,
therefore impacting financial outcomes.
As to proxy advisory firms, commenters
opposing the rule argued that these
firms engage in a rigorous process when
making recommendations about proxy
voting and that ongoing technological
advances continue to enhance proxy
voting transparency and effectiveness.
The final rule reflects a number of
modifications made by the Department
in response to the public comments. As
in the proposal, the final rule amends
the Investment Duties regulation in
regard to proxy voting and the exercise
of shareholder rights. The most
significant adjustment from the proposal
results from changes to make the final
rule a more principles-based approach
in response to commenters. The
Department is persuaded that the
complexity involved in a determination
of economic versus non-economic
impact would be costly to implement,
and believes the core structure of the
proposal that focused on whether a
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fiduciary has a prudent process for
proxy voting and other exercises of
shareholder rights is a more workable
framework for achieving the objectives
of the proposal. The final rule carries
forward from the proposal a provision
that requires plan fiduciaries, when
deciding whether to exercise
shareholder rights and when exercising
such rights, including the voting of
proxies, to carry out their duties
prudently and solely in the interests of
the plan participants and beneficiaries
and for the exclusive purpose of
providing benefits to participants and
beneficiaries and defraying the
reasonable expenses of administering
the plan. Also similar to the proposal,
but with some modifications in
response to public comments, the final
rule includes a list of principles that
fiduciaries must comply with when
making decisions on exercising
shareholder rights, including proxy
voting, in order to meet their prudence
and loyalty duties under ERISA section
404(a)(1)(A) and (B), including duties to
act solely in accordance with the
economic interest of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries and not
subordinate the interests of the
participants and beneficiaries in their
retirement income or financial benefits
under the plan to any non-pecuniary
objective, or promote non-pecuniary
benefits or goals unrelated to the
financial interests of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries. Finally,
the final rule includes specific language
to make clear that plan fiduciaries do
not have an obligation to vote all
proxies, as well as a safe harbor
provision, modified from the proposal,
pursuant to which plan fiduciaries may
adopt proxy voting policies and
parameters prudently designed to serve
the plan’s economic interest that
provide optional means for satisfying
their fiduciary responsibilities regarding
determining whether to vote under
ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A) and
404(a)(1)(B).
2. Elimination of Paragraphs (e)(3)(i)
and (ii) From the Proposal
The principles-based approach
adopted in the final rule is reflected by
the Department’s elimination of
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) from the
proposal. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the
proposal provided that a plan fiduciary
must vote any proxy where the fiduciary
prudently determined that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved
(including the cost of research, if
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necessary, to determine how to vote).
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must not
vote any proxy unless the fiduciary
prudently determined that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved.
The Department received a number of
comments suggesting removal of the
requirements in paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and
(ii). Commenters criticized these
provisions of the proposal as requiring
a fiduciary to undertake an economic
impact analysis in advance of each issue
that is the subject of a proxy vote in
order to even consider voting. A
commenter further noted that a
fiduciary may not discover until after
the analysis is performed that the cost
involved in determining whether to vote
outweighs the economic benefit to the
plan. Another commenter characterized
this as a ‘‘high risk compliance
dilemma’’ that could not be resolved
without expending funds on analysis
and documentation, without knowing in
advance whether the expenditure is
allowable. Commenters further
indicated that the proposal was unclear
as to how to establish whether an
economic basis would be strong enough
to justify voting and that it can be
difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain
whether a matter will have a future
economic impact. Commenters further
stated that the criteria enumerated in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal for
determining the economic impact of a
proxy vote were too narrow, which
could result in potentially negative
consequences to plans because
paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal could
prohibit fiduciaries from engaging in
activities that would mitigate risk. For
instance, a commenter stated that, in its
experience, once an evaluation of a
proxy matter has been done, a situation
with ‘‘no economic impact’’ is more of
a theoretical possibility than a reality.
According to this commenter, either its
research will show that the matter being
voted on will strengthen the company if
implemented, or that it will not. The
commenter further explained that, at a
base level, a matter that would
strengthen or otherwise improve a
company is likely to result in an
economic benefit in connection with a
plan’s investment when considered in
the long-term. If a matter would not
result in a net positive to the company,
the commenter believes a fiduciary
should vote against the proposal, not
decline to vote. The commenter
cautioned that prohibiting fiduciaries
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81663
from voting in circumstances where
they otherwise would vote against a
matter may have the unintended
consequence of allowing more frivolous
proxy matters to be approved, resulting
in decreased corporate accountability.
Commenters also raised practical issues
with respect to an obligation to not vote.
Some explained that failing to vote can
have the effect of a ‘‘no’’ vote or a ‘‘yes’’
vote, depending on the circumstances.
Another commenter stated that modern
proxy voting processes do not allow a
holder of securities subject to the proxy
to vote on some but not all proposals.
Other commenters, however,
supported paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the
proposal. They viewed the provision as
an important clarification that plan
fiduciaries are not required to vote all
proxies, which could reduce diversion
of plan resources by restricting voting
activity only to those issues that offer an
economic benefit to the plan.
The Department has decided not to
include the requirements in paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal in the
final rule at this time. The Department
recognizes the concerns expressed by
commenters regarding potentially
increased costs and liability exposure,
as well as the difficulty in some
circumstances of determining whether a
matter would have an economic impact
and the possibility that a fiduciary
might prudently determine that there
are risks to plan investments that could
result from not voting even when the
matter being voted upon itself would
not have an economic impact. Instead,
the Department has provided a specific
provision in the final rule stating that
plan fiduciaries are not required to vote
all proxies.
3. Section-by-Section Overview of Final
Rule
(i) Paragraph (e)(1)
Paragraph (e)(1) of the final rule, like
the proposal, provides that the fiduciary
duty to manage plan assets that are
shares of stock includes the
management of shareholder rights
appurtenant to the shares, such as the
right to vote proxies. Commenters raised
a number of issues with respect to the
general scope of fiduciaries’
responsibilities and obligations under
the rule as set forth in paragraph (e)(1)
of the proposal.
Several commenters supported the
Department’s goal of making clear that
plan fiduciaries are not obligated to vote
all proxies, and suggested the rule could
be improved by including that clear
statement in the regulatory text in
paragraph (e)(1). The Department was
clear in the preamble to the proposed
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rule that one objective of the proposal
was to correct a misunderstanding
among some fiduciaries and other
stakeholders that ERISA requires every
proxy to be voted. Thus, the Department
agrees that it would be appropriate to
include an explicit statement to that
effect in the final rule. The Department,
however, believes that the statement fits
better in paragraph (e)(2) (regarding the
principles that must be considered in
deciding whether to exercise
shareholder rights) and has added a
statement to paragraph (e)(2)(ii) that the
ERISA fiduciary duty to manage proxy
voting and other shareholder rights does
not require the voting of every proxy or
the exercise of every shareholder right.
A commenter suggested that the rule
should focus only on proxy voting,
including the decision of whether to
exercise voting rights, but should not
extend to ‘‘other shareholder rights.’’
This commenter explained that other
shareholder rights, such as inspecting
an issuer’s corporate record books and
participating in corporate actions taken
by the issuer, are substantively separate
and distinct from proxy voting. Also,
decisions on corporate actions such as
stock splits, tender offers, exchange
offers on bond issues, and mergers and
acquisitions generally are not governed
by proxy voting policies or undertaken
with advice from proxy voting advisors.
On this basis, the commenter
recommended removing other
shareholder rights from the rule. The
Department is not persuaded to make
the suggested change. The exercise of
shareholder rights has been part of the
Department’s prior guidance since the
first Interpretive Bulletin in 1994.32 The
Department believes that the exercise of
shareholder rights to monitor or
influence management, which may
occur in lieu of, or in connection with,
formal proxy proposals is just as much
an issue of fiduciary management of the
investment asset as proxy voting and
accordingly should be covered by the
final rule.
Commenters also requested
clarifications related to plan
investments in SEC-registered
investment companies, such as mutual
funds. Several commenters noted that
the preamble to the proposal suggested
that the rule would not apply to a
mutual fund’s exercise of shareholder
rights with respect to the stock it holds,
and requested that the Department
provide confirmation. As previously
explained, ERISA does not govern the
32 See 59 FR 38860, 38864 (July 29, 1994)
(discussing activities to monitor or influence
management by variety of means including by
exercise of legal rights of a shareholder).
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management of the portfolio internal to
an investment fund registered with the
SEC, including such fund’s exercise of
its shareholder rights appurtenant to the
portfolio of stocks it holds.33
Accordingly, the final rule would not
apply to such a fund’s exercise of
shareholder rights.
A commenter requested further
clarification that the Department does
not intend that plan fiduciaries apply
the standards of the rule in reviewing,
analyzing, or making a judgment on the
proxy voting practices of the mutual
funds in which the plan invests. This
commenter explained that SECregistered funds have the scale, internal
expertise, and experience to analyze and
vote proxies. According to the
commenter, they also publicly report
their proxy votes to the SEC, and must
describe in their registration statements
the policies and procedures that they
use to determine how to vote proxies for
their portfolio of securities. In the
commenter’s view, placing an obligation
on plan fiduciaries to review and make
judgments on the proxy voting practices
of mutual funds in which they invest
will substantially increase the
administrative burden and costs for
plans that invest in mutual funds. In
contrast, another commenter suggested
that the final rule should require
fiduciaries to investigate a mutual
fund’s objectives in shareholder voting
and engagement with portfolio
companies and determine that the
objectives are consistent with ERISA’s
loyalty requirement prior to deciding to
invest in the fund or considering it as
an option for participants. The
commenter noted that since the
issuance of the Avon Letter, plans
increasingly invest in mutual funds or
exchange-traded funds (ETFs) with
stock voting authority residing in the
funds. This commenter argued that
nothing in the Avon Letter or
subsequent guidance from the
Department suggested that ERISA
absolves a plan investment fiduciary of
any fiduciary duty associated with the
shareholder voting of shares that it owns
indirectly through its share ownership
in mutual funds and ETFs.
In response to these comments, the
Department notes that the issue raised
by these commenters is beyond the
scope of this rulemaking. Rather,
fiduciary responsibilities with respect to
investment decisions are addressed in
the other provisions of the Investment
Duties regulation, as recently amended.
Paragraph (c)(1) provides that, in
general, a fiduciary’s evaluation of an
investment or investment course of
33 85
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action must be based only on pecuniary
factors and that a fiduciary may not
subordinate the interests of participants
and beneficiaries in their retirement
income or financial benefits under the
plan to other objectives and may not
sacrifice investment return or take on
additional investment risk to promote
non-pecuniary benefits or goals.
Furthermore, the weight given to any
pecuniary factor by a fiduciary should
appropriately reflect a prudent
assessment of its impact on risk and
return. Whether a particular fund’s
proxy voting activities would constitute
a pecuniary factor and, if so, how much
weight it should be given in an
investment decision, are factual
questions that should be resolved by the
responsible fiduciary based on
surrounding circumstances.
Some commenters requested
clarification of whether the rule applies
to plan fiduciaries in the exercise of
shareholder rights with respect to
mutual funds and ETFs (which are
sometimes organized as corporate or
similar entities) when the fund itself
seeks a vote of its shareholders on fund
matters. According to commenters, for a
variety of reasons, SEC-registered funds
often face more challenges than
operating companies to achieve a
quorum and obtain approval of their
proxy matters. The commenters
explained that this is due to major
differences in shareholder bases (funds
have more diffuse and retail-oriented
shareholder bases), proxy voting
behavior of those bases (institutional
investors comprise a larger percentage
of operating companies’ shareholder
bases and are far more likely to vote),
legal obligations, and organizational
differences.
Furthermore, according to
commenters, funds also can have
difficulty even identifying and reaching
their shareholders when they invest
through intermediaries, which severely
limits a fund’s ability to communicate
with its shareholders to encourage
voting. These factors contribute
significantly to the costs and efforts
required to seek and obtain necessary
shareholder approvals for fund matters.
Funds, and therefore fund shareholders,
often bear the proxy costs associated
with proxy campaigns, including costs
associated with follow-up solicitations.
According to a commenter, the SEC
has recognized these issues in recent
years. The commenter, as well as others,
expressed concern that the rule could
create further difficulty for funds in
carrying out their proxy campaigns and
potentially result in imposing
unnecessary costs on funds, particularly
in connection with funds’ ability to
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achieve a timely quorum at their own
shareholder meetings. Another
commenter indicated that ERISA plan
investors receive a variety of proxies
that must be evaluated, not only in
connection with shares of common
stock held by the plan, but also from
SEC-registered funds as well as bank
collective trust funds and other
collective funds in which plans invest.
The commenter stated that the regulated
community needs to be able to clearly
identify those proxies that are subject to
the rule and those that are not. The
commenter requested that the rule itself
provide that plan investments in such
securities are not subject to the
requirements of the rule.
In the proposal, the Department
recognized that the proposed rule could
impact the ability to achieve a quorum
at shareholder meetings of funds.34 The
Department believes that the changes
made to the final rule significantly
eliminate any provisions of the proposal
that might impede achieving a quorum
for shareholder meetings, including
those held by funds. Under the
proposal, a fiduciary would have not
been able to vote unless the fiduciary
prudently concluded that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan. The
burden of determining whether a
fiduciary must, or must not, vote under
the proposal was likely to result in
fiduciaries opting to refrain from voting
under one of the permitted practices
described in the proposal. The
Department’s removal of the ‘‘vote/not
vote’’ determination from the final rule
should eliminate any concerns with
potential liability on a fiduciary
associated with making an incorrect
decision as to whether or not to cast a
proxy vote. The safe harbors in the final
rule are also sufficiently flexible to
permit a fiduciary to adopt voting
policies that would permit proxy voting
for fund shares while refraining from
voting other types of shares. Moreover,
the Department continues to believe, as
stated in the preamble to the proposal,
that fiduciary proxy voting policies may
consider the economic detriment to a
plan’s investment that might result from
direct and indirect costs incurred
related to delaying a shareholders’
meeting.35
(ii) Paragraph (e)(2)
Paragraph (e)(2) of the proposal set
forth the general responsibilities with
respect to the exercise of shareholder
rights under the regulation, and stated
that when deciding whether to exercise
34 Id.
35 Id.
at 55234.
at 55226.
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shareholder rights and when exercising
such rights, including the voting of
proxies, fiduciaries must carry out their
duties prudently and solely in the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries and for the exclusive
purpose of providing benefits to
participants and beneficiaries and
defraying the reasonable expenses of
administering the plan pursuant to
ERISA sections 403 and 404.
Paragraph (e)(2)(i)
A commenter noted that paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of the proposal referenced
ERISA sections 403 and 404, and
because those two separate sections
each carry separate responsibilities,
suggested that each be designated as a
separate clause in the final regulation
because a fiduciary could breach or
fulfill one but not the other. The
Department recognizes the separate
responsibilities under sections 403 and
404 of ERISA, but has decided to
remove the reference to section 403 for
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of the final rule. As
explained in connection with recently
adopted amendments to the Investment
Duties regulation, the Department
believes it is important that the
regulation focus on section 404 of
ERISA.36 Although similar, and
although actions taken in compliance
with section 404 would likely satisfy
similar obligations under section 403,
the text of ERISA section 403 is not
identical to ERISA section 404(a)(1)(A),
and the Department is wary of possible
inferences that compliance with the
provisions of the final rule would also
necessarily satisfy all the provisions of
ERISA section 403. The Department also
believes explicit reference to ERISA
section 404 is not necessary because
paragraph (e) is part of 29 CFR
2550.404a–1. As a result, paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of the final rule provides that
when deciding whether to exercise
shareholder rights and when exercising
such rights, including the voting of
proxies, fiduciaries must carry out their
duties prudently and solely in the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries and for the exclusive
purpose of providing benefits to
participants and beneficiaries and
defraying the reasonable expenses of
administering the plan.
Activities that are intended to monitor
or influence the management of
corporations in which the plan owns
stock can be consistent with a
fiduciary’s obligations under ERISA, if
the responsible fiduciary concludes that
such activities (by the plan alone or
together with other shareholders) are
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appropriate after applying the
considerations set forth in the final rule.
However, the use of plan assets by
fiduciaries to further policy-related or
political issues, including ESG issues,
through proxy resolutions would violate
the prudence and exclusive purpose
requirements of ERISA sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) and the final rule
unless such activities are undertaken
solely in accordance with the economic
interests of the plan and its participants
and beneficiaries. The mere fact that
plans are shareholders in the
corporations in which they invest does
not itself provide a rationale for a
fiduciary to spend plan assets to pursue,
support, or oppose such proxy
proposals. Moreover, the use of plan
assets by fiduciaries to further policy or
political issues through proxy
resolutions that are not likely to
enhance the economic value of the
investment in a corporation would, in
the view of the Department, violate the
prudence and exclusive purpose
requirements of ERISA sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) as well as the final
rule. For example, with respect to
proposals submitted by shareholders
that request a corporation to incur costs,
either directly or indirectly, without the
proposal including a demonstrable
expected economic return to the
corporation, a fiduciary may, depending
on the facts and circumstances, be
obligated under ERISA and the final
rule to vote against such proposals in
order to protect the financial interests of
the plan’s participants and
beneficiaries.37 Similarly, in the
Department’s view, it would not be
appropriate for plan fiduciaries,
including appointed investment
managers, to incur expenses to engage
in direct negotiations with the board or
management of publicly held companies
with respect to which the plan is just
one of many investors. Nor generally
should plan fiduciaries fund advocacy,
press, or mailing campaigns on
shareholder resolutions, call special
shareholder meetings, or initiate or
actively sponsor proxy fights on
environmental or social issues relating
to such companies, unless the
responsible plan fiduciary concludes
that such activities (alone or together
with other shareholders) are appropriate
37 The Department is not suggesting that a
fiduciary must perform its own economic analysis,
or incur expenses to obtain an analysis, to
determine whether the proposal will economically
benefit the corporation and its shareholders. For
example, a fiduciary could prudently consider a
credible economic analysis provided by the
shareholder proponent.
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after applying the considerations set
forth in the final rule.38
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal set
forth specific standards for fiduciaries to
meet when deciding whether to exercise
shareholder rights and when exercising
shareholder rights. The requirements in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal also
served as the basis for a fiduciary’s
determination of whether a matter being
voted upon would have an economic
impact on a plan for purposes of
compliance with paragraph (e)(3) of the
proposal. Many commenters focused
specifically on paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(A)
and (B) of the proposal, which required,
in relevant part, that fiduciaries (A)
consider only factors that they
prudently determine will affect the
economic value of the plan’s investment
based on a determination of risk and
return over an appropriate investment
horizon consistent with the plan’s
investment objectives and the funding
policy of the plan, and (B) consider the
likely impact on the investment
performance of the plan based on such
factors as the size of the plan’s holdings
in the issuer relative to the total
investment assets of the plan, the plan’s
percentage ownership of the issuer, and
the costs involved.
Some commenters argued that the
specificity of the proposal did not
comport with what they asserted was a
congressional intent that eschewed a
prescriptive approach to ERISA’s duties
of loyalty and prudence, or with the
Department’s own Investment Duties
regulation. Commenters also noted the
potential burdens that paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) of the proposal would place on
plan fiduciaries to evaluate and justify
decisions for potentially large numbers
of proxy proposals and to monitor an
investment manager’s or proxy advisory
firm’s voting policy for consistency with
the regulation, which could result in
increased costs that would ultimately be
borne by plan participants. Commenters
also stated that the provision’s
requirement to take into account planspecific factors did not adequately
recognize that investment managers do
not have information on plan holdings
they do not directly manage.
Commenters further indicated that, with
a focus on individual plans as opposed
to investment managers responsible for
pools of plan assets, paragraph
38 Although the provision in the proposal also
made reference to ‘‘purposes of the plan,’’ the
language is not carried forward in the final
provision as the Department believes it is
unnecessary because the purposes of a plan would
be encompassed by the financial interests of plan
participants and beneficiaries.
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(e)(2)(ii)(B) of the proposal failed to
consider situations when several ERISA
plans, particularly those with aligned
objectives and liabilities, may together
hold a significant stake in a company.
In such cases, voting together could
impact the investment and, as a result,
each investor’s portfolio. They argued
that the proposal, in contrast,
potentially would result in proxies
being un-voted if each ‘‘slice’’ of the
aggregate is too insignificant.
A commenter further suggested that
an economic impact test, as described in
the proposal, was ill-suited to the
purpose and role of proxy voting.
According to the commenter, many of
the items on which corporate law
permits shareholders to have a say—for
example, the election of directors or
ratification of auditors—are to mitigate
risk and assure prophylactic measures
are in place to avoid threats to their
share of capital over the long term. The
commenter questioned how a fiduciary
would determine that voting against a
company-proposed director for election
to the board who was clearly
unqualified and incompetent would
have an economic impact on the plan.
Another commenter explained that
some votes, such as those supporting
good corporate governance practices
(e.g., election of outside directors) may
not have an immediate measurable
economic effect, but still be in the
interest of plan investors. Another
commenter opined that a short-term
economic impact will be easier to prove
or disprove in terms of share price or
other similarly rudimentary indicators,
but questioned whether the rule should
encourage fiduciaries to think only in
terms of short-term economic gains. In
this regard, several commenters
requested that the Department confirm
that a fiduciary may take into
consideration the long-term nature of a
plan’s investment horizon. A
commenter also suggested that the
Department expand the criteria for
voting to include issuer risk-based
factors that ‘‘promote long-term growth
and maximize return on ERISA plan
assets.’’ Another commenter explained
that proposals that encourage greater
disclosure can result in enhancing
shareholder value or serve in a
prophylactic manner to prevent actions
that might serve to diminish
shareholder value. A commenter also
criticized the proposal as focusing on
the impact on individual plan
investments. Commenters explained
that modern portfolio theory focuses on
the role that an investment plays in the
context of an overall portfolio rather
than on a stand-alone basis, and
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expressed the view that the roles that
proxy voting and shareholder voices
play in current portfolio risk
management practices should be
evaluated in the context of the long-term
and portfolio-wide strategy, with
consideration of the aggregate effects of
shareholder votes and voices.
After considering these comments, the
Department has modified paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(A) and (B). An important goal
in proposing the rule was to ensure that
in making proxy voting decisions,
fiduciaries act for the exclusive purpose
of financially benefitting plan
participants and not subordinating the
interests of the plan and its participants
to goals and objectives unrelated to their
financial interests. Recent amendments
to the Investment Duties regulation,
which applies generally to fiduciary
decisions on investments and
investment courses of action, were
adopted for much the same purpose.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the final rule
requires that, when deciding whether to
exercise shareholder rights and when
exercising shareholder rights, a
fiduciary must act solely in accordance
with the economic interest of the plan
and its participants and beneficiaries.
The proposed requirement to prudently
determine whether the economic value
of the plan’s investment will be affected
based on a determination of risk and
return over an appropriate investment
horizon has not been included in the
final rule in order to address commenter
concerns that the impact of proxy voting
may not be readily quantifiable and to
reduce potential compliance costs. In
the Department’s view, the final rule
provides sufficient flexibility for
fiduciaries to consider longer-term
consequences and potential economic
impacts. Further, removal of the
references to a plan’s investment
objectives and funding policy responds
to concerns that investment managers
responsible for only a portion of the
plan assets may have limited access and
visibility into those objectives and
funding policies and such
considerations may unnecessarily
increase compliance costs without a
commensurate benefit for the plan or its
participants.
The Department, however, cautions
fiduciaries from applying an overly
expansive view as to what constitutes
an economic interest for purposes of
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the final rule.
As previously discussed, the costs
incurred by a corporation to delay a
shareholder meeting due to lack of a
quorum is an example of a factor that
can be appropriately considered as
affecting the economic interest of the
plan. However, vague or speculative
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notions that proxy voting may promote
a theoretical benefit to the global
economy that might redound, outside
the plan, to the benefit of plan
participants would not be considered an
economic interest under the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the proposal
required consideration of the likely
impact on the investment performance
of the plan based on such factors as the
size of the plan’s holdings in the issuer
relative to the total investment assets of
the plan, and the plan’s percentage
ownership of the issuer. Similar to the
changes made to paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A)
of the final rule, the Department has
removed this language to address
concerns that where portions of the
portfolio are managed by different
investment managers, a specific
manager may not know the plan’s
overall aggregate exposure to a single
issuer. Accordingly, paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(B) of the final rule has been
revised only to require a fiduciary
consider the impact of any costs
involved. However, in the Department’s
view, where the plan’s overall aggregate
exposure to a single issuer is known, the
relative size of an investment within a
plan’s overall portfolio and the plan’s
percentage ownership of the issuer, may
still be relevant considerations in
appropriate cases in deciding whether
to vote or exercise other shareholder
rights.
Several commenters requested further
guidance or examples of costs that a
fiduciary would be required to consider.
In the view of the Department, for
purposes of paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the
final rule, the types of relevant costs
would depend on the particular facts
and circumstances. Such costs could
include direct costs to the plan,
including expenditures for organizing
proxy materials; analyzing portfolio
companies and the matters to be voted
on; determining how the votes should
be cast; and submitting proxy votes to
be counted. If a plan can reduce the
management or advisory fees it pays by
reducing the number of proxies it votes
on matters that have no economic
consequence for the plan that also is a
relevant cost consideration. In some
cases, voting proxies may involve outof-the-ordinary costs or unusual
requirements, such as may be the case
of voting proxies on shares of certain
foreign corporations. Opportunity costs
in connection with proxy voting could
also be relevant, such as foregone
earnings from recalling securities on
loan or if, as a condition of submitting
a proxy vote, the plan will be prohibited
from selling the underlying shares until
after the shareholder meeting.
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Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(C) of the proposal
provided that a fiduciary must not
subordinate the interests of the
participants and beneficiaries in their
retirement income or financial benefits
under the plan to any non-pecuniary
objective, or sacrifice investment return
or take on additional investment risk to
promote goals unrelated to these
financial interests of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries or the
purposes of the plan. A commenter took
issue with this requirement, suggesting
that it was inconsistent with some client
expectations, as well as stewardship
codes outside the United States that do
not limit significant votes to economic
impact to the portfolio. The Department
disagrees and notes that the provision
reflects the fundamental fiduciary duty
of loyalty as set forth in ERISA section
404(a)(1)(A). The Department has
modified the final rule in order to avoid
suggesting that a fiduciary may exercise
proxy voting and other shareholder
rights with the goal of advancing nonpecuniary goals unrelated to the
financial interests of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries so long as
it does not result in increased costs to
the plan or a decrease in value of the
investment. Thus, paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(C)
of the final rule states that a fiduciary
must not subordinate the interests of the
participants and beneficiaries in their
retirement income or financial benefits
under the plan to any non-pecuniary
objective, or promote non-pecuniary
benefits or goals unrelated to these
financial interests of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal
provided that a fiduciary must
investigate material facts that form the
basis for any particular proxy vote or
other exercise of shareholder rights. The
provision further stated that the
fiduciary may not adopt a practice of
following the recommendations of a
proxy advisory firm or other service
provider without appropriate
supervision and a determination that
the service provider’s proxy voting
guidelines are consistent with the
economic interests of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, as
defined in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the
proposal.
A commenter suggested the
provision’s requirement to investigate
material facts was overly broad, and
explained that there may be instances
when routine or recurring proxy votes,
such as annual proxy votes on the same
subject, may not require a separate and
distinct investigation in order for a
fiduciary to make a prudent
determination. A commenter indicated
that paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) is overly
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burdensome, and that issues are
addressed in paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(F) and
(e)(2)(iii) (relating to selection of service
providers and delegation to investment
managers). The commenter
recommended deletion of the provision.
On the other hand, another
commenter suggested that the
Department go further with the
fiduciary requirement to investigate
material facts by explicitly referencing
review of the issuer response statements
required by recently-adopted SEC proxy
solicitation rules. The commenter
indicated these filings may include
significant, material information that
could impact a voting decision
(including decisions about whether to
vote and how to vote) that by definition
would not be considered by the proxy
advisory firm in drafting its
recommendation. Additionally,
according to the commenter, recent SEC
guidance on the proxy voting
responsibilities of investment advisers
encourages investment advisers to have
policies and procedures in place to
consider the information available to
them about proxy advisory firms
themselves under the SEC’s new proxy
solicitation rules (e.g., disclosures of
proxy advisory firm conflicts of
interests) as well as any information that
comes to light after they have received
a proxy advisory firm’s voting
recommendations (e.g., additional
soliciting material setting forth an
issuer’s views on a recommendation).
The supplemental guidance further
states that, under certain circumstances,
an investment adviser would likely
need to consider such additional
information from an issuer prior to
exercising voting authority in order to
demonstrate that it is voting in its
client’s best interest, and that it should
disclose how its policies and procedures
address the use of automated voting in
cases where it becomes aware before the
submission deadline for proxies that an
issuer intends to file or has filed
additional soliciting materials regarding
a matter to be voted upon.
Several commenters raised a number
of concerns in connection with
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal
about proxy advisory firms, including
conflicts of interest resulting from
business relationships with companies
that are the subject of proxy
recommendations, a ‘‘one-size-fits-all’’
approach to corporate governance that
does not take into account differences in
companies’ business models, a lack of
transparency in the process by which
proxy advisory firm recommendations
are developed, errors in proxy advisory
firm reports and recommendations,
proxy advisory firms’ resistance to
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engaging in a dialogue with issuers to
correct errors and misunderstandings,
automatic submission of votes for
clients, cutting plan managers out of the
decision-making process, and depriving
issuers of a chance to correct the record
or provide the market with additional
information.
After considering the comments, the
Department is modifying paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) by requiring a fiduciary to
evaluate, rather than investigate,
material facts. This change is to remove
any implication that plan fiduciaries
would be expected to conduct their own
investigation of material facts, which
was not intended by the Department.
Instead, the intent of this provision was
to ensure that in making informed proxy
voting decisions, fiduciaries should
consider information material to a
matter that is known or that is available
to and reasonably should be known by
the fiduciary. In this regard, the
Department notes that, as described by
the commenter above, as a result of
recent SEC actions, clients of proxy
advisory firms may become aware of
additional information from an issuer
which is the subject of a voting
recommendation.39 An ERISA fiduciary
would be expected to consider the
relevance of such additional
information if material. Paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) of the final rule thus
provides that a fiduciary must evaluate
material facts that form the basis for any
particular proxy vote or other exercise
of shareholder rights.
Some commenters also suggested that
the Department strengthen the rule by
including specific regulatory text that
generally disallows ‘‘robovoting,’’ a term
some commenters describe as automatic
voting mechanisms relying on proxy
advisors. A commenter questioned
whether robovoting is consistent with
ERISA’s stringent standards. Another
commenter suggested that robovoting is
an abridgment of fiduciary
responsibility. Some commenters also
suggested that the Department should
prohibit robovoting for significant,
contested, and controversial proxy
votes. Commenters also suggested that
the Department consider placing
conditions on the use of robovoting,
such as allowing robovoting only if a
company that is the subject of a proxy
advisory firm’s recommendations has
not submitted a response to the
recommendation.
39 2020 SEC Supplemental Guidance, 85 FR at
55155–57. Fiduciaries may retain proxy advisory
firms and other service providers, subject to any
applicable requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(F)
and (e)(2)(iii) and (iv), as part of satisfying the
fiduciaries’ obligations to evaluate material facts.
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The Department intended that the
provisions in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of
the proposal address the sort of
concerns raised by these comments and
provide appropriate guidelines for
ERISA fiduciaries. The provision in the
proposal stated, in relevant part, that a
fiduciary may not adopt a practice of
following the recommendations of a
proxy advisory firm or other service
provider without appropriate
supervision and a determination that
the service provider’s proxy voting
guidelines are consistent with the
economic interests of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries as defined
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the
proposal. The Department does not
dispute that proxy advisory firms can
play a role in providing information to
fiduciaries and economizing investors’
ability to exercise shareholder rights
and proxy voting. However, public
comments submitted in connection with
the proposal, and recent SEC actions in
this area described above, highlight
aspects of the proxy advisory firms’
recommendations and services that can
be problematic in a variety of ways. For
example, the Department acknowledges
some commenters noted that many
ERISA plans rely on proxy advisory
firms’ pre-population and automatic
submission mechanisms for proxy votes,
which can provide a cost-effective way
to exercise their shareholder voting
rights in cases where the proxy advisor
has processes which assure that its
voting recommendations conform to the
obligations that plan managers hold as
fiduciaries. However, adopting such a
practice for all proxy votes effectively
outsources their fiduciary decisionmaking authority. Rather, as the
Department noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule, ‘‘certain proposals may
require a more detailed or particularized
voting analysis.’’ 40
In light of other changes in paragraph
(e)(2) intended to adopt a more
principles-based approach in the final
rule, the Department has concluded that
it would be better to address these proxy
advisory firm issues in a separate
paragraph in the final rule, which is
described under paragraph (e)(2)(iv).
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) of the proposal
required a fiduciary to maintain records
40 85 FR at 55224. The SEC 2019 Guidance for
Investment Advisers similarly cautioned that a
higher degree of analysis ‘‘may be necessary or
appropriate’’ for certain types of matters, including
corporate events such as mergers and acquisitions,
or matters that are ‘‘highly contested or
controversial.’’ Commission Guidance Regarding
Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment
Advisers, 84 FR 47420, 47423–24 (Sept. 10, 2019).
Release Nos. IA–5325; IC–33605, available at
www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019–09-10/pdf/
2019-18342.pdf.
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on proxy voting activities and other
exercises of shareholder rights,
including records that demonstrate the
basis for particular proxy votes and
exercises of shareholder rights.
Recognizing that ERISA’s prudence
obligation carries with it a requirement
to maintain records and document
fiduciaries’ decisions, most commenters
did not seriously object to the proposal’s
general obligation to maintain records
on proxy voting activities and other
exercises of shareholder rights.
Commenters did, however, express
concern that the proposal included
particularized recordkeeping mandates
that were both unnecessary and costly.
One commenter suggested an alternative
that fiduciaries must make prudent
efforts to maintain accurate records that
include proxy voting activities and,
where authority is delegated, require the
same of that person. Other commenters
complained that the requirement to
maintain specific records demonstrating
the basis for particular votes was
unnecessary and costly. Some
commenters observed that such a level
of recordkeeping would exceed that
required for other potentially more
impactful investment decisions.
Another noted that the provision
appeared to require a level of
recordkeeping greater than described in
current guidance, and complained that
the Department did not adequately
explain the reason for this change. The
commenter noted that the Department
stated in 2011 that there was no basis to
impose more onerous documentation
requirements that treat proxy voting
differently from other fiduciary
activities.41 Some commenters
requested general clarification on the
types of documents that would be
necessary to demonstrate the basis for a
vote. A commenter suggested a specific
clarification that proxy voting activity
that is consistent with an applicable
proxy voting policy does not require
additional explanation or
documentation. Further, as discussed
below, commenters expressed concern
that the requirement in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(E) of the proposal to maintain
documents demonstrating the basis for
particular votes, as well as a similar
requirement in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of
the proposal (relating to delegation of
responsibilities to investment
managers), suggested that the proposal
would create new and heightened
monitoring obligations for fiduciaries
41 See Dep’t of Labor Office of Inspector Gen.
Report No. 09–11–001–12–121 (March 31, 2011).
The commenter cited the EBSA response to OIG
conclusion that EBSA does not have adequate
assurances that fiduciaries or third parties voted
proxies solely for the economic benefit of plans.
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that delegate responsibilities to
investment managers.
It has long been the view of the
Department that compliance with the
duty to monitor necessitates proper
documentation of the activities that are
subject to monitoring. However, the
Department agrees that a less
prescriptive approach to recordkeeping
obligations is appropriate. The
Department is retaining the general
recordkeeping requirement, but is
removing the requirement to maintain
documents that would be necessary to
demonstrate the basis for a vote to avoid
any inferences related to responsibilities
in monitoring investment managers,
which are addressed in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) of the final rule. Thus,
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) of the final rule
requires fiduciaries to maintain records
on proxy voting activities and other
exercises of shareholder rights. In
general, the extent of the documentation
needed to satisfy the monitoring
obligation will depend on individual
circumstances, including the subject of
the proxy voting and its potential
economic impact on the plan’s
investment. For fiduciaries that are SECregistered investment advisers, the
Department intends that the
recordkeeping obligations under
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) be applied in a
manner that aligns to similar proxy
voting recordkeeping obligations under
the Advisers Act.42
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the proposal
required that fiduciaries exercise
prudence and diligence in the selection
and monitoring of persons, if any,
selected to advise or otherwise assist
with exercises of shareholder rights,
such as providing research and analysis,
recommendations regarding proxy
votes, administrative services with
voting proxies, and recordkeeping and
reporting services.
Various commenters supported the
Department’s effort to better regulate
proxy advisory firms and the proxy
advisory process and suggested
additional steps the Department should
take in a final rule. Some suggested
mandating disclosure of fees paid by
investment managers to proxy voting
advisors, prohibiting proxy advisory
firms from consulting with companies
when they also make recommendations
on voting issues for that company, and
establishing a baseline disclosure
standard to which all proxy voting
advice businesses must adhere. Others
suggested placing specific conditions on
a fiduciary’s ability to rely on a proxy
advisory firm’s voting recommendation,
such as requiring the proxy advisory
42 See
infra note 43 and accompanying text.
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firm to demonstrate that it had
researched and analyzed evidence that
would support a conclusion contrary to
the proxy advisory firm’s conclusion. A
commenter suggested that the
Department should make more specific
reference to proxy advisory firm conflict
of interest disclosures required by the
recently amended SEC proxy
solicitation rules. According to the
commenter, the SEC rules require that
proxy advisory firms provide specific,
prominent disclosures of their conflicts
of interest and of any policies and
procedures designed to mitigate said
conflicts. Additionally, these
disclosures must be specific to the
company on which the proxy advisory
firm is issuing a report. The commenter
recommended that the fiduciaries
should be required to review a proxy
advisory firm’s conflicts disclosure, and
that the Department should caution
ERISA fiduciaries against relying on a
proxy advisory firm’s recommendations
if the disclosures reveal a conflict with
respect to an issuer that calls into
question the firm’s ability to provide
objective advice. Another commenter
suggested that the Department should
wait until implementation of the SEC’s
new regulations to determine if any
further action is necessary, and that the
Department’s approach to regulating
fiduciary use of proxy advisory firms
should align with the approach taken by
the SEC so that SEC-registered
investment advisers are subject to a
consistent standard regarding their use
of proxy advisory firms. On the other
hand, some commenters criticized the
Department’s focus on proxy advisory
firms as being based on unsupported
allegations of proxy advisory firm
critics, without the Department either
substantiating those criticisms or noting
the self-interest of the persons making
those allegations.
After considering the public
comments, the Department is adopting
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) in the final rule
unmodified. It provides that fiduciaries
must exercise prudence and diligence in
the selection and monitoring of persons,
if any, selected to advise or otherwise
assist with exercises of shareholder
rights, such as providing research and
analysis, recommendations regarding
proxy votes, administrative services
with voting proxies, and recordkeeping
and reporting services. The provision is
essentially a restatement of the general
fiduciary obligations that apply to the
selection and monitoring of plan service
providers, articulated in the context of
fiduciary and other service providers
that advise or assist with exercises of
shareholder rights. Thus, as a general
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matter, fiduciaries will be expected to
assess the qualifications of the provider,
the quality of services offered, and the
reasonableness of fees charged in light
of the services provided. The process
also must avoid self-dealing, conflicts of
interest or other improper influence. In
considering any proxy recommendation,
fiduciaries should assure that they are
fully informed of potential conflicts of
proxy advisory firms and the steps such
firms have taken to address them.
Furthermore, to the extent applicable,
fiduciaries will be expected to review
the proxy voting policies and/or proxy
voting guidelines and the implementing
activities of the person being selected. If
a fiduciary determines that the
recommendations and other activities of
such person are not being carried out in
a manner consistent with those policies
and/or guidelines, then the fiduciary
will be expected to take appropriate
action in response.
A commenter suggested deleting the
list of services related to proxy voting.
The commenter explained that the list is
incomplete, and that codifying it might
create confusion as to the types of
services that may be necessary or
appropriate for a particular voting
activity. The Department does not
believe it necessary to modify the
provision as it is clear that the provision
is not attempting to limit in any way the
types of services that a plan or plan
fiduciary may utilize in connection with
exercising shareholder rights. Also,
although the Department agrees that it
would be important for a fiduciary to
consider the proxy advisory conflict of
interest disclosure required under
recent SEC guidance, and that a
fiduciary should consider whether
potential conflicts may affect the quality
of services to be provided, the
Department does not believe it
appropriate to expressly require review
of such disclosure in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(F) of the final rule because the
provision could become outdated as
disclosure obligations change over time.
Rather, the Department believes that a
general principles-based provision is
adequate and would require ERISA
fiduciaries to review disclosures of
conflicts of interest required by SEC
rules or guidance.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iii)
Paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the proposal
required that, where the authority to
vote proxies or exercise shareholder
rights has been delegated to an
investment manager pursuant to ERISA
section 403(a)(2), or a proxy voting firm
or other person performs advisory
services as to the voting of proxies, a
responsible plan fiduciary must require
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such investment manager or proxy
advisory firm to document the rationale
for proxy voting decisions or
recommendations sufficient to
demonstrate that the decision or
recommendation was based on the
expected economic benefit to the plan,
and that the decision or
recommendation was based solely on
the interests of participants and
beneficiaries in obtaining financial
benefits under the plan. The preamble
explained that the proposal required
fiduciaries to require documentation of
the rationale for proxy-voting decisions
so that fiduciaries can periodically
monitor those decisions.
Commenters expressed concern that
paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the proposal
appeared to require a delegating
fiduciary to, in effect, peer over the
shoulder of an investment manager and
supervise each voting decision to
confirm the voting decision was made
based on the economic impact on the
plan. Commenters noted that such a
monitoring obligation for proxy voting
would be higher than for other fiduciary
activities, and would be inconsistent
with ERISA’s general rules and prior
Department guidance related to
delegation of fiduciary responsibilities.
Commenters asked for clarification that
fiduciaries would not be required to
monitor every proxy vote or secondguess other fiduciaries’ specific proxy
voting decisions, unless the fiduciary
knows or should know the designated
fiduciary is violating ERISA with their
proxy voting procedures.
Another commenter recommended
removal of the requirement that a
fiduciary require its investment
managers and proxy advisory firms to
document each voting decision along
with the rationale for each decision,
indicating that it would create
unmanageable liability risk for
fiduciaries by suggesting an obligation
to review every voting decision made.
Commenters indicated that the
documentation requirement would be
costly for investment managers,
believing they would need to justify and
communicate their decisions regarding
the benefit of each proxy agenda item to
each plan client. Another commenter
suggested industry practice is that,
when votes are exercised in accordance
with approved proxy voting guidelines
generally, only votes contrary to
approved guidelines warrant specific
documentation. Other commenters,
however, believed documentation
would be beneficial in protecting plan
interests and suggested that further
access to information and analyses from
proxy advisory firms would help plan
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fiduciaries understand how the advisory
firms developed their recommendations.
The Department did not intend to
create a higher standard for a fiduciary’s
monitoring of an investment manager’s
proxy voting activities than would
ordinarily apply under ERISA with
respect to the monitoring of any other
fiduciary or fiduciary activity. Thus, the
Department has revised the provision in
the final rule to eliminate the
requirement for documentation of the
rationale for proxy voting decisions, and
instead replaced it with a more general
monitoring obligation. Specifically,
paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the final rule
provides that where the authority to
vote proxies or exercise shareholder
rights has been delegated to an
investment manager pursuant to ERISA
section 403(a)(2), a proxy voting firm or
other person who performs advisory
services as to the voting of proxies, a
responsible plan fiduciary shall
prudently monitor the proxy voting
activities of such investment manager or
proxy advisory firm and determine
whether such activities are consistent
with paragraphs (e)(2)(i)–(ii) and (e)(3)
of the final rule. The Department notes
that while the provision does not
contain a specific documentation
requirement, an SEC rule requires
investment advisers registered with the
SEC under the Advisers Act to maintain
a record of each proxy vote cast on
behalf of a client, retain documents
created by the adviser that were material
to a decision on how to vote or that
memorialize the basis for that decision,
and to maintain each written client
request for information on how the
adviser voted proxies on behalf of the
client and any written response by the
investment adviser to any (written or
oral) client request for information on
how the adviser voted proxies on behalf
of the requesting client.43 These
requirements may be helpful to
responsible plan fiduciaries in fulfilling
monitoring requirements under
paragraph (e)(2)(iii).
Commenters also raised concerns
about the statement in the preamble to
the proposal that suggested uniform
proxy policies may sometimes
jeopardize responsible plan fiduciaries’
satisfaction of their duties under ERISA
as suggesting that ERISA plans should
require investment managers to use
customized policies. A commenter
explained that currently investment
managers with voting discretion may
43 SEC Rule 204–2, 17 CFR 275.204–2; see also
SEC Rule 206(4)–6(b) and (c), 17 CFR 275.206(4)–
6(b) and (c) (relating to certain disclosures about
proxy voting by an investment adviser that must be
provided to, or may be requested by, a client of the
investment adviser).
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vote consistently across client accounts
as appropriate (i.e., on those proposals
for which objectives of the accounts are
consistent and divergent economic
interests or client-specific preferences
are not present). Similarly, another
commenter indicated that many
investment advisers registered with the
SEC use consistent proxy voting policies
across client accounts, including
accounts held by ERISA plans and
pooled investment vehicles, because
they believe those policies are in the
best interest of clients.
Some commenters believed that
developing customized policies for
particular ERISA plans or collective
investment vehicles used by ERISA
plans would increase costs for plans and
investment managers without
incremental benefit to participants and
beneficiaries. A commenter noted that
investment managers might need to run
a parallel voting process for ERISA and
non-ERISA assets, which would create
additional administrative burden and
costs. A commenter also asserted that
due to increased risk, some managers
might move in the direction of not
undertaking voting responsibilities,
which would then require plans to make
their own assessments and invariably
result in increased costs.
A commenter suggested that the
proposal’s approach to regulating
fiduciary use of proxy advisory firms
should align with the approach taken by
the SEC so that SEC-registered
investment advisers are subject to a
consistent standard regarding their use
of proxy advisory firms. A commenter
noted similar concerns in the context of
proxy advisory services, indicating that
paragraph (e)(2)(iii) implied that proxy
advisors must tailor their rationale for
every recommendation to each specific
plan (and its participants) whose asset
manager uses its research. A commenter
believed such a requirement would be
unnecessarily plan specific and
unworkable. The commenter explained
that proxy advisory firms support their
clients, such as asset managers to
retirement plans, by providing
recommendations based on their chosen
proxy voting policy, which is usually a
custom policy the asset manager has
selected to serve the interest of its client
(e.g., a retirement plan and its
participants). According to the
commenter, the client’s decisions as to
what its policy should be and how it
should vote are at the sole discretion of
the asset manager.
With respect to uniform proxy
policies being utilized by investment
managers, it was not the Department’s
intention to suggest that plans must
require investment managers to vote
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according to custom policies. Rather,
the Department’s statement reflected a
general concern that responsible
fiduciaries might be accepting
investment managers’ proxy voting
policies without sufficient review as to
whether those policies comply with
ERISA and, if so, whether the
investment managers were complying
with those policies. The Department
believes that the revisions to the
recordkeeping requirement in the final
rule described above appropriately
address that issue.
requirement since that requirement
duplicates the monitoring obligations
set forth in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the
final rule. A fiduciary that retains a
proxy advisory firm or other service
provider, however, remains subject to
the prudence and diligence obligations
described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F)
regarding the selection of that person
and, if the fiduciary adopts a practice of
following the recommendations of that
person, the fiduciary is subject to the
additional requirements of paragraph
(e)(2)(iv) of the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv)
In light of other changes in paragraph
(e)(2) intended to adopt a more
principles-based approach in the final
rule, some provisions related to proxy
advisory firms that were in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal have been
moved to a new paragraph (e)(2)(iv) in
the final rule. Specifically, paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal stated that
the fiduciary may not adopt a practice
of following the recommendations of a
proxy advisory firm or other service
provider without appropriate
supervision and a determination that
the service provider’s proxy voting
guidelines are consistent with the
economic interests of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries as defined
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the
proposal.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final rule
generally includes the same fiduciary
obligations with respect to the use of
proxy advisory firms and other service
providers that were described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal,
with some modifications to strengthen
the oversight obligations of fiduciaries
who retain proxy advisory firms or other
service providers. In response to the
public comments that cited fiduciary
practices that carry a high risk of
noncompliance with ERISA, paragraph
(e)(2)(iv) of the final rule has been
modified so that a fiduciary that chooses
to follow the recommendations of a
proxy advisory firm or other service
provider must determine that the firm or
service provider’s proxy voting
guidelines are consistent with the five
factors set forth in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(A)–(E) of the final rule, rather
than only paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A).
Because paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the
final rule covers the exercise of
prudence and diligence in the selection
and monitoring of proxy advisory firms
and other service providers, it would
not generally be applicable to the proxy
voting guidelines of a proxy advisory
firm or other service provider.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final rule
removes the appropriate supervision
(iii) Paragraph (e)(3)
Paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the
proposal, which would have required
fiduciaries in certain circumstances to
vote or not to vote proxies, were
removed from the final rule, as
discussed above. Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of
the proposal expressly acknowledged
the appropriateness of ERISA
fiduciaries’ adoption of proxy voting
policies to help them more costeffectively comply with their obligations
under the proposal. Paragraph (e)(3)(iii)
of the proposal provided for adoption of
general proxy voting policies or
procedures and provided three
examples of policies that could be
utilized by fiduciaries (sometimes
referred to as ‘‘permitted practices’’) in
paragraphs (e)(3)(iii)(A)–(C) of the
proposal. The proposed permitted
practices included conditions intended
to require a fiduciary to make prudencebased judgments about the policies.
The Department received a number of
general comments on paragraph
(e)(3)(iii) of the proposal. Several
commenters supported use of proxy
voting policies to help fiduciaries
reduce costs and compliance burdens,
but suggested that the scope of relief for
fiduciaries under paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of
the proposal was unclear, noting that
clear ‘‘safe harbor’’ relief was not
afforded by the proposal. Commenters
also asked about the extent to which
fiduciaries following permitted
practices would still be required to
comply with particular provisions of the
proposal that seemed more directed as
evaluations of individual votes, e.g.,
some of the recordkeeping provisions in
the proposal. Commenters
recommended that the permitted
practices should be made clear safe
harbors indicating that fiduciaries are
deemed to satisfy their prudence and
loyalty obligations under ERISA.
Commenters argued that without such
treatment the permitted practices would
not offer effective options for easing
compliance burdens and associated
costs as intended by the Department.
Commenters also requested
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81671
confirmation that plan fiduciaries have
flexibility to adopt proxy voting policies
in addition to the specific examples
described in the rule. Other commenters
did not support paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of
the proposal, asserting that the proposal
would effectively compel ERISA plans
to adopt one of the permitted practices
by imposing the proposal’s burdensome
cost-benefit analysis requirements.
The Department has decided to retain,
with modifications, the framework for
adoption of proxy voting policies as set
forth in paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the
proposal as paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the
final rule. The provision in the final rule
has been modified to more clearly
provide safe harbor relief. The safe
harbors apply to a fiduciary’s duties of
loyalty and prudence with respect to
decisions on whether to vote, but do not
apply to decisions on how to vote. Thus,
a fiduciary will not breach its fiduciary
responsibilities under sections
404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA
with respect to decisions on whether to
vote, provided such policies are
developed in accordance with a
fiduciary’s obligations under ERISA as
set forth in the applicable provisions of
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final
rule. Because the compliance burdens
under the rule should be significantly
reduced by other changes from the
proposal described elsewhere (e.g., the
principles-based approaches and
elimination of proposed paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii)), the Department does
not believe that fiduciaries will be
compelled to adopt the proxy voting
policies described in paragraph (e)(3)(i)
of the final rule but rather will use
them, as the Department intended, to
provide cost-effective options for
exercising shareholder rights in
compliance with their fiduciary
obligations under ERISA.
Thus, paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the final
rule provides that in deciding whether
to vote a proxy pursuant to paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final rule,
fiduciaries to plans may adopt proxy
voting policies under which voting
authority shall be exercised pursuant to
specific parameters prudently designed
to serve the plan’s economic interest.
The final rule further provides that
paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) set forth
optional means for satisfying the
fiduciary responsibilities under section
404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, provided such
policies are developed in accordance
with a fiduciary’s prudence obligations
under ERISA as set forth in the
applicable provisions of paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final rule. These
safe harbors are intended to be applied
flexibly rather than in a binary ‘‘all or
none’’ manner, and may be used either
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independently or in conjunction with
each other. The safe harbors are thus a
means of establishing general proxy
voting practices that allow plans to
efficiently operationalize and manage
shareholder rights consistent with the
applicable fiduciary principles in
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii). Paragraph
(e)(3)(i) also makes clear that paragraphs
(e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) are not intended to
set forth an exclusive list of the policies
that plans could adopt that would
satisfy their responsibilities under the
fiduciary principles in paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii).
Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(A) sets forth the
first of two safe harbor policies
contained in the final rule. It describes
a policy that voting resources will focus
only on particular types of proposals
that the fiduciary has prudently
determined are substantially related to
the issuer’s business activities or are
expected to have material effect on the
value of the investment. The provision
is substantively similar to the permitted
practice described in paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(B) of the proposal. However,
the proposed provision listed types of
proposals that a fiduciary might
prudently consider focusing voting
resources on: Proposals relating to
corporate events (mergers and
acquisitions transactions, dissolutions,
conversions, or consolidations),
corporate repurchases of shares
(buybacks), issuances of additional
securities with dilutive effects on
shareholders, or contested elections for
directors. Commenters expressed
concern that the Department did not
provide any economic analysis for why
matters listed in proposed paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(B) would be more material to
shareholders than other issues, and
argued that voting on a variety of issues
not included in that list would be in the
interest of ERISA plans. For example, a
commenter pointed out that mutual
fund proposals, which may present
difficulties for these funds in achieving
quorum as compared to solicitations
made by corporate issuers, and votes to
approve auditors were not included in
the list but could be considered material
to investors.
The list of matters included in the
proposal was not intended as an
exhaustive list of particular matters that
merit consideration by fiduciaries. Nor
was it intended to limit a fiduciary’s
flexibility to prudently consider other
matters. The Department continues to
believe that the listed issues are
examples of matters that generally
would be expected to have an economic
impact on the value of the investment.
Nonetheless, to avoid the potential for
such a misperception, the Department is
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not including the list in paragraph
(e)(3)(i)(A) of the final rule.
The final provision slightly revises
the language used to describe the
fiduciary’s prudence determination to
reflect a pecuniary-based analysis. The
final rule also broadly references the
value of the investment rather than the
plan’s investment to make it clear that
the evaluation could be at the
investment manager level dealing with
a pool of investor’s assets or at the
individual plan level. Paragraph
(e)(3)(i)(A) of the final rule thus
describes a policy that voting resources
will focus only on particular types of
proposals the fiduciary has prudently
determined are substantially related to
the issuer’s business activities or are
expected to have a material effect on the
value of the investment.44
Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(B) of the final rule
sets forth the second safe harbor policy
and is based on paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C)
of the proposal. The proposal provided
that a fiduciary could adopt a policy of
refraining from voting on proposals or
particular types of proposals when the
plan’s holding of the issuer relative to
the plan’s total investment assets is
below quantitative thresholds that the
fiduciary prudently determines,
considering its percentage ownership of
the issuer and other relevant factors, is
sufficiently small that the matter being
voted upon is unlikely to have a
material impact on the investment
performance of the plan’s portfolio (or
investment performance of assets under
management in the case of an
investment manager). The proposal
indicated that the Department was
considering a specific quantitative
upper limit for the threshold (i.e., a cap)
under paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C), and
solicited comments on setting this
upper limit, including whether a
maximum cap should be defined and, if
so, what factors should be considered in
setting a cap. In particular, the
Department solicited comments on
whether a five percent cap would be
appropriate, or some other percent level
of plan assets.
A commenter expressed the view that
the permitted practice described in
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C) to refrain from
proxy voting would violate the
44 The final rule uses the term ‘‘material effect’’
rather than ‘‘significant impact.’’ No substantive
change is intended by the revision as the
Department believes that ‘‘significant impact’’ is
generally equivalent to ‘‘material effect’’ in this
context. Use of the term materiality is intended to
align the terminology consistent with the rest of the
Investment Duties regulation. The Department
believes that fiduciaries and investment managers
are generally familiar with the concept of
materiality from its use in connection with both
ERISA and the Federal securities laws.
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requirement in ERISA section
404(a)(1)(B) that plan fiduciaries act
‘‘with the care, skill, prudence, and
diligence under the circumstances then
prevailing [as] a prudent man acting in
a like capacity and familiar with such
matters.’’ According to the commenter,
the overwhelming majority of prudent
experts—i.e., the expert professionals
who make up the investment
management community—have
determined that proxy voting is in their
clients’ interests. Another commenter
disagreed with the Department’s
statement that voting shares of plan
holdings that comprise a small portion
of total plan assets rarely advances
plans’ economic interests. The
commenter indicated that, depending
on the size of a plan, even small relative
positions can have a large dollar value.
Commenters also expressed concerns
about potential negative unintended
consequences of widespread adoption of
the permitted practice. According to a
commenter, if the majority of a plan’s
investments in portfolio companies fell
within the parameters described in the
permitted practice, this could leave the
majority of the plan’s portfolio unvoted, which in the aggregate would
expose the plan investor to material risk
even if the risk associated with each
individual company was small.
Additionally, according to commenters,
non-voting by small plan investors
could result in concentrating proxy
votes in the hands of other investors
whose interests might not align with the
long-term interests of ERISA plans.
Furthermore, non-voting by plans could
result in companies with substantial
portions of un-voted shares, and could
also result in quorum requirements
going unmet.
With respect to the Department’s
request for input on whether a percent
cap would be appropriate, commenters
generally opposed such a provision and
suggested that the Department avoid
specifying a percentage cap on the
portion of the plan’s portfolio that must
be represented by an issuer for proxy
votes to be considered.
The Department is not persuaded that
the type of policy described in
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C) of the proposal
should be excluded from the final rule’s
safe harbor provision. The provision
was designed to provide a fiduciary
with flexibility to prudently tailor a
quantitative threshold for a plan’s
portfolio, below which the outcome of
the vote is unlikely to have a material
impact on the performance of the plan’s
portfolio or, in situations where only a
portion of the portfolio is being
managed by an investment manager, the
performance of the plan assets under
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management. The Department believes
that providing such an option in the
final rule may be helpful to plans in
reducing costs. The Department further
believes that it can be prudent for a
fiduciary to refrain from expending plan
resources to vote on matters pertaining
to a holding that makes up an
immaterial portion because a fiduciary
may prudently expect that voting on
such matters will not have a material
effect on performance. With respect to
setting a cap, the Department does not
believe it received sufficient
information from comments to establish
an upper limit in the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(B) of the final rule
thus describes as the second safe harbor
a policy of refraining from voting on
proposals or particular types of
proposals when holding in a single
issuer relative to the plan’s total
investment assets, or the portion of a
plan’s assets being managed by an
investment manager, is below a
quantitative threshold that the fiduciary
prudently determines, considering its
percentage ownership of the issuer and
other relevant factors, is sufficiently
small that the matter being voted upon
is not expected to have a material effect
on the investment performance.45 The
final rule does not require a specific
performance period for determining
whether a material effect exists;
fiduciaries must therefore prudently
decide an appropriate performance
period for use in its proxy voting
policies under this safe harbor.
The Department notes that paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(A) of the proposal is not being
incorporated in the final rule. Paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(A) of the proposal described a
policy of voting proxies in accordance
with the voting recommendations of a
corporation’s management on proposals
or types of proposals that the fiduciary
prudently determined would be
unlikely to have a significant impact on
the value of the plan’s investment,
subject to any conditions determined by
the fiduciary as requiring additional
analysis because the matter being voted
upon concerns a matter that may
present heightened management
conflicts of interest or is likely to have
a significant economic impact on the
value of the plan’s investment.
Commenters expressed the view that
45 The proposal referred to ‘‘the outcome of the
vote,’’ rather than ‘‘the matter being voted upon.’’
This final rule uses ‘‘the matter being voted upon’’
to make it clear that whether the fiduciary’s voting
power could sway the vote one way or the other is
not relevant to application of the safe harbor.
Rather, the point is that the plan’s holding would
be sufficiently small that any outcome of the vote
(and any consequent changes to the value of the
underlying asset) would have no material effect on
the investment performance of the plan.
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this permitted practice would be
unprecedented, indicating that the
Department has never previously
indicated that a fiduciary may assume
that another person is acting in the best
interest of the plan. Rather, according to
a commenter, the Department’s
consistent position is that a fiduciary
must prudently select and monitor both
fiduciary and non-fiduciary service
providers. The commenter questioned
this provision’s consistency with other
provisions of the proposal, noting that
under other provisions of the proposal
plan fiduciaries would be required to
increase their due diligence on proxy
advisory firms consistent with prudence
and loyalty obligations, but this
permitted practice would allow them to
follow corporate directors in deciding
what is in the best interest of the
fiduciaries’ plan participants without
undertaking similar due diligence.
A commenter specifically noted that
proxy advisory firms that are registered
with the SEC under the Advisers Act
owe their clients fiduciary duties of care
and loyalty and suggested that if the
permitted practice for management
recommendations under paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(A) was adopted, then the
Department should create a permitted
practice for fiduciaries to rely on such
firms. Commenters also questioned the
safeguards offered by a permitted
practice that relies on fiduciary duties
that officers and directors owe to a
corporation based on state corporate
laws. A commenter stated that such a
standard is lower that the fiduciary
standard of care under ERISA. The
commenter further stated that Delaware
corporate law authorizes companies to
waive director liability for breaches of
the duty of care, and that corporate
conflicts of interest with the company
may also be waived upon approval of
non-interested directors. Another
commenter criticized reliance on
fiduciary duties under state corporate
law by noting that the law imposes
these duties because management’s
interests can and do differ from those of
the company’s shareholders, and state
corporate law requires shareholder votes
precisely because managers’ fiduciary
duties alone are not adequate to align
management’s and shareholders’
interests.
The Department notes that some of
the commenters may have misread
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(A) as establishing
unconditional blanket reliance on
management recommendations. The
proposal expressly limited reliance on
management recommendations to
proposals or types of proposals that the
fiduciary had prudently determined
would be unlikely to have a significant
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impact on the value of the plan’s
investment. Nonetheless, based on
concerns expressed by commenters, and
on the Department’s separate decision to
remove the requirement not to vote in
certain situations, the Department
decided to not adopt this permitted
practice in the final rule’s safe harbor
provisions.
Commenters also provided several
suggestions for additional permitted
practices, none of which the Department
has adopted. Several recommended a
policy based on a determination that
voting would not result in material
additional costs to the plan. There is no
need to include this permitted practice
(or safe harbor) because the final rule
does not have an express prohibition on
voting based on the balance of economic
effect and costs. Other commenters
suggested permitted practices for
following prudently designed and
applied proxy voting guidelines. The
Department does not believe it is
necessary or appropriate to include such
a safe harbor. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) already
states that fiduciaries may adopt proxy
voting policies providing that the
authority to vote a proxy shall be
exercised pursuant to specific
parameters prudently designed to serve
the plan’s economic interest. Another
commenter suggested that if the rule
retains a permitted practice that permits
a fiduciary to follow management
recommendations, then the Department
should add a permitted practice that
permits following recommendations of
the proxy advisory firm if the adviser
owes a fiduciary duty to its clients. The
Department has not retained the
permitted practice regarding following
management recommendations and
believes that proxy advisory firms are
adequately addressed in other
provisions of the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the final rule
relates to the review of proxy voting
policies adopted under paragraph
(e)(3)(i). The corresponding provision at
paragraph (e)(3)(iv) of the proposal,
applicable to the proposal’s permitted
practices, required plan fiduciaries to
review any proxy voting policies
adopted pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(iii)
of the proposal at least once every two
years. The Department explained that
the proposed requirement was
appropriate to ensure a plan’s proxy
voting policies remain prudent given
ongoing changes in financial markets
and the investment world, but solicited
comments on whether some other
maximum interval for review would be
appropriate.
Commenters suggested that a two-year
requirement would be unnecessary and
recommended removal. Commenters
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expressed the view that review of
permitted practices should be based on
facts and circumstances and left to the
fiduciary to decide. A commenter also
expressed concern that a specific review
requirement in the rule could create
potential liability for fiduciaries in their
ongoing monitoring of other plan
policies, such as investment policy
statements, fiduciary charters, plan
expenses and other policies, or in
connection with the frequency of
requests for proposals.
After considering comments, the
Department has decided to remove the
specific two-year requirement and
provide a general requirement for
periodic review of policies. The
Department understands that general
industry practice is to review
investment policy statements
approximately every two years and
expects that fiduciaries will review
proxy voting policies with roughly the
same frequency. Nevertheless, the
Department is persuaded that it is
unnecessary to set an exact deadline
and that doing so could create liability
based on a technical temporal violation
of the rule. As a result, paragraph
(e)(3)(ii) of the final rule provides that
plan fiduciaries shall periodically
review proxy voting policies adopted
pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the
final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the final rule
relates to the effect of proxy voting
policies adopted under the final rule’s
safe harbor provision. It is based on
paragraph (e)(3)(v) of the proposal,
which provided that no policies
adopted under paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of
the proposal would have precluded, or
imposed liability for, submitting a proxy
vote when the fiduciary prudently
determines that the matter being voted
upon would have an economic impact
on the plan after taking into account the
costs involved, or for refraining from
voting when the fiduciary prudently
determines that the matter being voted
upon would not have an economic
impact on the plan after taking into
account the costs involved.
A commenter indicated that
paragraph (e)(3)(v) of the proposal was
not sufficient to provide safe harbor
relief for fiduciaries following permitted
practices under the proposal. Another
commenter expressed the view that the
provision was not broad enough and
should expressly permit fiduciaries to
consider any prudent alternative
courses of action for any particular
proxy issue that may otherwise fall
within the description of a permitted
practice.
The Department believes that
paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the final rule
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provides sufficient clarity with respect
to the Department’s intended safe
harbor treatment of proxy voting
policies adopted under paragraph (e)(3)
of the final rule. The Department also
believes that the principles-based
approach in the final rule provides
sufficient flexibility for fiduciaries to
exercise prudent judgment in making
proxy voting determinations. Changes
have been made to paragraph (e)(3)(iii)
of the final rule to reflect this
principles-based approach.
Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the final rule
provides that no proxy voting policies
adopted pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i)
of this section shall preclude, or impose
liability for, submitting a proxy vote
when the fiduciary prudently
determines that the matter being voted
upon is expected to have a material
effect on the value of the investment or
the investment performance of the
plan’s portfolio (or investment
performance of assets under
management in the case of an
investment manager) after taking into
account the costs involved, or refraining
from voting when the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon is not expected to
have such a material effect after taking
into account the costs involved. In light
of the potentially large number of
individual proxy votes that may need to
be considered on an annual basis, the
safe harbor provisions are intended to
apply and operationalize the fiduciary
principles described in the final rule for
a particular plan in a cost-efficient
manner and provide an alternative to
retaining a proxy advisory firm to
provide advice on each vote. Paragraph
(e)(3)(iii) of the final rule shields a
fiduciary from liability to the extent that
the fiduciary deviates from policies
adopted pursuant to the safe harbors
based on the fiduciary’s conclusion that
a different approach in a particular case
is in the economic interests of the plan
considering the specific facts and
circumstances.
(iv) Paragraph (e)(4)
Paragraphs (e)(4)(i) and (ii) of the final
rule, like the proposal, reflect
longstanding interpretive positions
published in the Department’s prior
Interpretive Bulletins. Paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(A) of the proposal stated that
the responsibility for exercising
shareholder rights lies exclusively with
the plan trustee, except to the extent
that either (1) the trustee is subject to
the directions of a named fiduciary
pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(1), or
(2) the power to manage, acquire, or
dispose of the relevant assets has been
delegated by a named fiduciary to one
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or more investment managers pursuant
to ERISA section 403(a)(2). Paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(B) of the proposal provided that
where the authority to manage plan
assets has been delegated to an
investment manager pursuant to ERISA
section 403(a)(2), the investment
manager has exclusive authority to vote
proxies or exercise other shareholder
rights appurtenant to such plan assets,
except to the extent the plan or trust
document or investment management
agreement expressly provides that the
responsible named fiduciary has
reserved to itself (or to another named
fiduciary so authorized by the plan
document) the right to direct a plan
trustee regarding the exercise or
management of some or all of such
shareholder rights.
A commenter indicated that
paragraph (e)(4)(i) of the proposal was
unclear as to trustee responsibilities
with respect to voting directed by plan
participants pursuant to plan
provisions. As discussed below, a new
paragraph (e)(5) was added to the final
rule to address ‘‘pass-through’’ or
‘‘participant-directed’’ voting. Paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(A) in the final rule is unchanged
from the proposal, with a correction of
a typographical error. Paragraph
(e)(4)(i)(B) in the final rule is unchanged
from the proposal.
Paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal
described obligations of an investment
manager of a pooled investment vehicle
that holds assets of more than one
employee benefit plan. It stated that an
investment manager of a pooled
investment vehicle that holds assets of
more than one employee benefit plan
may be subject to an investment policy
statement that conflicts with the policy
of another plan. It also provided that
compliance with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D) requires the investment
manager to reconcile, insofar as
possible, the conflicting policies
(assuming compliance with each policy
would be consistent with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D)). In the case of proxy
voting, to the extent permitted by
applicable law, the investment manager
must vote (or abstain from voting) the
relevant proxies to reflect such policies
in proportion to each plan’s economic
interest in the pooled investment
vehicle. Such an investment manager
may, however, develop an investment
policy statement consistent with Title I
of ERISA and the Investment Duties
regulation, and require participating
plans to accept the investment
manager’s investment policy, including
any proxy voting policy, before they are
allowed to invest. In such cases, a
fiduciary must assess whether the
investment manager’s investment policy
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statement and proxy voting policy are
consistent with Title I of ERISA and the
Investment Duties regulation before
deciding to retain the investment
manager.
Commenters indicated that the
proposal’s requirement to reconcile
conflicting policies of investing plans
and engage in proportionate voting to
reflect conflicting policies would be
highly burdensome for investment
managers. A commenter noted that it is
sometimes not possible to instruct a
single client’s holding within the fund
differently than other clients, as ‘‘splitvoting’’ is not permitted practice in
certain markets or custodian banks.
Commenters also indicated that
paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal did
not reflect current industry standard
practice that investment in a plan asset
vehicle is generally conditioned on
acceptance of the investment objectives,
guidelines, and policies that apply to
the vehicle. Some commenters
recommended deletion of the proposed
requirement to reconcile conflicting
policies of ERISA plans. Other
commenters suggested deleting
paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal
entirely.
Commenters requested that the
language in paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the
proposal addressing a plan’s acceptance
of an investment manager’s proxy voting
policy be modified to clarify that the
investment manager’s investment policy
statement or proxy voting policy must
be consistent with Title I of ERISA, but
are not required to be consistent with
the proposed rule. Commenters
indicated that investment managers
would have difficulties performing the
plan-specific evaluations required by
the proposal. These issues are discussed
more generally above. A commenter also
indicated that even if the rule were to
allow elimination of the plan-specific
evaluation, the task to make changes to
an investment manager’s policies would
still be enormous. According to the
commenter, the trust’s proxy voting
guidelines would likely require
revision, and once revised, would need
to be presented, explained, and
accepted by each participating plan,
including non-ERISA plans not subject
to the rule. Similarly another
commenter suggested that the subtle
differences between paragraph (e)(4)(ii)
of the proposal and the analogous
provision in IB 2016–01 might cause an
investment manager, in order to protect
all of its clients, to adopt a revised
investment policy statement that it
would require participating plans to
accept, and that the process would
involve both drafting that policy and
obtaining consent from investing plans.
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The Department is not persuaded to
remove paragraph (e)(4)(ii) from the
final rule or change the language
regarding reconciliation of conflicting
policies of investing plans or
proportionate voting. Similar guidance
has been consistently part of the
Department’s prior Interpretive
Bulletins in this area. As to the
requirement that policies must be
consistent with Title I of ERISA and the
final rule and difficulties associated
with plan specific evaluations, the
Department believes that changes in
paragraph (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final
rule should address commenters’
concerns. With respect to the
commenter’s identification of subtle
differences between paragraph (e)(4)(ii)
of the proposal and the relevant portion
of IB 2016–01, the Department
acknowledges that the language is not
identical.46 However, the Department
did not intend the language changes to
fundamentally alter that guidance. Like
IB 2016–01, paragraph (e)(4)(ii)
recognizes that there may be
circumstances under which an
investment manager of a pooled
investment vehicle that holds assets of
more than one plan may be subject to
conflicting policies of investing plans,
but that the manager may avoid
conflicting policies by requiring
investors to accept the investment
manager’s policies before they are
allowed to invest.47 However, paragraph
46 Specifically, IB 2016–01 stated: ‘‘An
investment manager of a pooled investment vehicle
that holds assets of more than one employee benefit
plan may be subject to a proxy voting policy of one
plan that conflicts with the proxy voting policy of
another plan. Compliance with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D) would require the investment manager
to reconcile, insofar as possible, the conflicting
policies (assuming compliance with each policy
would be consistent with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D)) and, if necessary and to the extent
permitted by applicable law, vote the relevant
proxies to reflect such policies in proportion to
each plan’s interest in the pooled investment
vehicle. If, however, the investment manager
determines that compliance with conflicting voting
policies would violate ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) in
a particular instance, for example, by being
imprudent or not solely in the interest of plan
participants, the investment manager would be
required to ignore the voting policy that would
violate ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) in that instance.
Such an investment manager may, however, require
participating investors to accept the investment
manager’s own investment policy statement,
including any statement of proxy voting policy,
before they are allowed to invest. As with
investment policies originating from named
fiduciaries, a policy initiated by an investment
manager and adopted by the participating plans
would be regarded as an instrument governing the
participating plans, and the investment manager’s
compliance with such a policy would be governed
by ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D).’’
47 See 59 FR 38860, 38863 (July 29, 1994)
(‘‘Nothing in ERISA, however, prevents such an
investment manager from maintaining a single
investment policy, including a proxy voting policy,
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81675
(e)(4)(ii) adds language that describes
the associated obligations of plan
fiduciaries in making the decision to
accept the investment manager’s
policies. Commenters did not question
whether an ERISA fiduciary should
assess an investment manager’s
investment policy statement for
consistency with ERISA prior to
accepting it. To the extent that the
commenter’s concerns about differences
from the relevant portion of IB 2016–01
relate to the requirement that the
manager’s policies must be consistent
with the final rule, the Department
believes changes in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of
the final rule, as described above,
should address this concern. As a result,
paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the final rule is
being adopted substantially as
proposed.
(v) Paragraph (e)(5)
A number of commenters indicated
that the proposal did not specifically
address proxy rights passed through to
plan participants. A commenter
explained that participants may invest
in publicly-traded companies, as well as
mutual funds and other securities,
through a self-directed brokerage
window offered by their plans.
According to the commenter, selfdirected brokerage windows involve the
broker passing voting rights through to
the participants. Further, participantdirected plans, such as those structured
to meet ERISA section 404(c) and
related regulations, sometimes allow
participants to invest in company stock
and pass through voting to them.
According to the commenter, many
ERISA-covered plans have been drafted
to explicitly provide that plan
participants are deemed to be ‘‘named
fiduciaries’’ when they vote securities
held by their plan accounts.
Commenters argued that the structure
and provisions of the proposed
regulation did not account for such
‘‘pass-through’’ or ‘‘participantdirected’’ voting activity, and requested
that the Department expressly exclude
such voting activity from the rule or
provide clarification as to application of
the proposed rule’s requirements in the
context of pass-through of voting rights,
including the responsibilities of trustees
in connection with the actual votes of
participants and whether participants
when exercising their proxy voting
rights would be treated as fiduciaries
under the rule.
The Department agrees that the
proposal was not intended to address
and requiring all participating investors to give
their asse[n]t to such policy as a condition of
investing.’’).
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the sort of pass-through voting that the
commenters described. Accordingly, the
final rule includes an express provision
in new paragraph (e)(5) stating that the
final rule does not apply to voting,
tender, and similar rights with respect
to such securities that are passed
through pursuant to the terms of an
individual account plan to participants
and beneficiaries with accounts holding
such securities. That should not be read
as an indication that plan trustees and
other plan fiduciaries do not have
fiduciary obligations with respect to
such practices. Prior Department
guidance recognized that in certain
circumstances a trustee may follow the
instructions of participants in an
eligible individual account plan that
expressly states that a trustee is subject
to the direction of plan participants
with respect to certain decisions
regarding the management of their
account. In such a case, under section
403(a)(1) of ERISA, the trustee must
follow the direction of participants if
those directions are proper, made in
accordance with plan terms, and not
contrary to ERISA.48 Plan trustees and
other fiduciaries would continue to
have to comply with ERISA’s prudence
and loyalty provisions with respect to
the pass through of votes to plan
participants and beneficiaries, and can
continue to rely on the Department’s
prior guidance with respect to such
participant-directed voting, including
29 CFR 2550.404c-1 implementing
ERISA section 404(c)(1) to participantdirected pass through voting.
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(vi) Paragraphs (g) and (h)
Paragraph (g) provides the
applicability dates for the final rule.
Under paragraph (g), the final rule will
be applicable thirty days after the date
this final rule is published in the
Federal Register.49 One commenter
requested clarity with respect to
whether the proposed applicability date
applied only to paragraph (e) or to the
entirety of § 2550.404a–1. Paragraphs
(g)(1) and (g)(3) of the final rule state
that the applicability date for paragraph
(e) is thirty days after the date this final
rule is published in the Federal Register
and shall apply to exercises of
48 See Letter from Deputy Assistant Secretary
Lebowitz to Thobin Elrod (Feb. 23, 1989); Letter
from Assistant Secretary Berg to Ian Lanoff (Sept.
28, 1995).
49 One commenter argued that the rule is a ‘‘major
rule’’ under the Congressional Review Act and thus
may not be effective earlier than 60 days after
publication in the Federal Register. As discussed in
the Regulatory Impact Analysis below, the Office of
Management and Budget has determined this rule
is not a ‘‘major rule’’ for Congressional Review Act
purposes and is therefore not subject to the delayed
60-day effective date.
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shareholder rights after such date. A
number of commenters on the proposal
stated that the proposed 30-day effective
date period would not accommodate the
essential and lengthy transition
processes that would be necessary for
plan fiduciaries to fully comply with the
rule.50 These commenters requested
extensions up to 12 or 18 months after
publication of a final rule. Alternatively,
or in addition to extending the
applicability date, commenters
requested that if the Department retains
the 30-day provision, that the final rule
include guidance that would permit
affected parties a more reasonable
amount of time to comply with the rule.
Commenters proffered a variety of
suggestions that would help plan
fiduciaries and others manage this new
process, including a different
applicability date, a transition rule, a
grandfather rule for existing voting
arrangements, and a temporary nonenforcement policy.
The Department is not extending the
applicability date, particularly given the
benefits this final rule affords to
participants and beneficiaries.
Furthermore, the Department believes
that the final rule does not represent so
significant a change from existing
guidance that fiduciaries can reasonably
claim impossibility in timely
implementing most of its requirements.
However, the Department agrees that for
certain portions of the final rule, a later
applicability date will address concerns
of some commenters with respect to
their ability to comply with the rule
within the 30-day effective period.
Paragraph (g)(3) grants fiduciaries until
January 31, 2022, to comply with the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(D)
and (E), (e)(2)(iv), and (e)(4)(ii) of the
final rule. This delay gives fiduciaries
additional time in making any
modifications with respect to their use
of proxy advisory firms and other
service providers and for reviewing any
proxy voting policies of pooled
investment vehicles by investment
managers. However, fiduciaries that are
investment advisers registered with the
SEC must comply with the 30-day
effective date with respect to paragraphs
(e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E) as such provisions
are intended to be aligned with existing
obligations under the Advisers Act,
50 Commenters pointed out that plan sponsors
and other fiduciaries would need to review, amend,
and possibly renegotiate existing contracts with
investment managers, proxy advisory firms, and
other service and investment providers. Some
commenters also expressed more specific concerns,
for example, that, with respect to pooled investment
vehicles, it may be necessary to obtain approval of
revised investment policy statements from
participating plans, which would be difficult to
obtain in only 30 days.
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including Rules 204–2 and 206(4)-6
thereunder and the 2019 SEC Guidance
and 2020 SEC Supplemental
Guidance.51
Finally, paragraph (h) of the final rule,
as proposed, continues to provide that
should a court of competent jurisdiction
hold any provision of the rule invalid,
such action will not affect any other
provision. Including a severability
clause describes the Department’s intent
that any legal infirmity found with part
of the final rule should not affect any
other part of the rule. The exact same
paragraph is included in the final rule
on Financial Factors in Selecting Plan
Investments.
4. Interpretive Bulletin 2016–01 (IB
2016–01) and Field Assistance Bulletin
2018–01 (FAB 2018–01)
The final rule also withdraws IB
2016–01 and removes it from the Code
of Federal Regulations. Accordingly, as
of publication of the final rule, IB 2016–
01 may no longer be relied upon as
reflecting the Department’s
interpretation of the application of
ERISA’s fiduciary responsibility
provisions to the exercise of shareholder
rights and written statements of
investment policy, including proxy
voting policies or guidelines.
FAB 2018–01 concerned both ‘‘ESG
Investment Considerations’’ and
‘‘Shareholder Engagement Activities.’’
The portion of FAB 2018–01 under the
heading of ‘‘ESG Investment
Considerations’’ was superseded by the
Department’s final rule on ‘‘Financial
Factors in Selecting Plan
Investments.’’ 52 Similarly, the portion
of FAB 2018–01 under the heading
‘‘Shareholder Engagement Activities’’
will be superseded by this final rule and
this accompanying preamble. Since that
discussion is the sole remaining
substantive portion of FAB 2018–01, as
of the effective date of the final rule,
FAB 2018–01 will no longer be
considered current guidance issued by
the Department.
C. Miscellaneous Issues
Constitutional Issues
A number of commenters raised
concerns that the proposal, or specific
provisions of the proposal, may be
inconsistent with certain rights afforded
shareholders by the First and Fifth
Amendments in the Constitution’s Bill
of Rights. The Department disagrees
51 The final rule includes a technical language
change in paragraph (g) to conform paragraph (g) to
Federal Register drafting conventions regarding the
use of ‘‘effective date’’ versus ‘‘applicability date’’
terminology.
52 85 FR at 72872.
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with these constitutional arguments
and, further, believes that the lack of
merit of those arguments is even more
pronounced in light of modifications to
the proposed rule adopted in the final
rule. Rather, the final rule is designed to
help these ERISA fiduciaries meet
statutory standards, in particular the
requirement that ERISA fiduciaries must
carry out their duties relating to the
exercise of shareholder rights prudently
and solely for the economic benefit of
plan participants and beneficiaries. The
Department’s view of the scope of
factors to be considered by an ERISA
fiduciary when managing plans assets
was articulated as recently as 2014 by
the Supreme Court in Fifth Third
Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer, 573 U.S. 409,
421 (2014) (the ‘‘benefits’’ to be pursued
by ERISA fiduciaries as their ‘‘exclusive
purpose’’ do not include ‘‘nonpecuniary
benefits’’).
First Amendment Free Speech and
Exercise of Religion
Some commenters asserted that the
proposal may violate the First
Amendment’s protection of free speech.
The decision to vote shares or engage in
shareholder activism is, they argued, a
form of speech, and they claimed that
the Department established strict
conditions and costly burdens on the
established mechanism by which
shareholders (and therefore their
representatives) are able to
communicate their interests and provide
for companies to take (or refrain from
taking) certain actions. They also argued
that the proposal was targeted at
preventing support of ESG-related
initiatives and, by increasing the costs
associated with determining whether it
is acceptable to vote, would force
fiduciaries to use a permitted practice
either to not support those initiatives or
to vote with corporate management;
thus, the commenters concluded that
the proposal was both a content- and
viewpoint-based restriction. The
proposal, according to these
commenters, could mandate that assets
are managed in a manner that is
inconsistent with the values and
interests of ERISA investors. Similarly,
a few commenters claimed that the
proposal also may violate the First
Amendment’s protections for freedom of
religion, because it would curtail the
rights of religious organizations to vote
in accordance with their beliefs.
The First Amendment bars the
government from abridging freedom of
speech or the right to assemble
peaceably and from prohibiting the free
exercise of religion.53 The right of free
53 U.S.
Const., amend. I.
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speech protects the open expression of
ideas without fear of government
reprisal. Some commenters stated that
the right to vote a proxy consistent with
the participants’ and beneficiaries’
values is protected speech, and argued
that the proposed rule’s requirements
would unconstitutionally limit this
right.
These commenters relied
predominantly on the premise that the
proposal effectively would force
fiduciaries either to not vote or to vote
with management. As one commenter
argued, the proposal would ‘‘impose
unique and burdensome restrictions on
shareholder activities that may be
contrary to the interests of a favored
group, while removing those restrictions
when the expressive activity favors the
preferred group.’’ However, the
Department in this final rule has
removed the provisions that these
commenters argued would create a fait
accompli, allegedly stifling fiduciaries’
speech-through-proxy-vote. Because of
those changes, these arguments are
moot.
To the extent commenters would still
argue that the final rule might run afoul
of the Free Speech Clause, this
argument is overbroad and inconsistent
with Supreme Court precedent. ERISA
requires fiduciaries to manage plan
assets for the ‘‘exclusive purpose’’ of
providing benefits and defraying
expenses. Even if voting by a
shareholder speaking for herself could
be speech, as some commenters argued,
proxy voting by a plan, which holds its
shares in trust for its participants and
beneficiaries, should appropriately and
correctly be considered conduct.
Consistent with Dudenhoeffer, fiduciary
plan asset management activity must
focus exclusively on providing
‘‘benefits.’’ That term refers to financial
benefits (such as retirement income),
and not to non-pecuniary goals. The
final rule’s provisions require that any
proxy decision serves those financial
benefits of participants and
beneficiaries, a duty derived directly
from the ERISA statute.
To the extent proxy voting by a plan
is speech, ERISA’s requirements and the
final rule’s standards of diligence and
consideration of cost plainly satisfy the
independent scrutiny that is required
for regulations of commercial speech.54
Moreover, the final rule is content- and
viewpoint-neutral. The final rule does
not require fiduciaries to say (or refrain
from saying) anything in particular or
54 See Cent. Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Pub.
Serv. Comm’n of New York, 447 U.S. 557, 564
(1980). Commenters generally argued that Central
Hudson’s commercial speech test would apply.
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take (or refrain from taking) any
particular position, nor does it require
fiduciaries to take action only on certain
topics. The final rule instead requires
that fiduciaries exercise authority over
their proxies with the same loyalty and
prudence applicable to all other aspects
of their management of plan assets. And
any restriction to express beliefs
imposed by the rule still leaves open
ample alternative channels to freely
express those same beliefs.55
The Department also does not agree
that the final rule violates the First
Amendment’s Free Exercise clause. The
final rule is a neutral rule of general
applicability and does not target any
religious view.56 The final rule’s
provisions aim solely to ensure that
fiduciaries base proxy decisions of any
kind exclusively on the financial
benefits of participants and
beneficiaries, as required by ERISA.57
The impact on religion, if any, would be
incidental and not violate the First
Amendment.58 Moreover, pursuant to
ERISA section 4(b)(2), church plans, as
defined in ERISA section 3(33), are not
subject to ERISA and this regulation.59
Fifth Amendment Takings
A few commenters raised a different
Constitutional concern—that the
proposal may violate the Fifth
Amendment’s ‘‘takings’’ clause.
Characterizing the right to vote a proxy
as a plan asset, these commenters argue
that the proposed rule would require
ERISA plans to use their votes in a
specific way, or relinquish them. The
proposed rule’s requirements, the
commenters posited, are so burdensome
as to prevent fiduciaries from fully
exercising their voting rights.
The Department disagrees that the
provisions of the final rule violate the
Takings Clause. The Fifth Amendment
prohibits the government from taking
55 Clark v. Community for Creative NonViolence,
468 U.S. 288, 293 (1984).
56 Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of
Hialeah, 508 U.S. 520, 531 (1993) (‘‘In addressing
the constitutional protection for free exercise of
religion, our cases establish the general proposition
that [a law that is neutral and of general
applicability need not be justified by a compelling
governmental interest even if the law has the
incidental effect of burdening a particular religious
practice.], Employment Div., Dept. of Human
Resources of Ore. v. Smith, 495 U.S. 872 (1990)’’).
57 Fraternal Order of Police of Newark v. City of
Newark, 170 F.3d 359, 360 (3d Cir. 1999) (‘‘Because
the Department makes exemptions from its policy
for secular reasons and has not offered any
substantial justification for refusing to provide
similar treatment for officers who are required to
wear beards for religious reasons, we conclude that
the Department’s policy violates the First
Amendment’’).
58 See Fraternal Order of Police of Newark, 170
F.3d at 360; Smith, 495 U.S. at 878–79.
59 See 29 U.S.C. 1002(33).
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private property for public use without
just compensation.60 A ‘‘regulatory
taking’’ is one in which a government
regulation is ‘‘so onerous that its effect
is tantamount to a direct appropriation
or ouster.’’ 61 The Government action
must (1) affect a property interest and
(2) go ‘‘too far’’ in so doing (i.e., amount
to a deprivation of all or most economic
use or a permanent physical invasion of
property).62 How far is too far depends
upon several factors, including ‘‘the
character of the governmental action, its
economic impact, and its interference
with reasonable investment-backed
expectations.’’ 63
At the outset, the Takings Clause
applies only when ‘‘property’’ is
‘‘taken.’’ The Department has stated that
the act of voting proxy shares is a
fiduciary act of managing plan assets.64
The Department is not aware of any
judicial authority that has addressed
whether a shareholder right appurtenant
to a share of stock, as opposed to the
share of stock itself, is ‘‘property’’ for
purposes of the Takings Clause and
whether the ‘‘taking’’ analysis would
involve an evaluation of the regulation’s
impact on the overall value of the stock.
Nonetheless, even if the right to vote a
proxy itself constitutes a
constitutionally-protected property
interest, neither the proposal nor this
final rule ‘‘takes’’ that right or the
underlying shares. Instead, the rule fully
preserves the right to vote proxies in the
economic interests of the plan. It is
designed to protect, not diminish,
participants’ and beneficiaries’ interests
in their retirement benefits and the
plan’s economic interests by ensuring
proxy votes do not subordinate those
interests to non-pecuniary factors. The
fiduciary maintains discretion to vote or
not vote consistent with these interests.
Given the Department’s longstanding
position that the plan’s pecuniary
interests guide the exercise of
shareholder rights, there is no
reasonable expectation that plans can
make proxy voting decisions based on
anything but plans’ pecuniary
interests.65 Further, both plans and
securities are already subject to
extensive regulation under state and
60 U.S.
Const. amend. V.
v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 544 U.S. 528, 537
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61 Lingle
(2005).
62 Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986,
1000–01, 1005 (1984).
63 Id. at 1005 (quoting PruneYard Shopping Ctr.
v. Robins, 447 U.S. 74, 832 (1980)).
64 Avon Letter, supra note 6.
65 Penn Central Transp. Co. v. City of New York,
438 U.S. 104, 127 (1978) (finding historical
preservation law not a taking in part because it
permitted owner to obtain a reasonable return on
its investment.).
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federal law.66 Finally, the rule does not
‘‘take’’ property for public use, such as
for public safety or historical
preservation, but instead places
parameters around proxy voting
conduct that would fall outside of the
prudence and loyalty duties found in
the ERISA statute itself.
Administrative Procedure Act
A few commenters suggested that the
Department’s proposal was arbitrary and
capricious and, more specifically, failed
to comply with the Administrative
Procedure Act. Also, although not
necessarily framed in terms of the
Department’s compliance with the
Administrative Procedure Act, a number
of commenters asserted that the
Department lacked sufficient
evidentiary support for proposing the
rule. For example, commenters pointed
out that the Department suggested an
increase in shareholder proposals as
justification for the rule, which they
argued is not relevant to whether
fiduciaries are confused about their
fiduciary obligations with respect to
proxy voting, and that the Department
did not cite to any enforcement action
or other evidence that ERISA plan
participants have been harmed or that
ERISA plan fiduciaries are actually
confused about their responsibilities.
Other commenters disagreed and
believed that the Department
established sufficient evidence to
support its proposal—for example,
evidence that politically charged
shareholder proposals result in the
incursion of sometimes significant costs
but do not demonstrably enhance
shareholder value—and that the
Department, therefore, is correct to limit
voting on such proposals. Commenters
supporting the rule also discussed
evidence that proxy advisory firms,
which exert massive amounts of
influence over public companies, have
well-documented deficiencies,
including conflicts of interest, errors,
and a lack of transparency.
Some commenters also argued that
the proposal was a significant departure
from prior Departmental guidance on
shareholder rights without sufficiently
establishing the existence of a problem
to be solved, or otherwise providing a
reason why the rule otherwise is
necessary. Commenters also argued that
66 See, e.g., Ruckelshaus, 467 U.S. at 1007 (1984)
(noting that expectations are necessarily adjusted in
areas that ‘‘ha[ve] long been the source of public
concern and the subject of government regulation’’);
Franklin Mem’l Hosp. v. Harvey, 575 F.3d 121, 128
(1st Cir. 2009) (holding that a claimant’s
investment-backed expectations were ‘‘tempered by
the fact that it operate[d] in the highly regulated
hospital industry’’).
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no further clarification of the existing
Interpretive Bulletin and Field
Assistance Bulletin regarding
fiduciaries’ ERISA obligations with
respect to proxy voting is necessary.
With respect to the arguments of
commenters concerning the
Administrative Procedure Act, the
Department believes that there are
sufficient reasons to justify the
promulgation of this final rule,
including the lack of precision and
consistency in the marketplace with
respect to ERISA fiduciary obligations
with respect to exercises of shareholder
rights, shortcomings in the rigor of the
prudence and loyalty analysis by some
fiduciaries and other market
participants, and perceived variation in
some aspects of the Department’s past
guidance. Further, the iterative
Interpretive Bulletins since 1994,
followed by the Field Assistance
Bulletin issued in 2018, and the number
of advisory opinions and information
letters historically issued on this topic
demonstrate the need for notice and
comment guidance issued under the
Administrative Procedure Act.67 The
Department does not believe that there
needs to be specific evidence of
fiduciary misbehavior or demonstrated
injury to plans and plan participants in
order to issue a regulation addressing
the application of ERISA’s fiduciary
duties to the exercise of shareholder
rights, including proxy voting, the use
of written proxy voting policies and
guidelines, and the selection and
monitoring of proxy advisory firms.
The need for this regulation was also
demonstrated by the disagreements
among commenters on fundamental
aspects of the proposal, which itself
confirmed that a lack of clarity in fact
exists and that ERISA fiduciaries and
other market stakeholders would benefit
from the Department’s guidance in this
final rule, as well as the confusion
regarding the scope of fiduciaries’ duties
with respect to proxy voting and
shareholder rights evidenced by the
number of statements by stakeholders
and others expressing a belief that
fiduciaries are required by ERISA to
always vote proxies. Moreover, under
the Department’s authority to
administer ERISA, the Department may
promulgate rules that are preemptive in
nature and is not required to wait for
widespread harm to occur. The
Department can take steps to ensure that
plans and plan participants and
beneficiaries are protected prospectively
and has the ability to issue regulations
67 See Executive Order 13891, 84 FR 55235 (Oct.
15, 2019), promoting notice-and-comment
rulemaking for guidance.
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to ensure that fiduciaries follow their
statutory duties and mitigate the
possibility of future violations.
The Department also believes that
proceeding through notice-andcomment rulemaking rather than
promulgating further interpretive
guidance has other benefits, including
the benefit of public input and the
greater stability of codified rules.
Proceeding in this manner is also
consistent with the principles of
Executive Order 13891 and the
Department’s recently issued PRO Good
Guidance rule, which emphasize the
importance of public participation, fair
notice, and compliance with the
Administrative Procedure Act.
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Tension With State Corporate Law
Some commenters argued that the
proposal, if finalized, would undermine
state corporate laws, which reflect the
inherent value of shareholder voting,
threaten good corporate governance, and
impede shareholders’ voting rights. The
Department is, according to these
commenters, overstepping its authority
and substituting its opinion for that of
shareholders, the owners of
corporations, as to what is important for
corporate management and business
affairs. Shareholders’ exercise of voting
rights is a critical ‘‘check’’ on the
principal-agent conflict that arises from
the separation of ownership and
management in modern corporate law.
Other commenters asserted that, in
addition to potentially conflicting with
corporate law, the Department’s rule
may conflict with corporations’ and
institutional investors’ existing policies
for shareholder voting, policies that
have evolved over time, in response to
real economic and financial
developments, to enhance the efficiency
and efficacy of the shareholder voting
process.
The Department disagrees with
commenters that this rulemaking creates
any real conflict with state corporate
laws. Although the rule will affect
ERISA plan fiduciaries as to whether
and how they exercise certain
shareholder rights, the rule will not
impact such rights themselves.
Commenters failed to provide specific
examples demonstrating any material
conflict or compliance issue concerning
these state laws.
Coordination With Other Federal Laws
and Policies
Some commenters expressed their
concern that the rule, if finalized, could
negatively impact the U.S. securities
markets to the extent the rule interferes
with other federal agencies’ objectives—
for example, by making it more difficult
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for the SEC to perform its mission of
protecting securities markets and
investors. According to commenters, in
efficient markets shareholders are
assumed to exercise their voting rights
to ensure that investments are managed
in their best interests, and the proposed
rule would frustrate evolving market
efficiencies concerning when and how
shareholders vote proxies. Commenters
also alleged that potential conflicts
could arise for financial market
stakeholders who are subject to the laws
of other federal agencies, including the
SEC, the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.
The Department believes that the
changes made to the final rule mitigate
any concerns with respect to potential
conflicts with other regulatory regimes.
For example, the final rule is intended
to align with comparable SEC
requirements imposed on investment
advisers with respect to
recordkeeping.68 Both the proposed and
final rules were sent to the SEC and
other federal agencies as part of the
inter-agency review conducted by the
Office of Management and Budget
pursuant to Executive Order 12866.
Also, the final rule, as described above,
adopts a principles-based approach that
is fundamentally consistent with the
Department’s published interpretive
guidance in this area beginning in 1994.
Accordingly, the Department does not
agree that the final rule will make it
more difficult for the SEC or any other
federal agency to perform their missions
or that the final rule will have any
negative impact on the U.S. securities
markets. Rather, many public comments
welcomed the final rule as appropriately
describing the prudence and loyalty
obligations of ERISA fiduciaries in
connection with the exercise of
shareholder rights.
Consistency With International
Practices and Regulatory Trends
A few commenters also raised
concerns about how the proposal, if
finalized, would impact international
investment. For example, one
commenter, a financial services
provider, claimed that the rule’s
mandate that proxy voting be based
solely on an ERISA plan’s economic
interests is inconsistent with the
provider’s clients’ expectations, and
68 In pursuing its consultations with other
regulators, the Department aimed to avoid conflict
with other federal laws and minimize duplicative
provisions between ERISA and federal securities
laws. However, the governing statutes do not permit
the Department to make obligations under ERISA
identical in all respects to duties under federal
securities laws.
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also with investment stewardship
standards outside of the United States.
The commenter claimed that asset
managers in the European Union and
other developed nations are increasingly
subject to standards exactly opposite to
those proposed by the Department,
which incorporate (and sometimes
require) consideration of ESG factors.
Further, some international securities
issuers require that investors vote
proxies, and commenters queried what
a plan fiduciary should do in such
cases.
This final rule reflects ERISA’s
requirements. Fiduciaries of ERISAcovered pension and other benefit plans
are statutorily bound to manage those
plans, including shareholder rights
appurtenant to shares of stock, with a
singular goal of maximizing the funds
available to pay benefits under the plan.
The duties of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA may not be the same
investment standards the commenters
referenced under which international
regulation of proxy voting and other
exercises of shareholder rights is taking
place. Accordingly, international trends
or the actions of regulators in other
countries are not an appropriate gauge
for evaluating ERISA’s requirements as
they apply to fiduciary management of
investments, including the topics
covered by this final rule relating to the
exercise of shareholder rights, including
proxy voting, the use of written proxy
voting policies and guidelines, and the
selection and monitoring of proxy
advisory firms. Moreover, to the extent
foreign legal and financial standards
condone sacrificing returns to consider
non-pecuniary objectives, they are
inconsistent with the fiduciary
obligations imposed by ERISA.
As to commenters’ assertion that some
international securities issuers require
that investors vote proxies, as discussed
above, the final rule does not carry
forward the provision from the proposal
stating that a plan fiduciary must not
vote any proxy unless the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule,
taking into account the costs involved
(including the cost of research, if
necessary, to determine how to vote).
The Department also believes that such
a voting requirement by an issuer of
securities held by a plan would be a
relevant consideration for the plan
fiduciary when applying the more
principles-based approach adopted in
the final rule when deciding whether to
vote. However, the Department has
previously noted that in deciding
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whether to purchase shares that may
involve out-of-the-ordinary costs or
unusual requirements—specifically
referencing as an example voting
proxies on shares of certain foreign
corporations—the responsible fiduciary
should consider whether the difficulty
and expense of voting the shares is
reflected in the market price.69
Similarly, in the Department’s view, in
deciding whether to purchase or retain
shares, a fiduciary would have to
consider proxy voting requirements of
an issuer that conflict with the
fiduciary’s duties of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA or that interfere
with the fiduciary’s ability to comply
with those duties.
D. Regulatory Impact Analysis
This section analyzes the regulatory
impact of the Department’s final
regulation amendments to the
‘‘Investment Duties’’ regulation in 29
CFR 2550.404a–1 addressing the
application of the prudence and
exclusive purpose responsibilities under
ERISA with respect to the exercise of
shareholder rights, including proxy
voting, the use of written proxy voting
policies and guidelines, and the
selection and monitoring of proxy
advisory firms. As stated earlier in this
preamble, in connection with proxy
voting, the Department’s longstanding
position articulated in sub-regulatory
guidance that was first issued in the
1980s is that the fiduciary act of
managing plan assets includes the
management of voting rights (as well as
other shareholder rights) appurtenant to
shares of stock. In carrying out these
duties, ERISA mandates that fiduciaries
act ‘‘prudently’’ as well as ‘‘solely in the
interest’’ and ‘‘for the exclusive
purpose’’ of providing benefits to
participants and their beneficiaries.70
This regulatory project was initiated
because the Department believes there is
a persistent misunderstanding among
some fiduciaries and other stakeholders
with respect to ERISA’s requirements
regarding proxy voting and the exercise
of shareholder rights. This
misunderstanding may be due in part to
varied statements the Department has
made on the consideration of nonpecuniary or non-financial factors in
sub-regulatory guidance about those
activities. This final rule provides
certainty to plan administrators and
69 See, e.g., 29 CFR 2509.2016–01 (last paragraph
in the section entitled ‘‘Proxy Voting’’).
70 ERISA section 404(a)(1). See also ERISA
section 403(c)(1) (‘‘[T]he assets of a plan shall never
inure to the benefit of any employer and shall be
held for the exclusive purposes of providing
benefits to participants in the plan and their
beneficiaries’’).
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benefits ERISA plan participants by
eliminating the misunderstanding that
exists among some stakeholders that
ERISA fiduciaries are required to vote
all proxies rather than only proxies
determined to have a net positive
economic impact on the plan. The final
rule also supplements the Department’s
sub-regulatory guidance by specifying
actions fiduciaries can take to ensure
they are meeting their long-standing
obligation under ERISA to act
prudently, solely in the interests of
participants and beneficiaries, and for
the exclusive purpose of providing
benefits and defraying reasonable plan
expenses.
While the Department expects that
this final rule will benefit plans and
participants overall, it also will impose
some compliance costs to the extent that
fiduciaries do not currently meet
specific requirements found in the final
rule. However, as discussed in the cost
section below, the Department has made
significant modifications to the proposal
in the final rule by taking a less
prescriptive, principles-based approach
to the subject matter that focuses on
whether a fiduciary has a prudent
process for voting and other exercises of
shareholder rights. These changes will
significantly reduce the potential
compliance costs for fiduciaries.
The benefits, costs, and transfer
impacts associated with the final rule
depend on the number of plan
fiduciaries that are currently not
following or misinterpreting the
Department’s existing sub-regulatory
guidance. While the Department does
not have sufficient data to estimate the
number of such fiduciaries, the
Department expects the number is small
because the Department believes that
most fiduciaries largely comply with the
Department’s existing sub-regulatory
guidance in this area, which is
consistent with the principles-based
requirements of the final rule. The
Department expects that the benefits of
the rule will be appreciable for
participants and beneficiaries covered
by plans with noncompliant investment
fiduciaries. If the Department’s
assumption regarding the number of
noncompliant fiduciaries is understated,
the proposed rule’s benefits, costs, and
transfer impacts will be proportionately
higher; however, even in this instance,
the Department believes that the final
rule’s benefits still justify its costs.
1. Relevant Executive Orders
The Department has examined the
effects of this rule as required by
PO 00000
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Executive Order 12866,71 Executive
Order 13563,72 Executive Order
13771,73 the Congressional Review
Act,74 the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995,75 the Regulatory Flexibility Act,76
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995,77 and Executive
Order 13132.78
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
direct agencies to assess the 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 rules,
and of promoting flexibility.
Under Executive Order 12866,
‘‘significant’’ regulatory actions are
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
Section 3(f) of the Executive order
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 in any
one year, 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’’); (2) creating
a 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.
OMB has determined that this rule is
not economically significant within the
meaning of section 3(f)(1) of the
Executive Order 12866, but that it is
significant within the meaning of
section 3(f)(4) of the Executive order.
Therefore, the Department provides an
assessment of the potential costs,
benefits, and transfers associated with
71 Regulatory Planning and Review, 58 FR 51735
(Oct. 4, 1993).
72 Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review,
76 FR 3821 (Jan. 18, 2011).
73 Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, 82 FR 9339 (Jan. 30, 2017).
74 5 U.S.C. 804(2) (1996).
75 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A) (1995).
76 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (1980).
77 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. (1995).
78 Federalism, 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999).
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this final rule below. OMB has reviewed
the final rule pursuant to the Executive
order. Pursuant to the Congressional
Review Act, OMB has determined that
this final rule is not a ‘‘major rule,’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
1. Introduction
ERISA plan assets comprise a
substantial stake of the shares of public
companies. In 2018, pension plan assets
contained stock holdings of $1.7 trillion;
such holdings made up 27 percent of
large defined benefit plan assets and 25
percent of large defined contribution
plan assets.79 However, ERISA pension
holdings represent a decreasing share of
all corporate equity. ERISA defined
benefit and defined contribution plans
held just 5.5 percent of total corporate
equity in 2019, down from a high of 22
percent in 1985.80
Prior to its annual meeting, a publicly
traded company sets a record date and
sends out a list of proposals on which
shareholders will vote. A shareholder
must hold shares as of the record date
in order to vote at a shareholder
meeting. There are two types of
proposals: Management proposals and
shareholder proposals. Management
proposals—including director elections,
audit firm ratification proposals, and
proposals regarding the company’s
executive compensation program (also
known as ‘‘say-on-pay’’ proposals)—
account for 98 percent of proposals and
are largely mandated by law or
exchange listing requirements. From
2011 to 2017, shareholder proposals
accounted for about two percent of
proposals but often were more
controversial and thus received more
attention than management proposals.81
Shareholder votes on some proposals,
such as director elections, are binding.
Votes on many other proposals,
including shareholder proposals and
say-on-pay proposals, are not binding
and serve only as shareholder
recommendations for the company’s
board.82
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1.1. Need for Regulation
As discussed above in section A,
Background and Purpose of Regulatory
79 Department estimates are based on Form 5500
annual reports filed by plans with 100 or more
participants. These estimates include only stocks
held directly or through Direct Filing Entities, not
through mutual funds.
80 Department calculations are based on U.S.
Federal Reserve statistics. Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Financial Accounts of the
United States—Z.1 (Sept. 2020).
81 Morris Mitler, Dorothy Donohue & Sean
Collins, Proxy Voting by Registered Investment
Companies, 2017, Investment Company Institute
Research Perspective (July 2019), at 4 (hereinafter
‘‘ICI Proxy Voting Report’’).
82 Id., at 6; see also 15 U.S.C. 78n–1.
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Action, the Department believes that
this final rule is necessary to provide
clarity and certainty regarding the
application of fiduciary obligations of
loyalty and prudence with respect to
exercises of shareholder rights,
including proxy voting. Despite past
efforts to make clear fiduciary
obligations in this regard, the
Department is concerned that its
existing sub-regulatory guidance may
have inadvertently created the
perception that fiduciaries must vote
proxies on every shareholder proposal
to fulfill their obligations under ERISA.
This belief may have caused some
fiduciaries to pursue proxy proposals
that have no connection to increasing
the value of investments used to pay
benefits or defray reasonable plan
administrative expenses.
For example, some fiduciaries may
feel obligated to vote proxies for nonpecuniary proposals related to
environmental, social, or public policy
agendas. The situation is concerning
due to the recent increase in the number
of environmental and social shareholder
proposals introduced. From 2011
through 2017, shareholders submitted
462 environmental proposals and 841
social shareholder proposals, and
resubmitted at least once 41 percent of
environmental and 51 percent of social
proposals.83 These proposals
increasingly call for disclosure, risk
assessment, and oversight, rather than
for specific policies or actions, such as
phasing out products or activities.84 The
Department believes it is likely that
many of these proposals have little
bearing on share value or other relation
to plan financial interests.85 The
Department also has reason to believe
that responsible fiduciaries may
sometimes rely on third-party proxy
voting advice without taking sufficient
steps to ensure that the advice is
impartial and rigorous.
The Department’s objective in issuing
this final rule is to ensure that plan
fiduciaries act solely in accordance with
the economic interest of the plan and its
83 Procedural Requirements and Resubmission
Thresholds under Exchange Act Rule 14a–8, 84 FR
66458, 66491 (Dec. 4, 2019).
84 See 2019 ISS Proxy Voting Trends, supra note
20.
85 See John G. Matsusaka, Oguzhan Ozbas, & Irene
Yi, Can Shareholder Proposals Hurt Shareholders?
Evidence from SEC No-Action Letter Decisions,
U.S.C. CLASS Research Paper No. CLASS17–4
(2019), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/
papers.cfm?abstract_id=2881408, at 25; Joseph P.
Kalt, L. Adel Turki, Kenneth W. Grant, Todd D.
Kendall & David Molin, Political, Social, and
Environmental Shareholder Resolutions: Do They
Create or Destroy Shareholder Value?, National
Association of Manufacturers (June 2018),
www.shopfloor.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/
nam_shareholder_resolutions_survey.pdf.
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81681
participants and beneficiaries and
consider only pecuniary factors when
deciding whether to vote proxies or
exercise shareholder rights. The
Department believes that addressing
these issues in the final rule will help
safeguard the interests of participants
and beneficiaries in their plan benefits.
1.2. Affected Entities
This final rule would affect ERISAcovered pension, health, and other
welfare plans that hold shares of
corporate stock. It would affect plans
with respect to stocks they hold
directly, as well as with respect to
stocks they hold through ERISA-covered
intermediaries, such as common trusts,
master trusts, pooled separate accounts,
and 103–12 investment entities. The
final rule would not affect plans with
respect to stock held through registered
investment companies, because the final
rule does not apply to such funds’
internal management of such underlying
investments. The final rule also does not
apply to voting, tender, and similar
rights with respect to securities that are
passed through pursuant to the terms of
an individual account plan to
participants and beneficiaries with
accounts holding such securities.
ERISA-covered plans with 100 or
more participants (large plans) annually
report data on their stock holdings on
Form 5500 Schedule H (see Table 1).
Approximately 27,000 defined
contribution plans and 5,000 defined
benefit plans, with approximately 84
million participants, either hold
common stocks or are an Employee
Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP).
Additionally, 573 health and other
welfare plans file the schedule H and
report holding common stocks either
directly or indirectly. In total, large
pension plans and welfare plans hold
approximately $1.7 trillion in stock
value. Common stocks constitute about
25 percent of total assets of those
pension plans that are not ESOPs and
hold common stock. Out of the 25,400
pension plans that hold common stock
and are not ESOPs, about 20,000 plans
hold common stock through an ERISAcovered intermediary and
approximately 3,500 plans hold
common stock directly. A smaller
number of plans hold stock both
directly and indirectly.86 In total, there
are approximately 32,000 plans holding
either common stock or employer stock,
comprised of large plans, welfare plans,
and ESOPs. In addition to the large
pension plans, approximately 629,000
86 DOL estimates from the 2018 Form 5500
Pension Research Files.
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small pension plans hold assets and
some may invest in stock.87
TABLE 1—NUMBER OF PENSION AND WELFARE PLANS HOLDING COMMON STOCKS OR ESOP BY TYPE OF PLAN, 2018
Common Stock
(no employer securities)
Defined
contribution
Total
pension plans
Welfare plans
Total all plans
Direct Holdings Only ............................................................
Indirect Holdings Only ..........................................................
Both Direct and Indirect .......................................................
1,272
2,792
941
2,286
17,591
586
3,558
20,383
1,527
569
3
1
4,127
20,386
1,528
Total ..............................................................................
ESOP (No Common Stock) .................................................
Common Stock and ESOP ..................................................
5,005
........................
........................
20,463
5,809
591
25,468
5,809
591
573
........................
........................
26,041
5,809
591
Total All Plans Holding Stocks .....................................
5,005
26,863
31,868
573
32,441
a DOL
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Defined
benefit
a
calculations from the 2018 Form 5500 Pension Research Files.
While this final rule would directly
affect ERISA-covered plans that possess
the relevant shareholder rights, the
activities covered under the final rule
would be carried out by responsible
fiduciaries on plans’ behalf. Many plans
hire asset managers to carry out
fiduciary asset management functions,
including proxy voting. In 2018, large
ERISA plans reportedly used
approximately 17,800 different service
providers, some of whom provide
services related to the exercise of plans’
shareholder rights. Such service
providers include trustees, trust
companies, banks, investment advisers,
and investment managers.88
In addition, this final rule will
indirectly affect proxy advisory firms.89
Currently, this market is dominated by
two firms: Institutional Shareholder
Services, Inc. (ISS) and Glass, Lewis &
Co., LLC (Glass Lewis). It has been
estimated that in 2013, the combined
market share of these two firms was 97
percent (61 percent for ISS and 36
percent for Glass Lewis).90 Each year,
ISS covers approximately 44,000
shareholder meetings and executes 10.2
million ballots on behalf of clients
holding 4.2 trillion shares. Glass Lewis
covers about 20,000 shareholder
meetings annually and provides services
to more than 1,300 clients that
collectively manage more than $35
trillion in assets.91
ERISA plans’ demand for proxy
advice might decline if fiduciaries
refrain from voting shares under the
provisions of this final rule or under
proxy voting policies adopted pursuant
to the safe harbors provided in
paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B). Plan
fiduciaries may want customized
recommendations about which
particular proxy proposals would have
a material effect on the investment
performance of their particular plan and
how they should cast their vote. Plans’
preferences for proxy advice services
could shift to prioritize services offering
more rigorous and impartial
recommendations. These effects may be
more muted, however, if the SEC rule
amendments enhance the transparency,
accuracy, and completeness of the
information provided to clients of proxy
voting firms in connection with proxy
voting decisions.
87 The Form 5500 does not require these plans to
categorize the assets as common stock, so the
Department does not know if they hold stock.
88 DOL estimates are derived from the 2018 Form
5500 Schedule C.
89 One commenter pointed out that in a
proprietary survey of the largest pension funds and
defined contribution plans, approximately 92
percent of the respondents indicated that they have
formally delegated proxy voting responsibilities to
another named fiduciary (e.g., an Investment
Manager), and approximately 42 percent of
respondents engage a proxy advisory firm (directly
or indirectly) to help with voting some or all
proxies.
90 Glassman, James K., and J.W. Verret, ‘‘How to
Fix our Broken Proxy Advisory System.’’ Arlington,
VA: Mercatus Center (2013).
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1.3. General Comments on the Proposed
Regulatory Impact Analysis
Comments on the proposed regulatory
impact analysis included comments that
supported the proposal and others that
challenged the Department’s analytical
approach, assumptions, and
conclusions, including criticizing the
Appendix A ‘‘illustrative’’ analysis as a
fundamentally flawed approach to the
measurement of possible costs, benefits,
and transfers associated with the
proposed rule.
As noted, a few commenters agreed
with the Department’s conclusion that
the rule would provide certainty to plan
administrators and benefits ERISA plan
participants by eliminating the
misunderstanding that exists among
some stakeholders that ERISA
fiduciaries are required to vote all
proxies rather than only proxies
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determined to have a net positive
economic impact on the plan analysis.
One commenter stated that outside of
clear cases of economic gain, the
benefits of proxy voting ‘‘are dubious at
best.’’ Another commenter dismissed
the argument that the benefits of
shareholder engagement may include
realizing gains over the long term and
asserted that short-term costs are nontrivial and long-term future benefits are
highly speculative. A commenter stated
that the rule will add elements of
transparency and accountability to the
proxy voting process.
Many commenters, however,
challenged the Department’s proposed
Regulatory Impact Analysis and
criticized the Department’s analysis of
the relevant literature.
With respect to the literature,
commenters criticized DOL’s assertion
that the evidence on the effectiveness of
and benefits from proxy voting is
‘‘mixed.’’ The Department continues to
believe that the research studies have a
wide range of findings. Some studies
have found that the adoption of
shareholder proposals has a positive
effect on financial performance. For
example, Dimson, Karakas, and Li’s
research, which examines U.S. public
companies, finds that the adoption of
ESG shareholder proposals increases the
returns of companies.92 Flammer’s
research, which examines shareholders
proposals of U.S. publicly traded
companies, also finds that the adoption
of shareholder proposals related to
corporate social responsibility improves
the financial performance of
91 Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy
Voting Advice, 85 FR 55082 (Sept. 3, 2020) (2020
SEC Proxy Voting Advice Amendments).
92 Dimson, Elroy, Og
˘ uzhan Karakas¸, and Xi Li.,
Active Ownership, 28 The Review of Financial
Studies 12 (2015).
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companies.93 In addition, Martin’s
research finds that the adoption of
shareholder proposals relating to
corporate social responsibility increases
the returns and market share of
companies.94 Finally, Cun˜at, Gine´, and
Guadalupe’s research, which examines
shareholder proposals filed with the
SEC, finds that adoption of shareholder
proposals relating to executive pay
improves the market value and the longterm profitability of firms.95 In contrast,
other studies have found shareholder
proposals to have a negative effect on
financial performance. Cai and
Walking’s research finds that the
announcement of labor-sponsored
shareholder proposals results in a
negative market reaction.96 Prevost and
Rao’s research finds that firms that
receive shareholder proposals for the
first time experience transitory declines
in market returns, while firms that
repeatedly receive shareholder
proposals experience permanent
declines in market returns.97 In
addition, Larcker, McCall, and
Ormazabal’s research, which examines
Russell 3000 companies, finds that
changes in compensation contracts
made to comply with proxy advisor
voting policies results in a negative
stock market reaction.98 Finally,
Woidtke’s research, which examines
Fortune 500 companies, finds that an
increase in shareholder activism by
public pension funds is negatively
associated with stock returns.99
Furthermore, there are studies with
inconclusive results. Karpoff, Malatesta,
and Walking’s research finds that
shareholder proposals have a negligible
effect on the share values and operating
returns of firms.100 Wahal’s research,
which examines firms targeted by
93 Flammer, Caroline, Does Corporate Social
Responsibility Lead to Superior Financial
Performance? A Regression Discontinuity
Approach, 61 Management Science 11 (2015).
94 Martins, Fernando, Corporate Social
Responsibility, Shareholder Value, and
Competition. (2020).
95 Cun
˜ at, Vicente, Mireia Gine´, and Maria
Guadalupe, Say Pays! Shareholder Voice and Firm
Performance, 20 Review of Finance 5 (2016).
96 Cai, Jie, and Ralph A. Walkling., Shareholders’
Say on Pay: Does it Create Value?, Journal of
Financial and Quantitative Analysis (2011).
97 Prevost, Andrew K., and Ramesh P. Rao, Of
What Value are Shareholder Proposals Sponsored
by Public Pension Funds, 73 Journal of Business 2
(2000).
98 Larcker, David F., Allan L. McCall, and Gaizka
Ormazabal, Outsourcing Shareholder Voting to
Proxy Advisory Firms, 58 Journal of Law and
Economics 18 (2015).
99 Woidtke, Tracie, Agents Watching Agents?:
Evidence from Pension Fund Ownership and Firm
Value, 63 Journal of Financial Economics 1 (2002).
100 Karpoff, Jonathan M., Paul H. Malatesta, and
Ralph A. Walkling, Corporate Governance and
Shareholder Initiatives: Empirical Evidence, 42
Journal of Financial Economics 3 (1996).
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pension funds with a social agenda,
finds that firms that receive proxy
proposals do not experience significant
abnormal returns.101 Wahal’s research
also finds no evidence of long-term
improvement in the performance of the
firm.102 Similarly, Del Guercio and
Hawkins’ research, which examines
firms that received shareholder
proposals from large pension funds,
finds no evidence of significant
abnormal long-term returns.103 Smith’s
research, which also examines firms
targeted by CalPERS, finds that there is
no statistically significant change in the
operating performance.104
With respect to the Department’s
analysis, assumptions, and conclusions,
although several commenters noted that
the costs and benefits associated with a
proxy vote are highly uncertain and
difficult to quantify, commenters argued
that the Department’s analysis
overstated the current costs of proxy
voting, understated the new costs that
ERISA plans will incur if the proposal
were finalized, and neglected to account
for benefits to proxy voting that the
proposal would appear to classify as
non-economic in nature yet have been
linked to better financial performance.
One commenter cited the research of a
team of academics that found benefits of
shareholder voting for the market value
of shares.105
Many commenters asserted that the
proposed rule will discourage voting,
and some suggested that less proxy
voting by ERISA investors will increase
the influence of non-ERISA investors.
Several of the commenters expressed
concerns that the costs imposed by the
rule would cause fiduciaries not to vote
proxies, even when economically
beneficial, or to adopt the permitted
practices described in the proposal
which they argued would benefit
corporate management at the expense of
plan participants and beneficiaries. A
commenter asserted that because
abstentions may have the effect of a
‘‘no’’ or ‘‘yes’’ vote, the rule may tip
101 Wahal, Sunil, Pension Fund Activism and
Firm Performance, Journal of Financial and
Quantitative Analysis (1996).
102 Id.
103 Del Guercio, Diane, and Jennifer Hawkins, The
Motivation and Impact of Pension Fund Activism,
52 Journal of Financial Economics 3 (1999).
104 Smith, Michael, Shareholder Activism by
Institutional Investors: Evidence from CalPERS, 51
Journal of Finance 1 (1996).
105 Vicente Cun
˜ at & Mireia Gine´ & Maria
Guadalupe, 2012. ‘‘The Vote Is Cast: The Effect of
Corporate Governance on Shareholder Value,’’
Journal of Finance; Vicente Cun˜at & Mireia Gine´ &
Maria Guadalupe, 2016. ‘‘Say Pays! Shareholder
Voice and Firm Performance,’’ Review of Finance,
European Finance Association, vol. 20(5), at 1799–
1834.
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81683
votes one way or the other.106 Some
commenters argued that having proxy
votes cast by individuals who are not
experts, for example by activists or
hedge fund managers rather than by
stable, expert, fiduciary shareholders,
would not be in the interests of ERISA
beneficiaries. Several commenters stated
that the rule could lead to a
concentration of voting power among a
few large firms whose proxy votes are
large enough to make an economic
impact on the plan’s investment.
Several commenters noted that proxy
voting serves as an important vehicle for
checks and balances to keep corporate
management accountable, focused on
long-term value creation, and to prevent
opportunistic behavior.107 Another
commenter suggested that there is
significant uncertainty with respect to
the economic impact of any proxy vote
and that the proposal’s requirement to
determine the economic impact of
voting proxies requires a level of
precision that is inconsistent with the
way fiduciaries operate. Other
commenters expressed concern about
determining whether to vote proxies in
relation to ESG issues; many criticized
the rule for ignoring academic evidence
supporting the pecuniary impact of
issues the proposal deemed to be noneconomic, such ESG concerns that
involve significant risks to companies—
such as litigation, reputational harm, or
stranded assets—and business activities
that cause adverse impacts to
individuals, employees, and
communities.108 They argued such
106 Data on abstentions not tipping votes is
suggestive, but not definitive. Figure 9 of the ICI’s
2017 research on proxy voting (www.ici.org/pdf/
per25-05.pdf), indicates that the percentage of
shares voting ‘‘for’’ various proposals (the
overwhelming number of which were management
proposals) as 95.2% in favor of management
proposals and 29.2% in favor of shareholder
proposals. The data is aggregated for all votes and
not focused on specific proposals, which could
indicate that there are no close votes or at least
some close votes which could be tipped. Based on
this uncertainty, the Department cannot quantify
the number of close votes that could be tipped
based on the available data, especially for
shareholder proposals. While the Department
received multiple comments expressing concern
that the rule would make it more difficult to reach
a quorum, the commenters did not include any data
supporting this assertion, and the Department is not
aware of any data sources that would support a
qualitative or quantitative analysis of the final rule’s
impact on reaching a quorum.
107 For the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and
Standards of Professional Conduct and the CFA
Institute Corporate Governance Manual, please see
www.cfainstitute.org/en/ethics-standards/ethics/
code-of-ethics-standards-of-conduct-guidance.
108 Some commenters cited a 2015 survey by the
CFA Institute that reported that 73 percent of global
investors take ESG factors into account in their
investment analysis and decisions. They also refer
to a McKinsey study that reports that ESG
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matters are critical to performing due
diligence risk analysis and have become
increasingly germane to assessing
company strategy and long-term
financial viability. One commenter
criticized the Department for allowing
the permitted practice of voting with
management but not allowing a similar
permitted practice of voting with proxy
advisors. The commenter asserted that
voting with proxy advisors costs less
and that proxy advisors are subject to
fewer and less severe conflicts than
management.
Finally, some commenters focused
specifically on proxy advisory firms.
Some commenters disagreed with the
Department’s expectation that the rule
may reduce plans’ demand for proxy
advice. A commenter pointed to a report
from the Manhattan Institute that
suggested that some ERISA fiduciaries
are using proxy advisors as a low-cost
way of meeting their own fiduciary
voting obligations, despite the fact that
the proxy advisor firms themselves are
not held to a fiduciary standard. One
commenter argued that proxy advisors
are in a resource-constrained
environment that adversely affects the
advice they provide. In support, the
commenter cites a study suggesting that
ISS provides lower quality advice
during the proxy season, when the firm
is at its busiest, and higher quality
advice during other times. This result
suggests that during the busy proxy
season, when proxy advisor firms’
resources are most constrained, such
firms are unable to maintain the same
companies create value disproportionate to their
peers. Similarly, by citing many studies made by
the investment industry, some commenters asserted
that there is a substantial, and growing, body of
empirical research that has identified meaningful
links between a company’s ESG characteristics and
financial performance. These include studies
produced by MSCI, Bank of America Merrill Lynch,
Allianz Global Investors, Nordea Equity Research,
Goldman Sachs, Morningstar, and Deutsche Asset &
Wealth Management. Some commenters cited an
academic study that uses ISS and FactSet data to
present evidence of a positive causal effect of the
passing of corporate social responsibility
shareholder proposals, the ones that are presumably
tied to ESG investing motives, to the correspondent
shareholder returns. Martins, Fernando, Corporate
Social Responsibility, Shareholder Value, and
Competition (July 1, 2020). Available at SSRN:
https://ssrn.com/abstract=3651240 or https://
dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3651240. The same
commenter cited an observational study that
reaches the same conclusion: www.hbs.edu/faculty/
conferences/2013-sustainability-and-corporation/
Documents/Active_Ownership_-_Dimson_Karakas_
Li_v131_complete.pdf. One commenter referred to a
meta-study showing that there is a correlation
between sustainability business practices and
economic performance. Clark, Gordon L. and
Feiner, Andreas and Viehs, Michael, From the
Stockholder to the Stakeholder: How Sustainability
Can Drive Financial Outperformance (March 5,
2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/
abstract=2508281 or https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/
ssrn.2508281.
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quality of service as provided during
other periods.
After reviewing the public comments,
the Department agrees that there is
uncertainty regarding the costs and
benefits of proxy voting activities of
ERISA plans, both currently and under
the terms of the proposed regulation.
The Department presented an
illustration of an analytical approach to
evaluating the possible impacts of the
proposed rule. The Department
presented the data it had to estimate the
impacts of the rule and also highlighted
places where it lacked data to accurately
measure key parameters. In so doing,
the Department solicited comments and
data to allow the accurate estimation of
the impact of the rule’s requirement and
the permitted practices. The Department
received comments on the illustration
and its assumptions that sought to
estimate the costs of the proposed rule.
Commenters did not provide explicit
data or estimates for a per vote burden
to conduct research or required
documentation, nor did they provide
alternative estimates of the number of
proxies that would be impacted by the
proposal. Thus, notwithstanding the
solicitation of such data, the Department
still lacks critical information that
would allow it to use or modify the
model to try to produce a more accurate
measure of the cost of the final rule’s
requirements.
The Department included the
illustration to solicit public input on
one possible way to envision and
quantify the potential cost burden and
costs savings that could be associated
with the proposal. The Department
emphasized that the illustration was
based on speculative assumptions due
to insufficient data, and, as noted above,
many of the commenters criticized its
basis. Based on the public comments
and the fact that commenters did not
provide data or estimates that would
support continued use of the illustration
as part of this final regulatory impact
analysis, the Department has concluded
that the illustrative analysis that was
presented for public comment as part of
the proposal does not represent a
reliable construct for evaluating the
costs, benefits, and transfers associated
with the final rule. Perhaps more
importantly, however, as discussed
above and below, the Department has
made substantial changes to the
proposed rule that have reduced much
of the cost burden associated with the
final rule and thus the illustrative
analysis, even with its challenges
identified by the commenters, no longer
reflects the potential burdens associated
with the rule.
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1.4. Benefits
This final rule would benefit plans by
providing improved guidance regarding
how ERISA’s fiduciary duties apply to
proxy voting. As discussed above, subregulatory guidance that the Department
has previously issued over the years
may have led to a misunderstanding
among some that fiduciaries are
required to vote on all proxies presented
to them. This misunderstanding may
have led some plans to expend plan
assets unnecessarily to research and
vote on proxy proposals not likely to
have a pecuniary impact on the value of
the plan’s investments. The final rule is
intended to eliminate that confusion
and includes specific language in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) clearly stating that
plan fiduciaries do not have an
obligation to vote all proxies. The rule
also includes a ‘‘safe harbor’’ provision
under which plan fiduciaries may adopt
proxy voting policies and parameters
prudently designed to serve the plan’s
economic interest. This will encourage
ERISA fiduciaries to execute
shareholder rights in an appropriate and
cost-efficient manner.
The final rule clarifies the duties of
fiduciaries with respect to proxy voting
and the monitoring of proxy advisory
firms. Specifically, in order to meet
their fiduciary obligations to manage
shareholder rights, plan fiduciaries must
(i) act solely in accordance with the
economic interest of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries
considering the impact of any costs
involved; (ii) not subordinate the
interests of the participants and
beneficiaries in their retirement income
or financial benefits under the plan to
any non-pecuniary objective, or promote
non-pecuniary benefits or goals; and (iii)
prudently monitor the proxy voting
activities of investment managers or
proxy advisory firms to whom that
authority to vote proxies or exercise
shareholder rights has been delegated.
Accordingly, plan fiduciaries will be
better positioned to conserve plan assets
by having clear direction and the option
to prudently adopt voting policies that
(i) focus voting resources only on
particular types of proposals that the
fiduciary has prudently determined are
substantially related to the issuer’s
business activities or are expected to
have a material effect on the value of the
investment; and (ii) refrain from voting
on proposals or particular types of
proposals when the plan’s holding in a
single issuer relative to the plan’s total
investment assets is below a
quantitative threshold that the fiduciary
prudently determines, considering its
percentage ownership of the issuer and
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other relevant factors, is sufficiently
small that the matter being voted upon
is not expected to have a material effect
on the investment performance of the
plan’s portfolio. Thus, votes will be cast
that more frequently advance plans’
economic interests. Cost savings and
other benefits to plans would flow to
plan participants and beneficiaries and
plan sponsors.
The final rule will replace existing
guidance on fiduciary responsibilities
for exercising shareholders’ rights. The
final rule will provide more certainty
than the existing sub-regulatory
guidance, and unlike such guidance, the
final rule sets forth binding, specific
requirements.
The final regulation could increase
investment returns on plan assets by
specifying when plan fiduciaries should
or should not exercise their shareholder
rights to vote proxies. Plan fiduciaries
are responsible for maximizing the
economic benefits to the plan, including
in their management of proxy voting
rights, which may involve voting
proxies or declining to vote them. If the
cost of obtaining information that
informs the vote exceeds the likely
economic benefits to the plan of voting,
then fiduciaries should not vote. This
course of action will save resources and
increase societal benefits.
The resources freed for other uses due
to voting fewer proxies (minus potential
upfront transition costs) would
represent benefits of the rule. To the
extent that the final regulation increases
the investment return on plan assets, it
would enhance participants’ and
beneficiaries’ retirement security,
thereby strengthening a central purpose
of ERISA. For the plans and participants
that would be affected by the final rule,
the benefits they would experience from
higher investment returns, compounded
over many years, could be considerable.
The increased returns would be
associated with investments generating
higher pre-fee returns, which means the
higher returns qualify as benefits of the
rule. However, to the extent that there
are any externalities, public goods, or
other market failures, those might
generate costs to society on an ongoing
basis. For example, a fiduciary may vote
for a proposal on a corporate merger or
acquisition transaction to maximize
shareholder value even though
implementation of the proposal would
bring about impacts in an affected
geographic area that would be adverse
for local businesses or residents.
Finally, some portion of the increased
returns would be associated with
transactions in which there is an
opposite party experiencing a decreased
return of equal magnitude. This portion
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of the rule’s impact would, from a
society-wide perspective, be
appropriately categorized as a transfer
as discussed further in the Transfers
section below (though it should be
noted that, if there is evidence of wealth
differing across the transaction parties,
it would have implications for marginal
utility of the assets).
1.5. Costs
The Department received several
comments regarding estimated costs for
the proposed rule. Commenters were
divided in their opinions about whether
the illustration over or under estimated
the proposed rule’s total costs.
Several commenters expressed
concern that the rule will increase plan
costs. One commenter said that
conducting a cost-benefit analysis for
each vote is ‘‘unworkable’’ and will
‘‘create a dramatic cost burden.’’ Some
commenters asserted that the proposed
rule would substantially increase costs
because the commenters claimed that
the current cost to vote proxies was
small, with one commenter even
suggesting it was approaching zero.
Other commenters argued that the
Department’s cost estimates were
suspect because the Department
estimates that saving resulting from
adopting the proposal’s permitted
practices were significantly larger than
the entire revenues of the proxy
advisory market. One commenter
suggested their cost to provide services
would increase by 10 to 20 times their
current rate. Other commenters pointed
out that although the model showed
large costs, actual costs would be even
larger, approaching $13 billion a year.
A few of the commenters criticized
that the rule places a higher emphasis
on short-term costs and performance, as
the short-term economic impact is often
easier to quantify with less uncertainty.
The commenters argued that this would
lead fiduciaries to focus on short-term
economic implications at the expense of
long-term value, which some
commenters argued would be in
violation of a fiduciary’s duty.
One commenter stated the proposal
was onerous and that it may not even
be possible for a plan fiduciary to do the
proposal’s mathematical exercises to
determine the economic impact, let
alone defend the determination, of every
proxy vote in a detailed way and
document it. The commenter felt this
would raise the costs of even routine
proxy votes. The commenter also said
plans may need to hire additional
service providers to help determine the
economic impact on the plan of each
vote. The need to have additional
reviews and recordkeeping procedures
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would increase costs for voting analysis.
Several commenters noted that the
Department’s economic analysis
overlooked costs associated with the
proposed rule, such as the cost of
analyzing whether to abstain from a vote
and the overhead costs of voting with
management.
A commenter said plans do not have
the expertise nor the desire to vote the
proxies themselves but instead rely on
asset managers. The commenter
suggested the proposed rule would
make proxy advisory services more
expensive, and the need to
independently investigate the basis of
the proxy advisor’s recommendation
will be costly. Another commenter
reported that they would need to charge
a rate 10 to 20 times the firm’s current
rate due to the proposal. The commenter
stated that such a high cost to vote
would force plans to either not vote or
defer to management.
Another commenter expressed the
view that the cost to use ERISA 3(38)
investment managers will increase as
they will have to bifurcate their
processes, policies, and voting to
accommodate ERISA and non-ERISA
accounts. Additionally, the commenter
argued that institutional investors
already approach their proxy voting
methodically and professionally.
Several commenters noted that the
analysis failed to address opportunity
costs or externalities. With reference to
externalities, one commenter referred to
academic research on corporate voting
and elections that highlights the voters’
motivation of communication with the
board of directors.109 According to this
research, voting can be used as a
channel of communication with boards
of directors, and protest voting can lead
to significant changes in corporate
governance and strategy. In such
scenarios, voting success would not
only be assessed by examining the
returns to individual targeted firms’
stocks, but also by the impact on the
behavior of other companies throughout
their portfolios. Another commenter
noted, as an example of a negative
externality, a study by Arjuna Capital
that emphasized the negative
environmental effects of carbon
109 David Yermack, Shareholder Voting and
Corporate Governance, 2 Ann Rev. Fin. Econ. 2.1,
2.15 (2010); Frederick Alexander, The Benefit
Stance: Responsible Ownership in The Twenty-First
Century, 36 Oxford Rev. Econ Policy 341, 355
(2020); Robert G. Hansen and John R. Lott,
Externalities and Corporate Objectives in a World
with Diversified Shareholder/Consumers, Journal Of
Financial And Quantitative Analysis, 1996, vol. 31,
issue 1, 43–68.
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emissions, which could potentially be
addressed through proxy voting.110
One commenter stated they currently
incur minimal costs to execute proxy
votes in a way that they believe best
protects the interests of participants and
beneficiaries. Another commenter said
that any increased costs would be
minimal and suggested that to ensure
the rule imposes a minimal burden on
plan managers and proxy advisory
firms, the Department could allow these
firms to make the data used for voting
shareholder decisions publicly available
for external economic analysis, allowing
academics, think tanks, and concerned
citizens to provide additional economic
analysis.
Finally, commenters expressed
concern that by requiring plan
fiduciaries to determine economic
materiality and to document that
determination, the proposed rule would
increase litigation risk for plan
fiduciaries. A few of the commenters
specifically alluded to increased
litigation risk from plan participants,
alleging improper voting activity. Some
of the commenters stated that this risk
would discourage plan fiduciaries to
vote proxy votes.
After carefully considering such
comments, the Department made several
modifications to the proposed rule. The
most significant adjustment from the
proposal results from the Department’s
agreement with the recommendation of
some commenters that the final rule
take a more principles-based approach
to this subject matter. The Department
estimates that the more principles-based
approach will reduce much of the cost
burden associated with the proposed
rule. As discussed earlier in this
preamble, the most significant revision
in the final rule eliminates paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii) from the proposal.
Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must vote
any proxy where the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan, after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved
(including the cost of research, if
necessary, to determine how to vote).
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must not
vote any proxy unless the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
110 See https://arjuna-capital.com/wp-content/
uploads/2016/07/Climate_Change_from_the_
Investor_s_Perspective.pdf.
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paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved.
As stated above, commenters
criticized these provisions of the
proposal as requiring a fiduciary to
undertake an economic impact analysis
in advance of each issue that is the
subject of a proxy vote in order to even
consider voting. A commenter further
noted that a fiduciary may not discover
until after the analysis is performed that
the cost involved in determining
whether to vote outweighs the economic
benefit to the plan.
The Department is persuaded by the
comments that the requirements
contained in paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii)
of the proposal should not be
incorporated in the final rule. The
Department recognizes the concerns
expressed regarding potential increased
costs and liability exposure, as well as
potential risks to plan investments that
could result from fiduciaries not voting
when prudent to do so. Due to this and
other changes the Department has made
in the final rule that are discussed
above, the Department expects that the
incremental costs of the final rule
provisions will be minimal on a perplan basis.
The Department recognizes that plans
will need to spend time reviewing the
final rule, evaluating how it affects their
proxy voting practices, and
implementing any necessary changes.
The Department estimates that this
review process will require a lawyer to
spend approximately four hours to
complete, resulting in a cost burden of
approximately $34.3 million.111 The
Department believes that these
processes will likely be performed for
most plans by a service provider that
likely oversees multiple plans.
Therefore, the Department’s estimate
likely represents an upper bound,
because it is based on the number of
affected plans. The Department does not
have sufficient data that would allow it
to estimate the number of service
providers acting in such a capacity for
these plans.
The Department believes that many
fiduciaries already are compliant with
the final rule, because they are meeting
the requirements of the Department’s
sub-regulatory guidance and prudently
conducting their business operations to
satisfy their fiduciary obligations as
required by ERISA.112 The Department
acknowledges that such practices are
111 The
burden is estimated as follows: (63,911
plans * 4 hours) = 255,644 hours. A labor rate of
$138.41 is used for a lawyer. The cost burden is
estimated as follows: (63,911 plans * 4 hours *
$138.41) = $34,309,915.
112 29 CFR 2509.2016–01 (81 FR 95879, Dec. 29,
2016).
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not universal. In the course of its
enforcement activity, the Department
sometimes encounters instances where
documentation is absent or does not
meet the requirements of this final rule.
The Department additionally believes
that the availability of economies of
scale limits the costs of this final rule.
The Department understands that under
the final rule, most of the relevant
fiduciary duties will reside with, and
most of the required activities will be
performed by, third-party asset
managers, as is already common
practice. Such asset managers are often
large and provide the relevant fiduciary
services for a large number of plans. The
Department estimates that plan
fiduciaries or investment managers will
require a half hour annually and a half
hour of help from clerical staff to
maintain or document the required
information, resulting in an annual cost
burden estimate of $6.05 million.113 For
a more in-depth discussion on the costs
for maintaining the required
documentation, please refer to the
Paperwork Reduction Act section of this
document below.
Several of the commenters noted that
the Department failed to recognize the
additional costs associated with
developing or updating policies or
procedures to reflect the requirements of
the proposed rule. One commenter,
however, asserted that most fiduciaries
have thoughtful proxy policies. Another
commenter stated that, contrary to the
DOL assumption that there are ‘‘cost
savings’’ because of the provisions in
the rule that allow the adoption of proxy
voting policies, proxy voting policies
already exist and the rule would impose
additional costs because such policies
will need to be reviewed on an initial
and ongoing basis. After further
deliberation, the Department agrees that
plans are likely to incur such costs,
particularly plans that choose to adopt
the safe harbors contained in paragraphs
(e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of the final rule. The
Department believes that the final rule
largely comports with industry practice
for ERISA fiduciaries; therefore the
Department estimates that on average, it
will take a legal professional two hours
to update policies and procedures for
each of the estimated 63,911 plans
affected by the rule. This results in a
cost of $17.2 million in the first year.114
113 The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911
plans * 0.5 hours = 31,955.4 hours for both a plan
fiduciary and clerical staff. A labor rate of $134.21
is used for a plan fiduciary and a labor rate of
$55.14 for clerical staff (31,955.4 * $134.21 =
$4,288,739 and 31,955.4 * $55.14 = $1,762,023).
114 The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911
plans * 2 hours = 127,821.8. A labor rate of $134.21
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The requirement in paragraph (e)(3)(ii)
to periodically review proxy voting
policies already is required for
fiduciaries to meet their obligations
under ERISA; therefore, the Department
does not expect that plans will incur
additional cost associated with the
periodic review.
The Department generally does not
expect that this final rule will change
the costs associated with plans’
remaining voting activity. Provisions
requiring responsible fiduciaries to
monitor and document voting policies
and activities would generally be
satisfied by current best practices that
satisfy earlier Departmental guidance.
Neither does the Department expect
plans to incur substantial costs from
proxy advisory firms’ potential efforts to
help fiduciaries meet the final rule’s
requirements. If they do not already
meet the standards detailed in the final
regulation, plans that currently exercise
shareholder rights, including proxy
voting activities, will incur the costs
associated with deciding whether to
exercise shareholder rights pursuant to
this final rule. The Department,
however, does not have sufficient
information to document such costs.
It is possible that proxy advisory firms
would take steps to avoid or mitigate
conflicts of interest, strengthen factual
and analytic rigor, better match their
research and recommendations with
ERISA plans’ interests, or increase
transparency as a result of the final rule.
The Department notes, however, that
proxy advisory firms are likely to take
at least some of these steps in response
to recent SEC policy initiatives and
spread their related costs across all of
their clients, not just ERISA plans.115 At
the same time, the final rule may reduce
plans’ demand for proxy advice.
However, this reduction in demand is
beneficial to plans as they previously
were purchasing more advice than they
would have otherwise chosen due to
their misunderstanding that they were
is used for a plan fiduciary: (127,821.8 * $134.21
= $17,154,957).
115 The SEC’s rule amendments require proxy
advisory firms engaged in a solicitation to provide
conflicts of interest disclosure, to adopt and
publicly disclose policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure that the company
subject of the proxy voting advice has such advice
made available to it at or prior to the time the
advice is disseminated, and to provide a
mechanism by which its clients can become aware
of any written statements by the company in
response to the proxy advice. The SEC also
modified its proxy solicitation antifraud rule to
specifically include material information about the
proxy advisor’s methodology, sources of
information, or conflicts of interest, as examples of
when the failure to disclose could, depending upon
the particular facts and circumstances, be
considered misleading. See 2020 SEC Proxy Voting
Advice Amendments, at 242–246.
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required to vote all proxies. This
reduced demand will lower the market
price and the amount of advice
purchased. Consequently, any
compliance costs passed on from proxy
advisory firms to ERISA plans are likely
to be at least partially offset by plans’
cost savings from purchasing a smaller
amount of advice. It should be noted
that proxy advisory firms will see a
reduction in revenues as a result of the
decreased demand for their services. In
addition, proxy advisory firms’ efforts to
satisfy any SEC requirements might ease
responsible fiduciaries’ efforts to
comply with this final rule. For
example, it may be easier to monitor
proxy advisory firms if those firms
provide additional disclosure about
their conflicts of interest and their
policies and procedures to address such
conflicts.
The Department estimates that the
final rule would impose incremental
costs of approximately $57.52 million in
the first year and $6.05 million in
subsequent years. Over 10 years, the
associated costs would be
approximately $90.6 million with an
annualized cost of $12.90 million, using
a seven percent discount rate.116 Using
a perpetual time horizon (to allow the
comparisons required under Executive
Order 13771), the annualized costs in
2016 dollars are $6.76 million at a seven
percent discount rate.117
1.6. Transfers
Proxy advisory firms that respond
best to this final rule will likely gain a
relative competitive advantage. Firms
that limit or eliminate conflicts of
interest and modify their services to
better align with the guidance of these
final regulations could gain market
share relative to firms that do not. Firms
that are willing to tailor their voting
guidelines, strategies, and costs
according to each plan’s investment
guidelines could gain market share
relative to firms that do not.
The final rule may reduce plans’
demand for proxy advice, lowering the
market price, the amount of advice
purchased, and revenues. This
represents a transfer from proxy
advisory firms to plans, who will benefit
as they previously were purchasing
more advice than they would have
chosen to due to their misunderstanding
that plan fiduciaries were required to
vote all proxies.
116 The costs would be $101.58 million over 10year period with an annualized cost of $11.91
million, applying a three percent discount rate.
117 The annualized costs in 2016 dollars would be
$6.31 million applying a three percent discount
rate.
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The Department also notes, however,
that the market for proxy advisors could
also change as a result of the final rule.
Such changes could lead to increased
competition among proxy advisory
firms. In such a scenario, it is possible
that the rule will result in a reduction
in the expenses plans incur to purchase
proxy advisory services. Although the
Department does not have sufficient
data to quantify this possibility, it
would result in a transfer from proxy
advisory firms to plans.
Moreover, as noted previously, if
some portion of rule-induced increases
in returns would be associated with
transactions in which the opposite party
experiences decreased returns of equal
magnitude, then this portion of the final
rule’s impact would, from a societywide perspective, be appropriately
categorized as a transfer.
1.7. Regulatory Alternatives
As discussed above, the Department
considered retaining paragraphs (e)(3)(i)
and (ii) of the proposal. Paragraph
(e)(3)(i) of the proposal provided that a
plan fiduciary must vote any proxy
where the fiduciary prudently
determines that the matter being voted
upon would have an economic impact
on the plan, after considering those
factors described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
of the proposal and taking into account
the costs involved (including the cost of
research, if necessary, to determine how
to vote). Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the
proposal provided that a plan fiduciary
must not vote any proxy unless the
fiduciary prudently determines that the
matter being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved.
After carefully considering comments,
the Department was persuaded to
eliminate paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii)
and adopt a more principles-based, less
prescriptive approach in the final rule
that will reduce much of the cost
burden associated with the proposed
rule. Commenters criticized these
provisions of the proposal as requiring
a fiduciary to undertake an economic
impact analysis in advance of each issue
that is the subject of a proxy vote in
order to even consider voting. A
commenter further noted that a
fiduciary may not discover until after
the analysis is performed that the cost
involved in determining whether to vote
outweighed the economic benefit to the
plan. The Department recognizes the
concerns expressed regarding potential
increased costs and liability exposure
associated with these provisions, as well
as potential risks to plan investments
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that could result from fiduciaries not
voting when prudent to do so.
1.8. Uncertainty
The Department’s economic
assessment of this final rule’s effects is
subject to uncertainty. Specific areas of
uncertainty are discussed below:
Cost Savings—As noted earlier, the
Department lacks complete data on
plans’ exercise of their shareholder
rights appurtenant to their stock
holdings, including proxy voting
activities, and on the attendant costs
and benefits. Many of the commenters
criticized that the Department lacks data
and evidence to support its cost-benefit
analysis and remarked that the
Department should not move forward
with the rule until the associated costs
and benefits are more certain. The
Department firmly disagrees and
believes that the impact of the rule has
been reasonably assessed based on the
best available data.
Demand for New Services—The
Department solicited comments
regarding whether the final rule would
create a demand for new services, and
if so, what alternate services or
relationships with service providers
might result and how overall plan
expenses could be impacted. The
Department did not receive comments
that specifically addressed this
question.
Other Securities—The final rule will
generally govern plans’ exercise of
shareholder rights appurtenant to their
stock holdings of individual companies,
but not to their holdings of other
securities. The Department cannot
determine whether some plans
nonetheless would modify their
practices with respect to other securities
because of this final rule. As noted
earlier, ERISA pensions held just 5.5
percent of total corporate equity in
2019, down from a high of 22 percent
in 1985. Mutual funds, in contrast, held
22 percent of all corporate equity in
2019, up from 6 percent in 1985.118 As
ERISA-covered pensions have shifted
from defined benefit to defined
contribution plans, both the proportion
of pension assets invested in mutual
funds and the proportion of all mutual
fund shares owned by pensions have
increased dramatically. In 2019, ERISAcovered pensions held 25 percent of all
mutual fund shares, up from 8 percent
in 1985. ERISA would apply to any
proxy votes for mutual fund shares and
shares of other funds registered with the
SEC for which the plan fiduciary is
118 Department calculations based on U.S. Federal
Reserve statistics, Financial Accounts of the United
States—Z.1.
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responsible. ERISA does not govern the
management of the portfolio internal to
a fund registered with the SEC,
including such fund’s exercise of its
shareholder rights appurtenant to the
portfolio of stocks it holds, though
ERISA would apply to similar funds
organized as collective investment
trusts. One commenter stated that if
plans do not participate in the proxy
process, it may prevent issuers from
reaching quorum for their shareholder
meetings, and this would impose costs
on plans.
Non-ERISA Investors—Many asset
managers serve both ERISA plans and
other investors. The Department
believes such uniform voting for ERISA
and non-ERISA clients may sometimes
jeopardize responsible fiduciaries’
satisfaction of their duties under ERISA.
However, as noted earlier in the
preamble, this concern may be mitigated
in the case of investment managers
subject to the SEC’s jurisdiction by the
fact that federal securities law requires
investment advisers to make the
determination in their client’s best
interest and not to place the investment
adviser’s own interests ahead of their
client’s.119 Where an SEC registered
investment adviser has assumed the
authority to vote on behalf of its client,
the SEC has stated that the investment
adviser, among other things, must have
a reasonable understanding of the
client’s objectives and must make voting
determinations that are in the client’s
best interest.
Under this final rule, responsible
fiduciaries might increase their
119 See Commission Interpretation Regarding
Standard of Conduct for Investment Advisers, 84 FR
33669, 33673 (July 12, 2019) (discussing an
adviser’s obligation to make a reasonable inquiry
into its client’s financial situation, level of financial
sophistication, investment experience and financial
goals and have a reasonable belief that the advice
it provides is in the best interest of the client based
on the client’s objectives); Commission Guidance
Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities of
Investment Advisers, Release No. IA–5325 (Aug. 21,
2019) (82 FR 47420 (Sep. 10, 2019) (clarifying
investment advisers’ duties when voting
shareholder proxies). See also Rule 206(4)–6 under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 17 CFR
275.206(4)–6 (Under rule 206(4)–6, it is a
fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative act, practice
or course of business within the meaning of section
206(4) of the Investment Advisers Act for an
investment adviser to exercise voting authority with
respect to client securities, unless the adviser (i) has
adopted and implemented written policies and
procedures that are reasonably designed to ensure
that the adviser votes proxies in the best interest of
its clients, which procedures must include how the
investment adviser addresses material conflicts that
may arise between the adviser’s interests and
interests of their clients; (ii) discloses to clients how
they may obtain information from the investment
adviser about how the adviser voted with respect
to their securities; and (iii) describes to clients the
investment adviser’s proxy voting policies and
procedures and, upon request, furnishes a copy of
the policies and procedures to the requesting client.
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demands for asset managers to
implement separate policies customized
for particular ERISA plans or for ERISA
plans generally, such as policies that
align with the proposed permitted
practices in paragraph (e)(3)(iii). One
commenter noted that policies would
increase costs for plans and investment
without an incremental benefit to
participants and beneficiaries. The
Department discusses the impact of
updating policies and procedures in the
cost section above.
Asset Allocation—This final rule
could exert influence on a plan’s asset
allocation. For example, the quantitative
threshold provision in paragraph
(e)(3)(i)(B) would permit responsible
fiduciaries, after prudently considering
the relevant factors, to adopt proxy
voting policies allowing them to refrain
from voting on proposals or particular
types of proposals when the plan’s
holding in a single issuer is sufficiently
small relative to the plan’s total
investment that the outcome of the vote
is not expected to have a material
impact on the investment performance
of the plan’s portfolio. This provision
might produce additional economic
benefits by promoting fuller and more
optimal diversification where it may
otherwise have been lacking. That is,
the quantitative threshold could prompt
a fiduciary to diversify what otherwise
would have been a concentration of
more than the specified threshold
amount of a plan’s portfolio in a single
stock.
Vote Categories—Proxy votes can be
tallied in four ways: For, against/
withhold, abstain, and not voted. The
vast majority of outstanding shares are
held in ‘‘street name’’ by intermediaries,
such as broker-dealers. Broker-dealers
may have discretionary authority to vote
proxies without receiving voting
instructions from the owner of the
shares for routine and noncontroversial
matters, such as the ratification of a
company’s independent auditors. For
matters in which a broker-dealer does
not have discretionary authority to vote,
a broker non-vote is required. For
matters that require approval of a
majority of shares present and voting,
abstentions (which are cast neither for
nor against a proposal) and broker nonvotes are not counted in the final tally.
For matters that require approval of a
majority of the shares issued and
outstanding, abstentions or broker nonvotes are treated as votes against the
proposal. If an investor is unsure about
a matter or unsure whether her interests
and management’s interests are aligned,
the investor arguably should abstain.
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1.9. Conclusion
The final rule would benefit ERISAcovered plans, as it provides guidance
regarding how ERISA’s fiduciary duties
apply to proxy voting and in particular
when fiduciaries should refrain from
voting. Plan fiduciaries will be able to
conserve plan assets as they refrain from
researching and voting on proposals that
are unlikely to have a material effect on
the investment performance of the
plan’s portfolio, and thereby increase
the return on plan assets. The
Department estimates that the final
rule’s cost impact is substantially less
than the proposal due to significant
revisions to the required actions of a
plan fiduciary that were made in the
final rule in response to comments on
the proposal.
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2. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA 95) (44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)), the Department
solicited comments concerning the
information collection request (ICR)
included in the Fiduciary Duties
Regarding Proxy Voting and
Shareholder Rights ICR (85 FR 55219).
At the same time, the Department also
submitted an information collection
request (ICR) to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d).
The Department received comments
that specifically addressed the
paperwork burden analysis of the
information collection requirement
contained in the proposed rule. The
Department took into account such
public comments in developing the
revised paperwork burden analysis
discussed below.
In connection with publication of this
final rule, the Department is submitting
an ICR to OMB requesting approval of
a new collection of information under
OMB Control Number 1210–0165. The
Department will notify the public when
OMB approves the ICR.
A copy of the ICR may be obtained by
contacting the PRA addressee shown
below or at www.RegInfo.gov. PRA
ADDRESSEE: G. Christopher Cosby,
Office of Regulations and
Interpretations, U.S. Department of
Labor, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Room N–5718,
Washington, DC 20210; cosby.chris@
dol.gov. Telephone: 202–693–8410; Fax:
202–219–4745. These are not toll-free
numbers.
It has long been the view of the
Department that the duty to monitor
necessitates proper documentation of
the activities that are subject to
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monitoring.120 Accordingly, the
Department’s final rule requires that
plan fiduciaries maintain records on
proxy voting activities and other
exercises of shareholder rights. This
requirement applies to all pension plans
with investments, including those that
have shareholder rights and proxy votes
that may need to be exercised.
The Department believes that most
plan fiduciaries have followed the
Department’s prior sub-regulatory
guidance or already are performing most
if not all of the documentation
requirements of the final rule as a
prudent practice in their normal course
of business. While the incremental
burden of the final rule is generally
small, perhaps even de minimis, the
Department discussed the full burden of
such requirements below to allow for
full evaluation of the requirements in
the information collection.
According to the most recent Form
5500 data there are 721,876 pension
plans (92,480 large plans and 629,396
small plans) and 8,475 health or welfare
plans (5,626 large plans filing a
schedule H, and 2,849 small plans filing
a schedule I).121 While the Schedule H
collects information on a plan’s stock
holdings, Schedule I lacks the
specificity to determine if small plans
hold stocks. As shown in Table 1,
31,868 pension plans hold stocks and
would have shareholder rights they may
need to exercise. Additionally, 573
health and other welfare plans file the
schedule H and report holding either
common stocks or employer stocks. The
Department lacks information on the
number of small plans that hold stock.
Small plans are significantly less likely
to hold stock than larger plans. For
purposes of estimating the burden, five
percent of small plans are presumed to
hold stock resulting in 31,470 small
plans needing to comply with the
information collection. Therefore, a total
of 63,911 plans will need to comply
with this information collection.
2.1. Maintain Documentation
The final rule requires that the named
plan fiduciary must maintain records on
proxy voting activities and other
exercises of shareholder rights. Where
the authority to vote proxies or exercise
shareholder rights has been delegated to
an investment manager pursuant to
ERISA section 403(a)(2), or a proxy
voting firm or another person performs
advisory services as to the voting of
proxies, plan fiduciaries must prudently
120 29 CFR 2509.2008–2 (73 FR 61731 (Oct. 17,
2008)).
121 EBSA estimates using 2018 Form 5500 filing
data.
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81689
monitor the proxy voting activities of
such investment manager or proxy
advisory firm and determine whether
such activities are consistent with
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) and (e)(3) of
this section.
Much of the information needed to
fulfill these requirements is generated in
the normal course of business. Plans
may need additional time to maintain
the proper documentation, but this
burden is likely to be reduced by the
adoption of policies by plan fiduciaries
that incorporate one or more of the final
rule’s safe harbors.
Commenters expressed concerns that
the proposed rule would be onerous,
since it would not be feasible for plan
fiduciaries to determine the economic
impact of every proxy vote in a detailed
way and document it. Thus,
commenters suggested that the
Department underestimated the amount
of time that fiduciaries and clerical staff
would spend documenting and
maintaining documentation for votes.
As discussed above in Section 1.5, after
carefully considering these comments,
the Department was persuaded to adopt
a more principles-based, less
prescriptive approach in the final rule
that does not carry forward specific
documentation and recordkeeping
provisions in the proposal that were
identified by commenters as
burdensome and unnecessary. The
Department believes that with this
revision, the final rule’s documentation
and recordkeeping requirements should
result in less burden than the proposal’s
requirements, because the final rule
requirements mirror previous guidance
and align with existing fiduciary duty of
documentation.
However, in light of the public
comments that argued that the
Department underestimated the
recordkeeping burden and because of
the uncertainty involved in determining
which plans will need to change
recordkeeping practices to comply with
the final rule, the Department is
retaining the documentation time
estimate from the proposal. This is
responsive to the commenters’ assertion
and is a step intended to avoid
underestimating the average time
required for plan fiduciaries to comply
with the final rule.
The Department estimates that plan
fiduciaries or investment managers will
require a half hour annually and a half
hour of help from clerical staff to
maintain or document the required
information. This is likely an
overestimate, because many, if not most,
plans use investment managers. These
investment managers provide similar
services for many plans. This results in
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an annual cost burden estimate of
$6,050,762.122
These paperwork burden estimates
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Title: Fiduciary Duties Regarding
Proxy Voting and Shareholder Rights.
OMB Control Number: 1210–0165.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profits.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
63,911.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 63,911.
Frequency of Response: Occasionally.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 0.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$6,050,762.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) 123 imposes certain requirements
with respect to federal rules that are
subject to the notice and comment
requirements of section 553(b) of the
Administrative Procedure Act 124 and
are likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Unless the head of an agency
certifies that a final rule is not likely to
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities,
section 604 of the RFA requires the
agency to present a final regulatory
flexibility analysis of the final rule.125
For purposes of analysis under the
RFA, the Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA) considers
employee benefit plans with fewer than
100 participants to be small entities.126
The basis of this definition is found in
section 104(a)(2) of ERISA, which
permits the Secretary of Labor to
prescribe simplified annual reports for
plans that cover fewer than 100
participants. Under section 104(a)(3) of
ERISA, the Secretary may also provide
for exemptions or simplified annual
reporting and disclosure for welfare
benefit plans. Pursuant to the authority
of section 104(a)(3), the Department has
previously issued (see 29 CFR
2520.104–20, 2520.104–21, 2520.104–
122 The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911
plans * 0.5 hours = 31,955.4 hours for both a plan
fiduciary and clerical staff. A labor rate of $134.21
is used for a plan fiduciary and a labor rate of
$55.14 for clerical staff (31,955.4 * $134.21 =
$4,288,739 and 31,955.4 * $55.14 = $1,762,023).
123 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (1980).
124 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq. (1946).
125 5 U.S.C. 604 (1980).
126 The Department consulted with the Small
Business Administration Office of Advocacy in
making this determination, as required by 5 U.S.C.
603(c) and 13 CFR 121.903(c) in a memo dated June
4, 2020.
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41, 2520.104–46, and 2520.104b–10)
simplified reporting provisions and
limited exemptions from reporting and
disclosure requirements for small plans,
including unfunded or insured welfare
plans, that cover fewer than 100
participants and satisfy certain
requirements. While some large
employers have small plans, small plans
are maintained generally by small
employers. Thus, the Department
believes that assessing the impact of this
final rule on small plans is an
appropriate substitute for evaluating the
effect on small entities. The definition
of small entity considered appropriate
for this purpose differs, however, from
a definition of small business based on
size standards promulgated by the Small
Business Administration (SBA) 127
pursuant to the Small Business Act.128
The Department solicited comments on
this assumption in the proposed rule;
however, no comments were received.
The Department has determined that
this final rule could have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities during the first year. Therefore,
the Department has prepared a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis that is
presented below.
3.1. Need for and Objectives of the Rule
The Department believes that this
final rule is an appropriate way to
provide clarity and certainty regarding
the application of fiduciary obligations
of loyalty and prudence with respect to
exercises of shareholder rights,
including proxy voting. Despite past
efforts to make clear fiduciary
obligations in this regard, the
Department is concerned that its
existing sub-regulatory guidance may
have inadvertently created the
perception that fiduciaries must vote
proxies on every shareholder proposal
to fulfill their obligations under ERISA.
This belief may have caused some
fiduciaries to pursue proxy proposals
that have no connection to increasing
the value of investments used to pay
benefits or defray the reasonable plan
administrative expenses.
Both of these concerns point to the
risk that a plan’s proxy voting activity
will sometimes impair rather than
advance participants’ economic interest
in their benefits. This final rule aims to
ensure that the costs plans incur to vote
proxies and exercise other shareholder
rights are economically justified, and
that responsible fiduciaries’ use of thirdparty advice supports rather than
jeopardizes their adherence to ERISA’s
fiduciary requirements.
127 13
128 15
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U.S.C. 631 et seq. (2011).
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The Department is monitoring other
federal agencies whose statutory and
regulatory requirements overlap with
ERISA. In particular, the Department is
monitoring SEC rules and guidance to
avoid creating duplicate or overlapping
requirements with respect to proxy
voting.
3.2. Significant Issues Raised by Public
Comments in Response to the IFRA and
Changes Made to the Proposed Rule in
Response
One of the most significant issue
raised by commenters was that
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the
proposal require a fiduciary to
undertake an economic impact analysis
in advance of each issue that is the
subject of a proxy vote in order to even
consider voting. A commenter further
noted that a fiduciary may not discover
until after the analysis is performed that
the cost involved in determining
whether to vote outweighed the
economic benefit to the plan. The
Department recognizes the concerns
expressed regarding potential increased
costs and liability exposure associated
with these provisions, as well as
potential risks to plan investments that
could result from fiduciaries not voting
when prudent to do so. Therefore, after
carefully considering comments, the
Department was persuaded to eliminate
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) and adopt a
more principles-based, less prescriptive
approach in the final rule that reduces
the cost burden associated with the
proposed rule. This revision to the
proposal is further discussed in Section
3.5 below.
In the proposal, the Department
included an illustration to try to capture
the cost burden on service providers
from the rule. This illustration was
based on certain assumptions the
Department described as speculative in
the proposal, and many of the
commenters criticized its basis. In
response to the commenters and
changes made to the rule since the
proposal, the Department has removed
this illustration. For a more detailed
description about the Department’s
decision, please refer to the Cost section
above.
Some commenters were concerned
that the rule would be burdensome on
small plan sponsors. One commenter
expressed concern that the requirements
of the regulation will have a significant
impact on small entities because of their
limited staff resources. The Department
acknowledges this concern as well as
the concern that smaller plans may not
be able to absorb the additional burden
of the regulation as easily as larger
plans. As described in the Cost section
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above, the Department has amended the
proposed rule’s requirements and
adopted a less prescriptive, principlesbased approach in the final rule that
mirrors and supplements requirements
contained in the Department’s prior subregulatory guidance and industry best
practices. These changes will
substantially reduce the Department’s
estimate of the proposed rule’s cost
impact.
Another commenter expressed
concern that the Department
substantially underestimated costs for
small plans, as many small plans would
need to hire a service provider to
produce additional documentation to
supplement existing investment policy
statements. The Department recognizes
that plans may need to make various
changes to compliance policies and
procedures to respond to the rule, so it
has added an additional cost for the
time it takes to develop or update such
policies and procedures in the final
rule.
3.2. Affected Small Entities
This final rule will affect ERISAcovered pension, health, and welfare
plans that hold stock either through
common stock or employer securities.
This includes plans that indirectly hold
stocks through collective trusts, master
trusts, pooled separate accounts, and
other similar plan asset investment
entities. Plans that only hold their assets
in registered investment companies,
such as mutual funds, will be unaffected
by the final rule.
There is minimal data available about
small plans’ stock holdings. The
primary source of information on assets
held by pension plans is the Form 5500.
Schedule H, which reports data on stock
holdings, is filed almost exclusively by
large plans. While the majority of
participants and assets are in large
plans, most plans are small plans (plans
with fewer than 100 participants). It is
likely that many small defined benefit
plans hold stock. Many small defined
contribution plans hold stock only
through mutual funds, and
consequently would not be affected by
this final rule. In 2018, there were
39,142 small defined benefit plans and
590,254 small defined contribution
plans. The Department lacks sufficient
data to estimate the number of small
plans that hold stock, but it assumes
that small plans are significantly less
likely to hold stock than larger plans.
The Department did not receive any
comments or additional data from
commenters regarding the number of
small plans that hold stock directly or
indirectly. As discussed elsewhere,
while the Department assumes that
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small affected entities will spend some
time familiarizing themselves with the
rule, it expects that even in the case of
small plans that hold stock directly or
indirectly, these costs will be small,
because the required activities are
reflected in common practice.
Therefore, for purposes of determining
whether a substantial number of small
plans are affected, the Department
presumes that five percent of small
plans hold stock resulting in as assumed
31,470 affected small plans.
The Department recognizes that
service providers, including small
service providers who act as asset
managers, could also be impacted by
this rule, if they provide compliance
assistance to the plans they serve. The
Department does not have complete
information on the number of affected
small service providers. However, the
Department does not believe that there
will be more service providers than the
63,911 affected plans. The Department
assumes the number of service
providers who will experience a
substantial impact from the final rule
will be significantly smaller as only
about 7.5 percent of service providers in
the NAICS categories that could be
affected have revenues below
$100,000.129 As discussed in Table 2,
below, the Department estimates that
compliance costs in the first year are
less than $900. Therefore, only service
providers with revenues less than
$100,000 could experience a cost that is
more than one percent of revenues. If
service providers incur compliance
costs, they could pass some of these
costs onto plans and experience a
smaller impact.
3.4. Estimate Cost Impact of the Final
Rule on Affected Small Entities
This final rule will benefit small
plans, by providing guidance regarding
how ERISA’s fiduciary duties apply to
proxy voting and the monitoring of
proxy advisory firms, and in particular,
when fiduciaries should refrain from
voting. Plan fiduciaries will be able to
129 To capture the number of potentially affected
service providers, the Department looked at the
number of small entities with the following North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
Codes: 523110 Investment Banking and Securities
Dealing; 523920 Portfolio Management; 523930
Investment Advice; 523991 Trust, Fiduciary, and
Custody Activities; and 525910 Open-End
Investment Funds. Small entities were identified
based on their revenue and the size standards from
the SBA. According to data provided by the SBA,
the Department estimates there are 8,616 small
entities in these industries with revenues less than
$100,000. This accounts for 7.5 percent of all firms
in these industries. The calculation of the number
of firms by industry is based on: NAICS. Businesses
by NAICS, https://www.naics.com/business-lists/
counts-by-company-size/.
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81691
better conserve plan assets by having
clear direction to refrain from
researching and voting on proposals that
they prudently determine have no
material effect on the investment
performance of the plan’s portfolio (or
investment performance of assets under
management in the case of an
investment manager). The final rule also
will benefit plans by improving the
frequency with which voting resources
are expended on matters that the
fiduciary has prudently determined are
substantially related to the issuer’s
business activities or are expected to
have a material effect on the value of the
investment. Cost savings and other
benefits to small plans will flow to plan
participants and beneficiaries in the
form of more secure retirement income.
As discussed under the Costs section
above, while the Department assumes
that small affected entities will spend
some time familiarizing themselves with
the rule, it expects that these
familiarization costs will be small,
because the required activities are
reflected in common practice. The
Department estimates it will take four
hours for an in-house attorney to review
the rule, at an hourly labor cost of
$138.41,130 resulting in an average cost
of $536.84. The Department believes
small plans are likely to rely on service
providers to monitor regulatory changes
and make necessary changes to the plan,
so this is likely an overestimate of the
costs incurred by small plans to
familiarize themselves with the rule.
Fiduciaries of plans must ensure that
all investments are prudently
monitored. The final rule provides that
fiduciaries responsible for the exercise
of shareholder rights must maintain
records on proxy voting activities and
other exercises of shareholder rights in
order to demonstrate compliance with
ERISA’s fiduciary provisions. The
Department assumes that, because the
documentation of fiduciary decisionmaking is a common practice,
responsible fiduciaries are likely already
recording and maintaining
documentation related to their own and
investment managers’ actions, including
voting proxies and exercising other
shareholder rights.
The final rule will have a small
impact on plans that are not currently
in full compliance, because their
130 Labor costs are based on statistics from Labor
Cost Inputs Used in the Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Office of Policy and Research’s
Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork
Reduction Act Burden Calculation, Employee
Benefits Security Administration (June 2019),
www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-andregulations/rules-and-regulations/technicalappendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-opr-riaand-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
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fiduciaries will be required to maintain
records or document decisions related
to voting proxies or exercising other
shareholder rights. Much of the
information required to comply with
this requirement is generated by affected
entities in the normal course of
business; however, additional time may
be required to maintain the proper
documentation. The Department
estimates that compliance with this
final regulation will require 30 minutes
of a plan fiduciary’s time and 30
minutes of a clerical worker’s time. The
Department assumes an hourly rate of
$134.21 for a plan fiduciary and an
hourly rate of $55.14 for a clerical
worker,131 resulting in an estimated perentity annual cost of $94.68.132
Additionally, the Department
estimates that to comply with the rule,
many plans will need to either develop
or update proxy-voting policies and
procedures. This is particularly true for
plans choosing to adopt one of the final
rule’s safe harbors. The Department
estimates that it will take two hours for
a legal professional to develop or update
relevant policies and procedures. The
Department assumes an hourly rate of
$134.21 for a legal professional,
resulting in an estimate per-entity cost
of $268.42 in the first year.
Under these assumptions, the
Department estimates the additional
requirements of the rule will increase
costs by $899.94 per plan in the first
year and $94.68 per plan in subsequent
years, on average. This is illustrated in
Table 2 below.
TABLE 2—COSTS FOR PLANS TO COMPLY WITH REQUIREMENTS
Affected entity
Labor rate
Hours
Year 1 cost
Year 2 cost
Documentation: Plan Fiduciary ........................................................................
Documentation: Clerical workers .....................................................................
Rule Familiarization: Plan Fiduciary ................................................................
Develop or Update Proxy-Voting Policies and Procedures .............................
$134.21
55.14
134.21
134.21
0.5
0.5
4
2
$67.11
27.57
536.84
268.42
$67.11
27.57
0
0
Total ..........................................................................................................
........................
........................
899.94
94.68
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Source: DOL calculations based on statistics from Labor Cost Inputs Used in the Employee Benefits Security Administration, Office of Policy
and Research’s Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Calculation, Employee Benefits Security Administration (June
2019), www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-and-regulations/rules-and-regulations/technical-appendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-oprria-and-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
To put these costs in perspective, the
Department looked at how the
additional cost from the proposed rule
would compare to the average total plan
cost of 401(k) plans by assets. Plan costs
include investment fees as well as
administrative and recordkeeping fees.
The way plan costs are paid vary by
plan. A 2019 survey of 240 plan
sponsors found that 33 percent of
defined contribution (DC) plans paid all
recordkeeping and administrative fees
through investment revenue, while 52
percent of DC plans paid recordkeeping
and administrative fees through a direct
fee.133 Accounts from the industry
purport that per-participant
recordkeeping fees are becoming the
best practice standard; this trend has
been driven by digital recordkeeping
technology that requires the same
amount of resources for large accounts
as small accounts.134
Fees paid by plans also vary by firm
size. A survey of 361 defined
contribution plans for the Investment
Company Institute calculated an ‘‘all-
in’’ fee that included both
administrative and investment fees paid
by the plan and the participant. They
found that small plans with 10
participants pay approximately 50 basis
points more than plans with 1,000
participants. Further, small plans with
10 participants are paying about 90
basis points more than large plans with
50,000 participants.135 Another study
documented the same trend, noting that
larger plans tend to have lower fees
because larger plans tend to have a
greater share of assets invested in index
funds, which tend to have lower
expenses. Additionally, large 401(k)
plans are able to spread the fixed costs
across more participants, lowering the
per participant fee.136
For this analysis, the Department
relies on data from BrightScope to
establish a baseline of total plan fees,
before the implementation of this rule.
In August of 2020, BrightScope released
updated total plan costs based on 2017
data. Their total plan cost includes
asset-based investment management
fees, asset-based administrative and
advice fees, and other fees from the
Form 5500 and audited financial
statements of ERISA-covered 401(k)
plans.137 This data does not include
plans with fewer than 100 participants,
the standard set for a small plan in this
analysis. However, the Department
believes that the median total plan
costs, provided by BrightScope, serves
as a helpful reference point when
considering the additional burden from
this rule.
Table 3 shows total plan costs from
BrightScope; plan cost information is
based on categories of plans with assets
less than $1 million, between $1 million
and $10 million, and between $10
million and $50 million. The
Department provides as the impact of
the rule the additional cost plans will
incur as a percent of plan assets, using
the median asset value of each category,
to illustrate how the rule is likely to
affect plans with different amounts of
assets. As seen in the table below, the
estimated burden in the first year will
131 Labor costs are based on statistics from Labor
Cost Inputs Used in the Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Office of Policy and Research’s
Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork
Reduction Act Burden Calculation, Employee
Benefits Security Administration (June 2019),
www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-andregulations/rules-and-regulations/technicalappendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-opr-riaand-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
132 This cost is estimated as: 0.5 hours * $134.21
+ 0.5 hours * $55.14 = $94.68.
133 Deloitte. ‘‘2019 Defined Contribution
Benchmarking Survey Report: the Retirement
Landscape has Changed—Are Plan Sponsors
Ready?’’ www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/humancapital/articles/annual-defined-contributionbenchmarking-survey.html.
134 Manganaro, John. ‘‘Recordkeeping Fees Under
the Microscope Retirement Plans of All Sizes are
Seeing Their Recordkeeping Fee Schedules
Questioned, Especially When Those Fees are
Expressed as a Percentage of Assets.’’ Planadviser.
(November 2019). www.planadviser.com/
recordkeeping-fees-microscope/.
135 Deloitte Consulting and Investment Company
Institute, ‘‘Inside the Structure of Defined
Contribution/401(k) Plan Fees, 2013: A Study
Assessing the Mechanics of the ‘All-in’ Fee’’ (Aug.
2014).
136 BrightScope, ICI. ‘‘The BrightScope/ICI
Defined Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at
401(k) Plans, 2017.’’ (August 2020).
137 BrightScope, ICI. ‘‘The BrightScope/ICI
Defined Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at
401(k) Plans, 2017.’’ (August 2020).
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increase the costs significantly for small
plans with minimal assets. The cost in
subsequent years is negligible—less
than one percent of plan assets for even
the smallest size category and for most
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plans less than 0.25 percent of plan
assets.
TABLE 3—TOTAL FIRST YEAR PLAN COST AS A PERCENT OF PLAN ASSETS FOR PLANS WITH LESS THAN 100
PARTICIPANTS
Number of plans a
Plan assets
Defined
benefit
$1–24K .............................................................................................................
$25–49K ...........................................................................................................
$50–99K ...........................................................................................................
$100–249K .......................................................................................................
$250–499K .......................................................................................................
$500K–999K ....................................................................................................
$1 Million to $10 Million ...................................................................................
$10 Million to $50 Million .................................................................................
Defined
contribution
12
8
37
188
300
433
547
202
1,750
1,072
1,716
3,638
4,124
5,095
6,458
2,818
Beginning
median total
plan cost b
(percent)
Additional
plan cost
from the rule c
Percent of
mid-point in
asset range
1.24 d
1.24 d
1.24 d
1.24 d
1.24 d
1.24 d
1.05
0.78
7.500
2.368
1.200
0.514
0.240
0.120
0.018
0.003
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a Calculated as five percent of plans in each asset range, based on data from the 2018 Form 5500 for the distribution of pension plans with
fewer than 100 participants by type of plan and plan assets. As the Form 5500 does not allow a determination of which small plans has stock,
the actual size distribution is unknown. The population distribution is used.
b Total plan cost is BrightScope’s measure of the total cost of operating the 401(k) plan and includes asset-based investment management
fees, asset-based administrative and advice fees, and other fees (including insurance charges) from the Form 5500 and audited financial statements of ERISA-covered 401(k) plans. Total plan cost is computed only for plans with sufficiently complete information. The sample is 53,856
plans with $4.4 trillion in assets. BrightScope audited 401(k) filings generally include plans with 100 participants or more. Plans with fewer than
four investment options or more than 100 investment options are excluded from BrightScope audited 401(k) filings for this analysis. The data
does not include DB plans, but due to lack of comparable data it is applied to DB plans as a proxy for their plan costs. Source: BrightScope, ICI.
‘‘The BrightScope/ICI Defined Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at 401(k) Plans, 2017.’’ (August 2020).
c The Department estimates that additional plan cost from the rule will be $899.94. The Department applied this fixed cost as a percent of midpoint in each asset range.
d BrightScope did not differentiate between plans with less than $1 million in assets; however, as most of the small plans have less than $1
million in assets, the Department applied this broader estimate to smaller sub-sets of assets to illustrate how small plans are likely to affected by
the rule.
The Department believes that this is
likely an overestimate of the costs faced
by small plans, as small plans are likely
to rely on service providers. The
Department believes these service
providers offer economies of scale in
meeting the requirements of the final
rule; however, the Department does not
have data that would allow it to
estimate the number of service
providers acting in such a capacity for
these plans.
The time required to make necessary
changes to compliance policies and
procedures in response to the rule may
vary widely between plans, the
Department believes the requirements in
the final rule closely resemble existing
prior guidance and industry best
practices. The Department believes that,
on average, the marginal cost to meet
the additional requirements regulation,
outside of existing fiduciary duties, will
be small because the required activities
are reflected in common practice and
the requirements are similar to prior
guidance. Further, plan fiduciaries
would be able to conserve plan assets by
refraining from researching and voting
on proposals that they prudently
determine do not have a material effect
on the value of the plan’s investment.
Thus, the final rule would result in cost
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savings and other benefits for small plan
sponsors.
3.5. Steps the Agency Has Taken To
Minimize the Significant Economic
Impact on Small Entities
As discussed above, the Department’s
longstanding position is that the
fiduciary duties of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A) and
404(a)(1)(B) apply to the exercise of
shareholder rights, including proxy
voting, proxy voting policies and
guidelines, and the selection and
monitoring of proxy advisory firms.
These duties apply to all affected
entities–large and small. Accordingly,
no special actions were taken into
consideration for small entities.
As discussed above, after carefully
considering comments, the Department
was persuaded to eliminate paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii) and adopt a more
principle-based, less prescriptive
approach in the final rule that will
reduce much of the cost burden
associated with the proposed rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must vote
any proxy where the fiduciary
prudently determined that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
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Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved
(including the cost of research, if
necessary, to determine how to vote).
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must not
vote any proxy unless the fiduciary
prudently determined that the matter
being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and
taking into account the costs involved.
This is a significant adjustment from the
proposal that results in a less
prescriptive, more principles-based
approach that will reduce much of the
cost burden associated with the
proposed rule for all plans, including
small plans. See the section above
entitled ‘‘Elimination of Paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii) from the Proposal’’ for
a more detailed discussion of this
change.
4. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 138 requires each
federal agency to prepare a written
statement assessing the effects of any
138 2
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federal mandate in a proposed or final
agency rule that may result in an
expenditure of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation with the
base year 1995) in any one year by state,
local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector. For
purposes of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act, as well as Executive Order
12875, this final rule does not include
any federal mandate that the
Department expects would result in
such expenditures by state, local, or
tribal governments, or the private sector.
This final rule will not result in an
expenditure of $100 million or more in
any one year, because the Department is
simply restating and modernizing
fiduciary practices related to voting
rights and aligning its regulations to the
extent possible with guidance issued by
the SEC.
5. Federalism Statement
Executive Order 13132 outlines
fundamental principles of federalism
and requires federal agencies to adhere
to specific criteria when formulating
and implementing policies that have
‘‘substantial direct effects’’ on the states,
the relationship between the national
government and states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Federal agencies
promulgating regulations that have
federalism implications must consult
with state and local officials and
describe the extent of their consultation
and the nature of the concerns of state
and local officials in the preamble to the
final rule.
In the Department’s view, this final
rule does not have federalism
implications because it does not have
direct effects on the states, the
relationship between the national
government and the states, or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among various levels of
government. The final rule describes
requirements and permitted practices
related to the exercise of shareholder
rights under ERISA. While ERISA
generally preempts state laws that relate
to ERISA plans, and preemption
typically requires an examination of the
individual law involved, it appears
highly unlikely that the provisions in
this final regulation would have
preemptive effect on general state
corporate laws.
Statutory Authority
This regulation is adopted pursuant to
the authority in section 505 of ERISA
(Pub. L. 93–406, 88 Stat. 894; 29 U.S.C.
1135) and section 102 of Reorganization
Plan No. 4 of 1978 (43 FR 47713,
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17:44 Dec 15, 2020
Jkt 253001
October 17, 1978), effective December
31, 1978 (44 FR 1065, January 3, 1979),
3 CFR 1978 Comp. 332, and under
Secretary of Labor’s Order No. 1–2011,
77 FR 1088 (Jan. 9, 2012).
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Parts 2509
and 2550
Employee benefit plans, Employee
Retirement Income Security Act,
Exemptions, Fiduciaries, investments,
Pensions, Prohibited transactions,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department amends parts
2509 and 2550 of subchapters A and F
of chapter XXV of title 29 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
Subchapter A—General
PART 2509—INTERPRETIVE
BULLETINS RELATING TO THE
EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT INCOME
SECURITY ACT OF 1974
1. The authority citation for part 2509
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1135. Secretary of
Labor’s Order 1–2003, 68 FR 5374 (Feb. 3,
2003). Sections 2509.75–10 and 2509.75–2
issued under 29 U.S.C. 1052, 1053, 1054. Sec.
2509.75–5 also issued under 29 U.S.C. 1002.
Sec. 2509.95–1 also issued under sec. 625,
Pub. L. 109–280, 120 Stat. 780.
§ 2509.2016–01
■
[Removed]
2. Remove § 2509.2016–01.
Subchapter F—Fiduciary Responsibility
Under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974
PART 2550—RULES AND
REGULATIONS FOR FIDUCIARY
RESPONSIBILITY
3. The authority citation for part 2550
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1135 and Secretary
of Labor’s Order No. 1–2011, 77 FR 1088
(January 9, 2012). Sec. 102, Reorganization
Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. at 727
(2012). Sec. 2550.401c–1 also issued under
29 U.S.C. 1101. Sec. 2550.404a–1 also issued
under sec. 657, Pub. L. 107–16, 115 Stat 38.
Sec. 2550.404a–2 also issued under sec. 657
of Pub. L. 107–16, 115 Stat. 38. Sections
2550.404c–1 and 2550.404c–5 also issued
under 29 U.S.C. 1104. Sec. 2550.408b–1 also
issued under 29 U.S.C. 1108(b)(1). Sec.
2550.408b–19 also issued under sec. 611,
Pub. L. 109–280, 120 Stat. 780, 972. Sec.
2550.412–1 also issued under 29 U.S.C. 1112.
4. Section 2550.404a–1 is amended by
adding paragraph (e), revising paragraph
(g), and republishing paragraph (h) to
read as follows:
■
§ 2550.404a-1
*
PO 00000
*
*
Frm 00038
Investment duties.
*
Fmt 4701
*
Sfmt 4700
(e) Proxy voting and exercise of
shareholder rights. (1) The fiduciary
duty to manage plan assets that are
shares of stock includes the
management of shareholder rights
appurtenant to those shares, such as the
right to vote proxies.
(2)(i) When deciding whether to
exercise shareholder rights and when
exercising such rights, including the
voting of proxies, fiduciaries must carry
out their duties prudently and solely in
the interests of the participants and
beneficiaries and for the exclusive
purpose of providing benefits to
participants and beneficiaries and
defraying the reasonable expenses of
administering the plan.
(ii) The fiduciary duty to manage
shareholder rights appurtenant to shares
of stock does not require the voting of
every proxy or the exercise of every
shareholder right. In order to fulfill the
fiduciary obligations under paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of this section, when deciding
whether to exercise shareholder rights
and when exercising shareholder rights,
plan fiduciaries must:
(A) Act solely in accordance with the
economic interest of the plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(B) Consider any costs involved;
(C) Not subordinate the interests of
the participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income or financial
benefits under the plan to any nonpecuniary objective, or promote nonpecuniary benefits or goals unrelated to
those financial interests of the plan’s
participants and beneficiaries;
(D) Evaluate material facts that form
the basis for any particular proxy vote
or other exercise of shareholder rights;
(E) Maintain records on proxy voting
activities and other exercises of
shareholder rights; and
(F) Exercise prudence and diligence
in the selection and monitoring of
persons, if any, selected to advise or
otherwise assist with exercises of
shareholder rights, such as providing
research and analysis, recommendations
regarding proxy votes, administrative
services with voting proxies, and
recordkeeping and reporting services.
(iii) Where the authority to vote
proxies or exercise shareholder rights
has been delegated to an investment
manager pursuant to ERISA section
403(a)(2), or a proxy voting firm or other
person who performs advisory services
as to the voting of proxies, a responsible
plan fiduciary shall prudently monitor
the proxy voting activities of such
investment manager or proxy advisory
firm and determine whether such
activities are consistent with paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) and (e)(3) of this section.
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(iv) A fiduciary may not adopt a
practice of following the
recommendations of a proxy advisory
firm or other service provider without a
determination that such firm or service
provider’s proxy voting guidelines are
consistent with the fiduciary’s
obligations described in paragraphs
(e)(2)(ii)(A) through (E) of this section.
(3)(i) In deciding whether to vote a
proxy pursuant to paragraphs (e)(2)(i)
and (ii) of this section, fiduciaries may
adopt proxy voting policies providing
that the authority to vote a proxy shall
be exercised pursuant to specific
parameters prudently designed to serve
the plan’s economic interest. Paragraphs
(e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section set
forth optional means for satisfying the
fiduciary responsibilities under sections
404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA
with respect to decisions whether to
vote, provided such policies are
developed in accordance with a
fiduciary’s obligations under ERISA as
set forth in the applicable provisions of
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of this
section. Paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B)
of this section do not establish
minimum requirements or the exclusive
means for satisfying these
responsibilities. A plan may adopt
either or both of the following policies:
(A) A policy to limit voting resources
to particular types of proposals that the
fiduciary has prudently determined are
substantially related to the issuer’s
business activities or are expected to
have a material effect on the value of the
investment.
(B) A policy of refraining from voting
on proposals or particular types of
proposals when the plan’s holding in a
single issuer relative to the plan’s total
investment assets is below a
quantitative threshold that the fiduciary
prudently determines, considering its
percentage ownership of the issuer and
other relevant factors, is sufficiently
small that the matter being voted upon
is not expected to have a material effect
on the investment performance of the
plan’s portfolio (or investment
performance of assets under
management in the case of an
investment manager).
(ii) Plan fiduciaries shall periodically
review proxy voting policies adopted
pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this
section.
(iii) No proxy voting policies adopted
pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this
section shall preclude submitting a
proxy vote when the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
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17:44 Dec 15, 2020
Jkt 253001
being voted upon is expected to have a
material effect on the value of the
investment or the investment
performance of the plan’s portfolio (or
investment performance of assets under
management in the case of an
investment manager) after taking into
account the costs involved, or refraining
from voting when the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon is not expected to
have such a material effect after taking
into account the costs involved.
(4)(i)(A) The responsibility for
exercising shareholder rights lies
exclusively with the plan trustee except
to the extent that either:
(1) The trustee is subject to the
directions of a named fiduciary
pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(1); or
(2) The power to manage, acquire, or
dispose of the relevant assets has been
delegated by a named fiduciary to one
or more investment managers pursuant
to ERISA section 403(a)(2).
(B) Where the authority to manage
plan assets has been delegated to an
investment manager pursuant to section
403(a)(2), the investment manager has
exclusive authority to vote proxies or
exercise other shareholder rights
appurtenant to such plan assets in
accordance with this section, except to
the extent the plan, trust document, or
investment management agreement
expressly provides that the responsible
named fiduciary has reserved to itself
(or to another named fiduciary so
authorized by the plan document) the
right to direct a plan trustee regarding
the exercise or management of some or
all of such shareholder rights.
(ii) An investment manager of a
pooled investment vehicle that holds
assets of more than one employee
benefit plan may be subject to an
investment policy statement that
conflicts with the policy of another
plan. Compliance with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D) requires the investment
manager to reconcile, insofar as
possible, the conflicting policies
(assuming compliance with each policy
would be consistent with ERISA section
404(a)(1)(D)). In the case of proxy
voting, to the extent permitted by
applicable law, the investment manager
must vote (or abstain from voting) the
relevant proxies to reflect such policies
in proportion to each plan’s economic
interest in the pooled investment
vehicle. Such an investment manager
may, however, develop an investment
policy statement consistent with Title I
of ERISA and this section, and require
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
81695
participating plans to accept the
investment manager’s investment policy
statement, including any proxy voting
policy, before they are allowed to invest.
In such cases, a fiduciary must assess
whether the investment manager’s
investment policy statement and proxy
voting policy are consistent with Title I
of ERISA and this section before
deciding to retain the investment
manager.
(5) This section does not apply to
voting, tender, and similar rights with
respect to such securities that are passed
through pursuant to the terms of an
individual account plan to participants
and beneficiaries with accounts holding
such securities.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Applicability date. (1) Except for
paragraph (e) of this section, this section
shall apply in its entirety to all
investments made and investment
courses of action taken after January 12,
2021.
(2) Plans shall have until April 30,
2022, to make any changes to qualified
default investment alternatives
described in § 2550.404c–5, where
necessary to comply with the
requirements of paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(3) Paragraph (e) of this section
applies on January 15, 2021.
Fiduciaries, other than investment
advisers subject to 17 CFR 275.206(4)–
6, shall have until January 31, 2022, to
comply with the requirements of
paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E) of this
section. All fiduciaries shall have until
January 31, 2022 to comply with the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(iv)
and (e)(4)(ii) of this section.
(h) Severability. If any provision of
this section is held to be invalid or
unenforceable by its terms, or as applied
to any person or circumstance, or stayed
pending further agency action, the
provision shall be construed so as to
continue to give the maximum effect to
the provision permitted by law, unless
such holding shall be one of invalidity
or unenforceability, in which event the
provision shall be severable from this
section and shall not affect the
remainder thereof.
Signed at Washington, DC.
Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
[FR Doc. 2020–27465 Filed 12–15–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
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[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 242 (Wednesday, December 16, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 81658-81695]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-27465]
[[Page 81657]]
Vol. 85
Wednesday,
No. 242
December 16, 2020
Part IV
Department of Labor
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Employee Benefits Security Administration
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29 CFR Parts 2509 and 2550
Fiduciary Duties Regarding Proxy Voting and Shareholder Rights; Final
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 242 / Wednesday, December 16, 2020 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 81658]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Parts 2509 and 2550
RIN 1210-AB91
Fiduciary Duties Regarding Proxy Voting and Shareholder Rights
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of Labor.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Labor (Department) is amending the
``Investment Duties'' regulation to address the application of the
prudence and exclusive purpose duties under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) to the exercise of shareholder
rights, including proxy voting, the use of written proxy voting
policies and guidelines, and the selection and monitoring of proxy
advisory firms. This document also removes Interpretive Bulletin 2016-
01 from the Code of Federal Regulations as it no longer represents the
view of the Department regarding the proper interpretation of ERISA
with respect to the exercise of shareholder rights by fiduciaries of
ERISA-covered plans.
DATES: Effective Date: The final rule is effective on January 15, 2021.
Applicability Dates: See Section B.3(vi) of this document and Sec.
2550.404a-1(g) of the final rule for compliance dates for Sec.
2550.404a-1(e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E), (e)(2)(iv), (e)(4)(ii) of the final
rule.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jason A. DeWitt, Office of Regulations
and Interpretations, Employee Benefits Security Administration, (202)
693-8500. This is not a toll-free number.
Customer Service Information: Individuals interested in obtaining
information from the Department of Labor concerning ERISA and employee
benefit plans may call the Employee Benefits Security Administration
(EBSA) Toll-Free Hotline, at 1-866-444-EBSA (3272) or visit the
Department of Labor's website (www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background and Purpose of Regulatory Action
Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
(ERISA) establishes minimum standards for the operation of private-
sector employee benefit plans and includes fiduciary responsibility
rules governing the conduct of plan fiduciaries.\1\ In connection with
proxy voting, the Department's longstanding position is that the
fiduciary act of managing plan assets includes the management of voting
rights (as well as other shareholder rights) appurtenant to shares of
stock. In carrying out these duties, ERISA mandates that fiduciaries
act ``prudently'' and ``solely in the interest'' and ``for the
exclusive purpose'' of providing benefits to participants and their
beneficiaries.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Throughout this preamble, the Department's discussion of
plan fiduciaries includes named fiduciaries under the plan, along
with any persons that named fiduciaries have designated to carry out
fiduciary responsibilities as permitted under ERISA section
405(c)(1). Similarly, references to proxy voting also encompass
situations in which a fiduciary directly casts a vote in a matter
(e.g., voting in person at a shareholder meeting) rather than by
proxy.
\2\ ERISA section 404(a)(1). See also ERISA section 403(c)(1)
(``[T]he assets of a plan shall never inure to the benefit of any
employer and shall be held for the exclusive purposes of providing
benefits to participants in the plan and their beneficiaries'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This regulatory project was undertaken, in part, to confirm that,
when exercising shareholder rights, ERISA plan fiduciaries may not
subordinate the interests of plan participants and beneficiaries in
receiving financial benefits under a plan to non-pecuniary
objectives.\3\ This duty of loyalty--a bedrock principle of ERISA, with
deep roots in the common law of trusts--requires those serving as
fiduciaries to act with a single-minded focus on the interests of
beneficiaries. The duty of prudence prevents a fiduciary from choosing
an investment alternative that is financially less beneficial than
reasonably available alternatives. The Supreme Court has described the
duty of loyalty as requiring that fiduciaries act with an ``eye
single'' to the interests of participants and beneficiaries,\4\ and
appellate courts have described ERISA's fiduciary duties as ``the
highest known to the law.'' \5\ The subject of this rulemaking is how
these ERISA fiduciary duties apply to the exercise of shareholder
rights by ERISA-covered plans, as a result of the Department's belief
that confusion exists among some fiduciaries and other stakeholders
with respect to the exercise of shareholder rights, perhaps due in part
to varied statements the Department has made on the consideration of
non-pecuniary or non-financial factors over the years in sub-regulatory
guidance on these activities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer, 573 U.S. 409, 421
(2014) (the ``benefits'' to be pursued by ERISA fiduciaries as their
``exclusive purpose'' does not include ``nonpecuniary benefits'')
(emphasis in original).
\4\ Pegram v. Herdrich, 530 U.S. 211, 235 (2000) (quoting
Donovan v. Bierwirth, 680 F.2d 263, 271 (2d Cir. 1982)).
\5\ See, e.g., Tibble v. Edison Int'l, 843 F.3d 1187, 1197 (9th
Cir. 2016).
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The Department began interpreting the duties of prudence and
loyalty and issuing sub-regulatory guidance in the area of proxy voting
and the exercise of shareholder rights in the 1980s. The Department
issued an opinion letter to Avon Products, Inc. in 1988 (the Avon
Letter), in which the Department took the position that, while the
fiduciary act of managing plan assets that are shares of corporate
stock includes the voting of proxies appurtenant to those shares, the
named fiduciary of a plan has a duty to monitor decisions made and
actions taken by investment managers with regard to proxy voting.\6\
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\6\ Letter to Helmuth Fandl, Chairman of the Retirement Board,
Avon Products, Inc. 1988 WL 897696 (Feb. 23, 1988). Only a few
commenters on the proposal mentioned the Avon Letter, either
supporting the views taken in the letter as being consistent with
other professional codes of ethics or asserting that the proposed
rule reversed the intent of the Avon Letter by establishing a
presumption that voting proxies is a cost to be minimized and not an
asset to be prudently managed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subsequent to the Avon Letter, the Department issued additional
guidance concerning fiduciary duties in the context of exercising
shareholder rights. In 1994, the Department issued its first
interpretive bulletin on proxy voting, Interpretive Bulletin 94-2 (IB
94-2).\7\ IB 94-2 recognized that fiduciaries may engage in shareholder
activities intended to monitor or influence corporate management in
situations where the responsible fiduciary concludes that, after taking
into account the costs involved, there is a reasonable expectation that
such shareholder activities (by the plan alone or together with other
shareholders) will enhance the value of the plan's investment in the
corporation. The Department expected that increased shareholder
engagement by pension funds--encouraged by the new interpretive
bulletin--would improve corporate performance and help ensure companies
treated their employees well.\8\ However, the Department also
reiterated its view that ERISA does not permit fiduciaries, in voting
proxies or exercising other shareholder rights, to subordinate the
[[Page 81659]]
economic interests of participants and beneficiaries to unrelated
objectives.
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\7\ 59 FR 38860 (July 29, 1994).
\8\ See 1994 DOL Press Conference, at 2-4, 10, 15-16; see also
Leslie Wayne, U.S. Prodding Companies to Activism on Portfolios,
N.Y. Times (July 29, 1994), www.nytimes.com/1994/07/29/business/us-prodding-companies-to-activism-on-portfolios.html (quoting official
stating that the Department is ``trying to encourage corporations to
be activist owners,'' and that ``such activism is consistent with
your fiduciary duty and we expect it will improve your corporate
performance'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In October 2008, the Department replaced IB 94-2 with Interpretive
Bulletin 2008-02 (IB 2008-02).\9\ The Department's intent was to update
the guidance in IB 94-2 and to reflect interpretive positions issued by
the Department after 1994 on shareholder engagement and socially-
directed proxy voting initiatives. IB 2008-02 stated that fiduciaries'
responsibility for managing proxies includes both deciding to vote or
not to vote.\10\ IB 2008-02 further stated that the fiduciary duties
described at ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) require that in voting
proxies the responsible fiduciary shall consider only those factors
that relate to the economic value of the plan's investment and shall
not subordinate the interests of the participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income to unrelated objectives. In addition, IB 2008-
02 stated that votes shall only be cast in accordance with a plan's
economic interests. IB 2008-02 explained that if the responsible
fiduciary reasonably determines that the cost of voting (including the
cost of research, if necessary, to determine how to vote) is likely to
exceed the expected economic benefits of voting, the fiduciary has an
obligation to refrain from voting.\11\ The Department also reiterated
in IB 2008-02 that any use of plan assets by a plan fiduciary to
further political or social causes ``that have no connection to
enhancing the economic value of the plan's investment'' through proxy
voting or shareholder activism is a violation of ERISA's exclusive
purpose and prudence requirements.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 73 FR 61731 (Oct. 17, 2008).
\10\ Id. at 61732.
\11\ Id.
\12\ Id. at 61734.
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In 2016, the Department issued Interpretive Bulletin 2016-01 (IB
2016-01), which reinstated the language of IB 94-2 with certain
modifications.\13\ IB 2016-01 reiterated and confirmed that ``in voting
proxies, the responsible fiduciary [must] consider those factors that
may affect the value of the plan's investment and not subordinate the
interests of the participants and beneficiaries in their retirement
income to unrelated objectives.'' \14\ In further interpreting ERISA's
duties, the Department has stated that it has rejected a construction
of ERISA that would render the statute's tight limits on the use of
plan assets illusory and that would permit plan fiduciaries to expend
trust assets to promote myriad public policy preferences, including
through shareholder engagement activities, voting proxies, or other
investment policies.\15\
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\13\ 81 FR 95879 (Dec. 29, 2016). In addition, the Department
issued a Field Assistance Bulletin to provide guidance on IB 2016-01
on April 23, 2018. See FAB 2018-01, at www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/ebsa/employers-and-advisers/guidance/field-assistance-bulletins/2018-01.pdf.
\14\ Id. at 95882.
\15\ See id. at 95881.
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On September 4, 2020, the Department published in the Federal
Register a proposed rule to amend the ``Investment Duties'' regulation
at 29 CFR 2550.404a-1 (Investment Duties regulation) to address the
prudence and loyalty duties under sections 404(a)(1)(A) and
404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA in the context of proxy voting and other
exercises of shareholder rights by the responsible ERISA plan
fiduciaries, the use of written proxy voting policies and guidelines,
and the selection and monitoring of proxy advisory firms.\16\ The
Department explained its belief that addressing the application of
ERISA fiduciary obligations with respect to exercise of shareholder
rights, including proxy voting, through notice-and-comment regulatory
action under the Administrative Procedure Act was appropriate and would
benefit ERISA plan fiduciaries and plan participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 85 FR 55219 (Sept. 4, 2020).
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This regulatory project also was initiated to respond to a number
of other issues. The Department was concerned, for example, that the
Avon Letter and subsequent sub-regulatory guidance from the Department
has resulted in a misplaced belief among some stakeholders that
fiduciaries must always and in every case vote proxies, subject to
limited exceptions, in order to fulfill their obligations under
ERISA.\17\ Further, the Department was responding to significant
changes in the way ERISA plans invest and changes in the investment
world more broadly since the Department first issued guidance on these
topics in 1988. Widespread shareholder activism and corporate takeovers
at that time created an intense focus on shareholder voting by ERISA
plans and confusion as to how fiduciary standards applied to such
voting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See, e.g., Barbara Novick, Revised and Extended Remarks at
Harvard Roundtable on Corporate Governance Keynote Address ``The
Goldilocks Dilemma'' (Nov. 6, 2019), www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/publication/barbara-novick-remarks-harvard-roundtable-corporate-governance-the-goldilocks-dilemma-110619.pdf, at 15 (Avon
Letter indicated ``that asset managers should generally vote shares
as part of their fiduciary duty''); see Former SEC Commissioner
Daniel M. Gallagher, Outsized Power & Influence: The Role of Proxy
Advisers, Washington Legal Foundation (Aug. 2014), https://s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/washlegal-uploads/upload/legalstudies/workingpaper/GallagherWP8-14.pdf, at 3; Business Roundtable Comment
Letter on SEC Proposed Amendments to Rule 14a-8 (Feb. 3, 2020),
www.sec.gov/comments/s7-22-19/s72219-6742505-207780.pdf, at 2-3
(``many institutional investors historically interpreted SEC and
Department of Labor rules and guidance as requiring institutional
investors to vote every share on every matter on a proxy'') (citing
Gallagher); Manifest Information Services Ltd, Response to ESMA
Discussion Paper `An Overview of the Proxy Advisory Industry:
Considerations on Possible Policy Options' (June 2012),
www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/Securities-Category2-Comments/com_20120622_25-401_wilsons.pdf, at 37 (comment letter from European
proxy voting agency describing DOL proxy guidance as concerning
``duties of . . . fiduciaries . . . to vote the shares in companies
held by their pension plans''); Charles M. Nathan, The Future of
Institutional Share Voting: Three Paradigms (July 23, 2010), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2010/07/23/the-future-of-institutional-share-voting-three-paradigms/ (``the current system for voting
portfolio securities by application of uniform voting policies . . .
is perceived as successfully addressing the commonly understood
fiduciary duty of institutional investors to vote all of their
portfolio securities on all matters''). See also U.S. Department of
Labor, Transcript of Press Conference on Corporate Activist Role in
Pension Planning (July 28, 1994), at 15-16 (then-Secretary Robert
Reich stating that IB 94-2 ``makes very clear that . . . pension
fund managers, trustees, [and] fiduciaries have an obligation to
vote proxies'' unless the costs ``substantially outweigh'' the
benefits) (1994 DOL Press Conference).
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The Department described in the proposal a variety of changes in
proxy voting policies and behavior, including an increase in the
percentage of individual securities held by, and plan assets managed
by, institutional investors, diminishing the scope of proxy voting
rights and obligations attributable to individual securities held by
ERISA plans.\18\ At the same time, since the 1980s, the type of
investments held by ERISA plans has changed, for example through the
development and growth of exchange-traded funds, sector-based equity
products, hedge funds, and passive investments. The proportion of ERISA
plan assets held in alternative investments like hedge, private equity,
and venture capital funds has grown significantly.\19\ When issuing the
proposed rule, the Department cited evidence that investors continue to
add to the set of factors considered in their review and analysis of
corporate practices.\20\
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\18\ 85 FR 55219 at 55221-22 (Sept. 4, 2020).
\19\ See id., at 55222.
\20\ Kosmas Papadopoulos, The Long View: US Proxy Voting Trends
on E&S Issues from 2000 to 2018, Harvard Law School Forum on
Corporate Governance (Jan. 31, 2019), https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2019/01/31/the-long-view-us-proxy-voting-trends-on-es-issues-from-2000-to-2018, (2019 ISS Proxy Voting
Trends).
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The Department also took note of the issues and concerns identified
during the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC's) ongoing
proxy reform initiative.\21\ Pursuant to the 2019
[[Page 81660]]
SEC Guidance, where an investment adviser has the authority to vote on
behalf of its client, the investment adviser, among other things, must
have a reasonable understanding of the client's objectives and must
make voting determinations that are in the best interest of the client.
Under this guidance, for an investment adviser to form a reasonable
belief that its voting determinations are in the best interest of the
client, the investment adviser should conduct an investigation
reasonably designed to ensure that the voting determination is not
based on materially inaccurate or incomplete information. The 2019 SEC
Guidance also provides that investment advisers that retain proxy
advisory firms to provide voting recommendations or voting execution
services should consider additional steps to evaluate whether the
voting determinations are consistent with the investment adviser's
voting policies and procedures, and in the client's best interest
before the votes are cast. The 2019 SEC Guidance provides that
investment advisers should consider whether the proxy advisory firm has
the capacity and competency to adequately analyze the matters for which
the investment adviser is responsible for voting. The 2019 SEC Guidance
also explains that an investment adviser's decision regarding whether
to retain a proxy advisory firm should also include a reasonable review
of the proxy advisory firm's policies and procedures regarding how it
identifies and addresses conflicts of interest. Further, as part of the
investment adviser's ongoing compliance program, the investment adviser
must, no less frequently than annually, review and document the
adequacy of its voting policies and procedures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See, e.g., Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting
Responsibilities of Investment Advisers, 84 FR 47420 (Sept. 10,
2019) (2019 SEC Guidance).
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The SEC also adopted regulatory amendments that, among other
things, require proxy advisory firms that are engaged in a solicitation
to provide specified disclosures, adopt written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure that proxy voting advice is made
available to securities issuers, and provide proxy advisory firm
clients with a mechanism by which the clients can reasonably be
expected to become aware of a securities issuer's views about the proxy
voting advice, so that the clients can take such views into account as
they vote proxies.\22\ The SEC issued supplemental guidance to assist
investment advisers in assessing how to consider the additional
information that may become more readily available to them as a result
of these amendments, including in circumstances when the investment
adviser uses a proxy advisory firm's electronic vote management system
that ``pre-populates'' the adviser's proxies with suggested voting
recommendations and/or for voting execution services.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy Voting
Advice, 85 FR 55082 (Sept. 3, 2020) (2020 SEC Proxy Voting Advice
Amendments).
\23\ See Supplement to Commission Guidance Regarding Proxy
Voting Responsibilities of Investment Advisers, 85 FR 55155 (Sept.
3, 2020) (2020 SEC Supplemental Guidance).
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The proposal on proxy voting and shareholder rights provided the
Department with a vehicle to coordinate many of the fiduciary concepts
concerning investing according to the pecuniary interests of plans with
the rules governing the use of plan resources on proxy voting and the
exercise of other shareholder rights.\24\ A more detailed discussion of
the basis for the rulemaking and the evidence supporting the proposal
can be found in the preamble to the Department's proposal.\25\ As
discussed throughout this preamble, the final rule reflects significant
modifications to the proposal based on the public record and
commenters' feedback. The Department continues to believe that
enhancing the effectiveness and efficiency of the proxy voting process
for ERISA plans is an important goal. This process will be improved to
the extent ERISA plan fiduciaries better understand how to make
informed decisions when executing shareholder rights in compliance with
ERISA's obligations of prudence and loyalty--specifically that the
execution of such rights must be conducted in a manner to ensure that
plan resources are not inappropriately allocated. The Department also
believes that this rule is necessary to modernize standards for ERISA
plan fiduciaries in this context, for example to recognize that proxy
voting advice businesses, such as proxy advisory firms, now play a more
significant role in the proxy voting process. It is not the
Department's intention to judge the value of any specific proposal to
be voted upon, for example, or to take a position on the merits of any
particular topic. Rather, the Department intends only to address the
standards according to which plan fiduciaries must make such judgments,
a goal that the Department believes is more appropriately advanced in
light of revisions made in the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ 85 FR at 55219.
\25\ Id., beginning at 55221 and in the proposed regulatory
impact analysis beginning at 55227.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Department invited interested persons to submit comments on the
proposed rule, and in response received approximately 300 written
comments from a variety of parties, including plan sponsors and
fiduciaries, plan service and investment providers (including
investment managers and proxy voting firms), and employee benefit plan
and participant representatives. The Department also received
approximately 6,700 submissions in response to petitions. The comments
are available for review on the ``Public Comments'' page under the
``Laws and Regulations'' tab of the Department's Employee Benefits
Security Administration website.\26\
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\26\ See www.dol.gov/agencies/ebsa/laws-and-regulations/rules-and-regulations/public-comments.
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B. Final Rule
After evaluating the full range of public comments and extensive
record developed on the proposal, the final rule as described below
amends the Investment Duties regulation to address the prudence and
loyalty duties under sections 404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA in
the context of proxy voting and other exercises of shareholder rights
by responsible ERISA plan fiduciaries. The Department anticipates that
actions taken by the SEC as part of its proxy reform initiative may
result in changes in practices among investment advisers and proxy
advisory firms that will help address some of the Department's concerns
about ERISA fiduciaries properly discharging their duties with respect
to proxy voting activities and appropriately selecting and overseeing
proxy advisory firms. However, the Department continues to believe that
notice-and-comment rulemaking in this area is appropriate, in part
because the Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance may have
created a perception that ERISA fiduciaries must vote proxies on every
proposal. In the Department's view, a regulation in this area will
address the misunderstanding that exists on the part of some
stakeholders that ERISA fiduciaries are required to vote all proxies
and, to the extent that proxies are voted, direct fiduciaries to act in
a manner consistent with the economic interests of plans and plan
participants that does not subordinate their interests to any non-
pecuniary objectives or promote goals unrelated to the financial
interests of participants and beneficiaries.
Some commenters complained that the 30-day comment period was too
short given the complexity of issues involved, the magnitude of such
changes to the current marketplace
[[Page 81661]]
practices related to proxy voting and other exercises of shareholder
rights, and the need to prepare supporting data. Many commenters
requested an extension of the comment period and that the Department
schedule a public hearing on the proposal and allow the public record
to remain open for post-hearing comments from interested parties. The
Department has considered these requests, but has determined that it is
neither necessary nor appropriate to extend the public comment period,
hold a public hearing, or withdraw or republish the proposed
regulation. A substantial and comprehensive public comment record was
developed on the proposal sufficient to substantiate promulgating a
final rule. The scope and depth of the public record that has been
developed itself belies arguments that a 30-day comment period was
insufficient. In addition, most issues relevant to the proposal have
been analyzed and reviewed by the Department and the public in the
context of three separate Interpretive Bulletins issued in 1994, 2008,
and 2016 and the public feedback that resulted. Finally, public
hearings are not required under the Department's general rulemaking
authority under section 505 of ERISA, nor under the Administrative
Procedure Act's procedures for rulemaking at 5 U.S.C. 553(c). In this
case, a public hearing is not necessary to supplement an already
comprehensive public record.
Thus, this final rulemaking follows the notice-and-comment process
required by the Administrative Procedure Act, and fulfills the
Department's mission to protect, educate, and empower retirement
investors. This rule is considered to be an Executive Order (E.O.)
13771 regulatory action. Details on the estimated costs of this rule
can be found in the final rule's economic analysis. The Department has
concluded that the additions to the Investment Duties regulation and
the rule's improvements as compared to the Department's previous sub-
regulatory guidance are appropriate and warranted. The final rule
furthers the paramount goal of ERISA plans to provide a secure
retirement for American workers. Accordingly, after consideration of
the written comments received, the Department has determined to adopt
the proposed regulation as modified and set forth below. As explained
more fully below, the final regulation contains several important
changes from the proposal in response to public comments.
1. General Public Comments and Adoption of a Principles-Based Approach
In response to the proposed rule, the Department received a
considerable amount of support and opposition from interested parties.
Commenters supporting the rule argued that the proposed rule was
essential because the Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance has
created a perception that ERISA fiduciaries must vote proxies on every
proposal. This rulemaking, according to some commenters, would provide
certainty to plan fiduciaries and benefit ERISA plan participants, by
ensuring that plan resources will be expended only on proxy research
and voting matters that are necessary to protect the economic interests
of plan participants. Commenters supporting the proposal endorsed the
Department's view that these rights must be exercised with a singular
focus in mind--the economic interests of ERISA plan participants and
beneficiaries. They agreed that in a rapidly changing investment
landscape, plan fiduciaries and asset managers should not be influenced
by non-financial interests. For example, some commenters explained that
it is the duty of ERISA fiduciaries to reject attempts to advance
political or social objectives at the expense of investment returns,
growth, and stability for individuals saving for retirement, the very
population that the Department, through ERISA, has been charged to
protect. As one commenter explained, ERISA fiduciary duties are
predicated on trust law, and trusts must be managed to the advantage of
formally named beneficiaries--in this case plan participants and their
beneficiaries--and not to benefit corporate management or vague notions
of societal good as determined by other parties. Some commenters argued
that proxy advisory firms, which often assist with proxy voting, have
an outsized influence on voting decisions and have ``taken sides''
politically and socially.
A number of commenters agreed in general with the Department's
position on these issues, and some provided additional information
substantiating the need for, and propriety of, the Department's
proposed approach to managing proxy voting practices. Some further
argued that, although exercising shareholder rights on the basis of
environmental, social, or governance factors (commonly referred to as
``ESG'') may be welcomed by some private investors, proxy rights should
be exercised only for financial matters that will help secure the
retirement of plan participants in the case of ERISA-covered pension
and other retirement savings plans because when fiduciaries exercise
proxy rights for non-financial reasons they are more likely to incur
additional, unnecessary risks for investors that may not produce
corresponding economic value. A few commenters supported the
Department's assertion that the amount of ESG shareholder proposals has
increased since 1988, as more such proposals are being put forward by
groups with objectives other than increasing shareholder returns. While
some commenters agreed with ESG proponents on the importance of
environmental protections, social and political issues, and
transparency in corporate governance, they nevertheless expressed their
concern that proxy advisory firms, in particular, seem to have
increasing power to promote these goals without the knowledge and
agreement of a corporation's ``real'' owners, the shareholders, which
include ERISA plans. They agreed that the Department has appropriately
undertaken in this rulemaking to improve fiduciary oversight of these
firms. Finally, commenters supporting the rule also said that any
increased costs associated with the rule would be manageable, or,
according to some commenters, that the rule would ultimately decrease
plan costs and compliance burdens.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ One commenter suggested that the rule may especially
benefit fiduciaries of small plans, for whom the cost and burden of
voting all proxies may be an impediment to sponsoring a plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters, however, objected to the Department's proposed
rulemaking and raised a variety of legal and practical concerns. Some
commenters who objected to the proposal requested that the Department
withdraw the rule entirely, propose a different rule that takes a more
principles-based approach to this subject matter, or wait until the
Department analyzes the impact of its rule concerning ``Financial
Factors in Selecting Plan Investments.'' \28\ Alternatively, they
argued that the Department should wait until the SEC establishes a
track record of experience with its new proxy advisor and shareholder
proposal rules, so that the Department can better align its guidance
with the SEC's rules. Additionally, some commenters expressed the view
that a principles-based approach would be consistent with the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (Advisers Act) and the SEC's Rule
206(4)-6 thereunder and might help to reduce burdens for
[[Page 81662]]
fiduciaries in reconciling the Department's rule with the SEC's
regulatory regime for investment advisers.
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\28\ See 85 FR 72846 (Nov. 13, 2020).
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Some commenters opposing the proposed rule claimed that the
Department failed to establish that there is in fact a problem with
fiduciaries' exercise of shareholder rights and argued that the
proposal, if finalized, would upset decades of Departmental precedent.
These commenters further said that the approach taken in the proposal
represented a burdensome and costly solution to a perceived problem
without ``real life'' examples of any plans or participants and
beneficiaries that have been harmed.
The Department does not believe that it is necessary to establish
specific evidence of fiduciary misunderstandings or injury to plans or
to plan participants in order to issue a regulation addressing the
application of ERISA's fiduciary duties to the exercise of shareholder
rights. Under the Department's authority to administer ERISA, the
Department may promulgate rules that are preemptive in nature and is
not required to wait for widespread harm to occur. The Department can
thereby guard against injuries to plans and plan participants and
beneficiaries and ensure prospective protections.
Regardless, there are several reasons for this rulemaking. First,
the Department is aware that some plan fiduciaries and other parties
have incorporated, or have considered incorporating, non-pecuniary
factors into their proxy voting decisions. Further, as documented in
the proposal, there is a history of statements from stakeholders and
others evidencing misunderstanding of the Department's sub-regulatory
guidance.\29\ Finally, commenters on the proposal confirmed that
fiduciaries may be over-relying on proxy advisory firms as a result of
such confusion, by implementing advisory firms' voting recommendations
without attention to whether the firms' policies are consistent with
the economic interests of the plan. This final rule confirms that such
decisions on proxy voting and other exercises of shareholder rights
must be made pursuant to the duties of loyalty and prudence mandated by
ERISA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ 85 FR 55219, 55230 (Sept. 4, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters argued that unless a number of clarifications and
changes were made in the final rule, for example with respect to
documentation and other requirements, the rule would be costly to
implement and its standards costly to execute. Some commenters opposing
the proposed rule argued that, not only is the rule unnecessary, but it
would create new confusion for fiduciaries as they implement their
duties under ERISA. According to these commenters, the rule would
undermine fiduciaries' ability to act in what they believe to be the
long-term economic interest of their plans' participants, which is a
core statutory duty of fiduciaries to such participants. A few
commenters provided an example of a potential ``trap'' that the
proposal would create for fiduciaries, in that the rule would cause
fiduciaries to not vote on a proposal for fear of violating the rule,
but then later discover that they should in fact have voted on the
proposal, effectively creating a breach of fiduciary duties. They
claimed that the proposal was an example of ``government overreach''
that could dangerously impact the efficiency of the U.S. capital
markets and the stability of the global economy.\30\ The opposing
commenters also argued that the proposal, if finalized, would
disenfranchise ERISA plans, and thereby plan participants, as
investors, by reducing the power and value of their shareholder rights,
including the right to vote proxies.\31\ Instead, voting power would be
concentrated in the hands of non-ERISA investors, such as hedge funds,
foreign investors, and other activist investors whose motivations may
be based on short-term profits and non-economic factors, as well as in
the hands of corporate management, as a result of the proposal's
provision that, in these commenters' view, includes deference to
management views.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ A number of commenters asserted that the proposal was a
not-so-thinly-veiled, policy-based judgment against the value of ESG
shareholder proposals. They argued that this judgment is not the
Department's to make; rather, it is the role of plan fiduciaries to
make such judgments, and ESG proposals are material to shareholder
decision-making and an important part of the due diligence of
fiduciaries in constructing long-term, diversified portfolios. The
Department disagrees with these commenters. This rulemaking project,
similar to the recently published final rule on ERISA fiduciaries'
consideration of financial factors in investment decisions,
recognizes, rather than ignores, the economic literature and
fiduciary investment experience that show a particular ``E,'' ``S,''
or ``G'' consideration may present issues of material business risk
or opportunities to a specific company that its officers and
directors need to manage as part of the company's business plan and
that qualified investment professionals would treat as economic
considerations under generally accepted investment theories.
However, the Department recognizes that other ``E,'' ``S,'' or ``G''
factors may be non-pecuniary and a fiduciary should not assume that
combining ESG factors into a single rating, index, or score creates
an amalgamated factor that is itself pecuniary. Rather, this final
rule and the financial factors rule sought to make clear that, from
a fiduciary perspective, the relevant question is not whether a
factor under consideration is ''ESG,'' but whether it is a pecuniary
factor relevant to the exercise of a shareholder right or to an
evaluation of the investment or investment course of action. See 85
FR at 72857 (Nov. 13, 2020).
\31\ One commenter further warned that the rule could result in
voter suppression, not just disenfranchisement, by preventing
shareholders from reaching a quorum, which the Department itself
acknowledged in the proposal would result in economic detriment to
ERISA plans' holdings. Some corporate bylaws, for example, require a
supermajority for certain votes, which may be difficult to achieve
if certain shareholders are discouraged from voting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters opposing the proposed rule stated that, in voting on
proposals, investors, including ERISA plans, generally decide matters
that will hold management accountable and materially impact the long-
term economic value of corporations. Some commenters argued that the
proposal failed to recognize the potential long-term performance and
economic impact of shareholder proposals on topics such as board
independence and accountability--including opportunities to change a
company's board of directors, diversity, approval of auditing firms,
executive compensation policies--from either an individual investment
or a wider portfolio perspective. These commenters disagreed with what
they viewed as the Department's conclusion that ESG shareholder
activity generally has little bearing on the value of corporate shares.
Rather, these commenters claimed that a growing body of evidence
demonstrates an increasing link between ESG activity, including the
impact of ESG issues on a corporation's brand and reputation, and a
corporation's long-term value. According to commenters, ESG factors may
not appear to be economic on their face, yet all are fundamental
corporate matters that often are critical to how companies strategize
and manage risk, therefore impacting financial outcomes. As to proxy
advisory firms, commenters opposing the rule argued that these firms
engage in a rigorous process when making recommendations about proxy
voting and that ongoing technological advances continue to enhance
proxy voting transparency and effectiveness.
The final rule reflects a number of modifications made by the
Department in response to the public comments. As in the proposal, the
final rule amends the Investment Duties regulation in regard to proxy
voting and the exercise of shareholder rights. The most significant
adjustment from the proposal results from changes to make the final
rule a more principles-based approach in response to commenters. The
Department is persuaded that the complexity involved in a determination
of economic versus non-economic impact would be costly to implement,
and believes the core structure of the proposal that focused on whether
a
[[Page 81663]]
fiduciary has a prudent process for proxy voting and other exercises of
shareholder rights is a more workable framework for achieving the
objectives of the proposal. The final rule carries forward from the
proposal a provision that requires plan fiduciaries, when deciding
whether to exercise shareholder rights and when exercising such rights,
including the voting of proxies, to carry out their duties prudently
and solely in the interests of the plan participants and beneficiaries
and for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to participants and
beneficiaries and defraying the reasonable expenses of administering
the plan. Also similar to the proposal, but with some modifications in
response to public comments, the final rule includes a list of
principles that fiduciaries must comply with when making decisions on
exercising shareholder rights, including proxy voting, in order to meet
their prudence and loyalty duties under ERISA section 404(a)(1)(A) and
(B), including duties to act solely in accordance with the economic
interest of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries and not
subordinate the interests of the participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income or financial benefits under the plan to any
non-pecuniary objective, or promote non-pecuniary benefits or goals
unrelated to the financial interests of the plan's participants and
beneficiaries. Finally, the final rule includes specific language to
make clear that plan fiduciaries do not have an obligation to vote all
proxies, as well as a safe harbor provision, modified from the
proposal, pursuant to which plan fiduciaries may adopt proxy voting
policies and parameters prudently designed to serve the plan's economic
interest that provide optional means for satisfying their fiduciary
responsibilities regarding determining whether to vote under ERISA
sections 404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B).
2. Elimination of Paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) From the Proposal
The principles-based approach adopted in the final rule is
reflected by the Department's elimination of paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and
(ii) from the proposal. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal provided
that a plan fiduciary must vote any proxy where the fiduciary prudently
determined that the matter being voted upon would have an economic
impact on the plan after considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and taking into account the costs
involved (including the cost of research, if necessary, to determine
how to vote). Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal provided that a plan
fiduciary must not vote any proxy unless the fiduciary prudently
determined that the matter being voted upon would have an economic
impact on the plan after considering those factors described in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and taking into account the costs
involved.
The Department received a number of comments suggesting removal of
the requirements in paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii). Commenters
criticized these provisions of the proposal as requiring a fiduciary to
undertake an economic impact analysis in advance of each issue that is
the subject of a proxy vote in order to even consider voting. A
commenter further noted that a fiduciary may not discover until after
the analysis is performed that the cost involved in determining whether
to vote outweighs the economic benefit to the plan. Another commenter
characterized this as a ``high risk compliance dilemma'' that could not
be resolved without expending funds on analysis and documentation,
without knowing in advance whether the expenditure is allowable.
Commenters further indicated that the proposal was unclear as to how to
establish whether an economic basis would be strong enough to justify
voting and that it can be difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain
whether a matter will have a future economic impact. Commenters further
stated that the criteria enumerated in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the
proposal for determining the economic impact of a proxy vote were too
narrow, which could result in potentially negative consequences to
plans because paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal could prohibit
fiduciaries from engaging in activities that would mitigate risk. For
instance, a commenter stated that, in its experience, once an
evaluation of a proxy matter has been done, a situation with ``no
economic impact'' is more of a theoretical possibility than a reality.
According to this commenter, either its research will show that the
matter being voted on will strengthen the company if implemented, or
that it will not. The commenter further explained that, at a base
level, a matter that would strengthen or otherwise improve a company is
likely to result in an economic benefit in connection with a plan's
investment when considered in the long-term. If a matter would not
result in a net positive to the company, the commenter believes a
fiduciary should vote against the proposal, not decline to vote. The
commenter cautioned that prohibiting fiduciaries from voting in
circumstances where they otherwise would vote against a matter may have
the unintended consequence of allowing more frivolous proxy matters to
be approved, resulting in decreased corporate accountability.
Commenters also raised practical issues with respect to an obligation
to not vote. Some explained that failing to vote can have the effect of
a ``no'' vote or a ``yes'' vote, depending on the circumstances.
Another commenter stated that modern proxy voting processes do not
allow a holder of securities subject to the proxy to vote on some but
not all proposals.
Other commenters, however, supported paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the
proposal. They viewed the provision as an important clarification that
plan fiduciaries are not required to vote all proxies, which could
reduce diversion of plan resources by restricting voting activity only
to those issues that offer an economic benefit to the plan.
The Department has decided not to include the requirements in
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal in the final rule at this
time. The Department recognizes the concerns expressed by commenters
regarding potentially increased costs and liability exposure, as well
as the difficulty in some circumstances of determining whether a matter
would have an economic impact and the possibility that a fiduciary
might prudently determine that there are risks to plan investments that
could result from not voting even when the matter being voted upon
itself would not have an economic impact. Instead, the Department has
provided a specific provision in the final rule stating that plan
fiduciaries are not required to vote all proxies.
3. Section-by-Section Overview of Final Rule
(i) Paragraph (e)(1)
Paragraph (e)(1) of the final rule, like the proposal, provides
that the fiduciary duty to manage plan assets that are shares of stock
includes the management of shareholder rights appurtenant to the
shares, such as the right to vote proxies. Commenters raised a number
of issues with respect to the general scope of fiduciaries'
responsibilities and obligations under the rule as set forth in
paragraph (e)(1) of the proposal.
Several commenters supported the Department's goal of making clear
that plan fiduciaries are not obligated to vote all proxies, and
suggested the rule could be improved by including that clear statement
in the regulatory text in paragraph (e)(1). The Department was clear in
the preamble to the proposed
[[Page 81664]]
rule that one objective of the proposal was to correct a
misunderstanding among some fiduciaries and other stakeholders that
ERISA requires every proxy to be voted. Thus, the Department agrees
that it would be appropriate to include an explicit statement to that
effect in the final rule. The Department, however, believes that the
statement fits better in paragraph (e)(2) (regarding the principles
that must be considered in deciding whether to exercise shareholder
rights) and has added a statement to paragraph (e)(2)(ii) that the
ERISA fiduciary duty to manage proxy voting and other shareholder
rights does not require the voting of every proxy or the exercise of
every shareholder right.
A commenter suggested that the rule should focus only on proxy
voting, including the decision of whether to exercise voting rights,
but should not extend to ``other shareholder rights.'' This commenter
explained that other shareholder rights, such as inspecting an issuer's
corporate record books and participating in corporate actions taken by
the issuer, are substantively separate and distinct from proxy voting.
Also, decisions on corporate actions such as stock splits, tender
offers, exchange offers on bond issues, and mergers and acquisitions
generally are not governed by proxy voting policies or undertaken with
advice from proxy voting advisors. On this basis, the commenter
recommended removing other shareholder rights from the rule. The
Department is not persuaded to make the suggested change. The exercise
of shareholder rights has been part of the Department's prior guidance
since the first Interpretive Bulletin in 1994.\32\ The Department
believes that the exercise of shareholder rights to monitor or
influence management, which may occur in lieu of, or in connection
with, formal proxy proposals is just as much an issue of fiduciary
management of the investment asset as proxy voting and accordingly
should be covered by the final rule.
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\32\ See 59 FR 38860, 38864 (July 29, 1994) (discussing
activities to monitor or influence management by variety of means
including by exercise of legal rights of a shareholder).
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Commenters also requested clarifications related to plan
investments in SEC-registered investment companies, such as mutual
funds. Several commenters noted that the preamble to the proposal
suggested that the rule would not apply to a mutual fund's exercise of
shareholder rights with respect to the stock it holds, and requested
that the Department provide confirmation. As previously explained,
ERISA does not govern the management of the portfolio internal to an
investment fund registered with the SEC, including such fund's exercise
of its shareholder rights appurtenant to the portfolio of stocks it
holds.\33\ Accordingly, the final rule would not apply to such a fund's
exercise of shareholder rights.
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\33\ 85 FR 55219, 55234 (Sept. 4, 2020).
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A commenter requested further clarification that the Department
does not intend that plan fiduciaries apply the standards of the rule
in reviewing, analyzing, or making a judgment on the proxy voting
practices of the mutual funds in which the plan invests. This commenter
explained that SEC-registered funds have the scale, internal expertise,
and experience to analyze and vote proxies. According to the commenter,
they also publicly report their proxy votes to the SEC, and must
describe in their registration statements the policies and procedures
that they use to determine how to vote proxies for their portfolio of
securities. In the commenter's view, placing an obligation on plan
fiduciaries to review and make judgments on the proxy voting practices
of mutual funds in which they invest will substantially increase the
administrative burden and costs for plans that invest in mutual funds.
In contrast, another commenter suggested that the final rule should
require fiduciaries to investigate a mutual fund's objectives in
shareholder voting and engagement with portfolio companies and
determine that the objectives are consistent with ERISA's loyalty
requirement prior to deciding to invest in the fund or considering it
as an option for participants. The commenter noted that since the
issuance of the Avon Letter, plans increasingly invest in mutual funds
or exchange-traded funds (ETFs) with stock voting authority residing in
the funds. This commenter argued that nothing in the Avon Letter or
subsequent guidance from the Department suggested that ERISA absolves a
plan investment fiduciary of any fiduciary duty associated with the
shareholder voting of shares that it owns indirectly through its share
ownership in mutual funds and ETFs.
In response to these comments, the Department notes that the issue
raised by these commenters is beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
Rather, fiduciary responsibilities with respect to investment decisions
are addressed in the other provisions of the Investment Duties
regulation, as recently amended. Paragraph (c)(1) provides that, in
general, a fiduciary's evaluation of an investment or investment course
of action must be based only on pecuniary factors and that a fiduciary
may not subordinate the interests of participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income or financial benefits under the plan to other
objectives and may not sacrifice investment return or take on
additional investment risk to promote non-pecuniary benefits or goals.
Furthermore, the weight given to any pecuniary factor by a fiduciary
should appropriately reflect a prudent assessment of its impact on risk
and return. Whether a particular fund's proxy voting activities would
constitute a pecuniary factor and, if so, how much weight it should be
given in an investment decision, are factual questions that should be
resolved by the responsible fiduciary based on surrounding
circumstances.
Some commenters requested clarification of whether the rule applies
to plan fiduciaries in the exercise of shareholder rights with respect
to mutual funds and ETFs (which are sometimes organized as corporate or
similar entities) when the fund itself seeks a vote of its shareholders
on fund matters. According to commenters, for a variety of reasons,
SEC-registered funds often face more challenges than operating
companies to achieve a quorum and obtain approval of their proxy
matters. The commenters explained that this is due to major differences
in shareholder bases (funds have more diffuse and retail-oriented
shareholder bases), proxy voting behavior of those bases (institutional
investors comprise a larger percentage of operating companies'
shareholder bases and are far more likely to vote), legal obligations,
and organizational differences.
Furthermore, according to commenters, funds also can have
difficulty even identifying and reaching their shareholders when they
invest through intermediaries, which severely limits a fund's ability
to communicate with its shareholders to encourage voting. These factors
contribute significantly to the costs and efforts required to seek and
obtain necessary shareholder approvals for fund matters. Funds, and
therefore fund shareholders, often bear the proxy costs associated with
proxy campaigns, including costs associated with follow-up
solicitations.
According to a commenter, the SEC has recognized these issues in
recent years. The commenter, as well as others, expressed concern that
the rule could create further difficulty for funds in carrying out
their proxy campaigns and potentially result in imposing unnecessary
costs on funds, particularly in connection with funds' ability to
[[Page 81665]]
achieve a timely quorum at their own shareholder meetings. Another
commenter indicated that ERISA plan investors receive a variety of
proxies that must be evaluated, not only in connection with shares of
common stock held by the plan, but also from SEC-registered funds as
well as bank collective trust funds and other collective funds in which
plans invest. The commenter stated that the regulated community needs
to be able to clearly identify those proxies that are subject to the
rule and those that are not. The commenter requested that the rule
itself provide that plan investments in such securities are not subject
to the requirements of the rule.
In the proposal, the Department recognized that the proposed rule
could impact the ability to achieve a quorum at shareholder meetings of
funds.\34\ The Department believes that the changes made to the final
rule significantly eliminate any provisions of the proposal that might
impede achieving a quorum for shareholder meetings, including those
held by funds. Under the proposal, a fiduciary would have not been able
to vote unless the fiduciary prudently concluded that the matter being
voted upon would have an economic impact on the plan. The burden of
determining whether a fiduciary must, or must not, vote under the
proposal was likely to result in fiduciaries opting to refrain from
voting under one of the permitted practices described in the proposal.
The Department's removal of the ``vote/not vote'' determination from
the final rule should eliminate any concerns with potential liability
on a fiduciary associated with making an incorrect decision as to
whether or not to cast a proxy vote. The safe harbors in the final rule
are also sufficiently flexible to permit a fiduciary to adopt voting
policies that would permit proxy voting for fund shares while
refraining from voting other types of shares. Moreover, the Department
continues to believe, as stated in the preamble to the proposal, that
fiduciary proxy voting policies may consider the economic detriment to
a plan's investment that might result from direct and indirect costs
incurred related to delaying a shareholders' meeting.\35\
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\34\ Id. at 55234.
\35\ Id. at 55226.
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(ii) Paragraph (e)(2)
Paragraph (e)(2) of the proposal set forth the general
responsibilities with respect to the exercise of shareholder rights
under the regulation, and stated that when deciding whether to exercise
shareholder rights and when exercising such rights, including the
voting of proxies, fiduciaries must carry out their duties prudently
and solely in the interests of the participants and beneficiaries and
for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to participants and
beneficiaries and defraying the reasonable expenses of administering
the plan pursuant to ERISA sections 403 and 404.
Paragraph (e)(2)(i)
A commenter noted that paragraph (e)(2)(i) of the proposal
referenced ERISA sections 403 and 404, and because those two separate
sections each carry separate responsibilities, suggested that each be
designated as a separate clause in the final regulation because a
fiduciary could breach or fulfill one but not the other. The Department
recognizes the separate responsibilities under sections 403 and 404 of
ERISA, but has decided to remove the reference to section 403 for
paragraph (e)(2)(i) of the final rule. As explained in connection with
recently adopted amendments to the Investment Duties regulation, the
Department believes it is important that the regulation focus on
section 404 of ERISA.\36\ Although similar, and although actions taken
in compliance with section 404 would likely satisfy similar obligations
under section 403, the text of ERISA section 403 is not identical to
ERISA section 404(a)(1)(A), and the Department is wary of possible
inferences that compliance with the provisions of the final rule would
also necessarily satisfy all the provisions of ERISA section 403. The
Department also believes explicit reference to ERISA section 404 is not
necessary because paragraph (e) is part of 29 CFR 2550.404a-1. As a
result, paragraph (e)(2)(i) of the final rule provides that when
deciding whether to exercise shareholder rights and when exercising
such rights, including the voting of proxies, fiduciaries must carry
out their duties prudently and solely in the interests of the
participants and beneficiaries and for the exclusive purpose of
providing benefits to participants and beneficiaries and defraying the
reasonable expenses of administering the plan.
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\36\ 85 FR 72846, (Nov. 13, 2020).
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Activities that are intended to monitor or influence the management
of corporations in which the plan owns stock can be consistent with a
fiduciary's obligations under ERISA, if the responsible fiduciary
concludes that such activities (by the plan alone or together with
other shareholders) are appropriate after applying the considerations
set forth in the final rule. However, the use of plan assets by
fiduciaries to further policy-related or political issues, including
ESG issues, through proxy resolutions would violate the prudence and
exclusive purpose requirements of ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B)
and the final rule unless such activities are undertaken solely in
accordance with the economic interests of the plan and its participants
and beneficiaries. The mere fact that plans are shareholders in the
corporations in which they invest does not itself provide a rationale
for a fiduciary to spend plan assets to pursue, support, or oppose such
proxy proposals. Moreover, the use of plan assets by fiduciaries to
further policy or political issues through proxy resolutions that are
not likely to enhance the economic value of the investment in a
corporation would, in the view of the Department, violate the prudence
and exclusive purpose requirements of ERISA sections 404(a)(1)(A) and
(B) as well as the final rule. For example, with respect to proposals
submitted by shareholders that request a corporation to incur costs,
either directly or indirectly, without the proposal including a
demonstrable expected economic return to the corporation, a fiduciary
may, depending on the facts and circumstances, be obligated under ERISA
and the final rule to vote against such proposals in order to protect
the financial interests of the plan's participants and
beneficiaries.\37\ Similarly, in the Department's view, it would not be
appropriate for plan fiduciaries, including appointed investment
managers, to incur expenses to engage in direct negotiations with the
board or management of publicly held companies with respect to which
the plan is just one of many investors. Nor generally should plan
fiduciaries fund advocacy, press, or mailing campaigns on shareholder
resolutions, call special shareholder meetings, or initiate or actively
sponsor proxy fights on environmental or social issues relating to such
companies, unless the responsible plan fiduciary concludes that such
activities (alone or together with other shareholders) are appropriate
[[Page 81666]]
after applying the considerations set forth in the final rule.\38\
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\37\ The Department is not suggesting that a fiduciary must
perform its own economic analysis, or incur expenses to obtain an
analysis, to determine whether the proposal will economically
benefit the corporation and its shareholders. For example, a
fiduciary could prudently consider a credible economic analysis
provided by the shareholder proponent.
\38\ Although the provision in the proposal also made reference
to ``purposes of the plan,'' the language is not carried forward in
the final provision as the Department believes it is unnecessary
because the purposes of a plan would be encompassed by the financial
interests of plan participants and beneficiaries.
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Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal set forth specific standards
for fiduciaries to meet when deciding whether to exercise shareholder
rights and when exercising shareholder rights. The requirements in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal also served as the basis for a
fiduciary's determination of whether a matter being voted upon would
have an economic impact on a plan for purposes of compliance with
paragraph (e)(3) of the proposal. Many commenters focused specifically
on paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(A) and (B) of the proposal, which required, in
relevant part, that fiduciaries (A) consider only factors that they
prudently determine will affect the economic value of the plan's
investment based on a determination of risk and return over an
appropriate investment horizon consistent with the plan's investment
objectives and the funding policy of the plan, and (B) consider the
likely impact on the investment performance of the plan based on such
factors as the size of the plan's holdings in the issuer relative to
the total investment assets of the plan, the plan's percentage
ownership of the issuer, and the costs involved.
Some commenters argued that the specificity of the proposal did not
comport with what they asserted was a congressional intent that
eschewed a prescriptive approach to ERISA's duties of loyalty and
prudence, or with the Department's own Investment Duties regulation.
Commenters also noted the potential burdens that paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
of the proposal would place on plan fiduciaries to evaluate and justify
decisions for potentially large numbers of proxy proposals and to
monitor an investment manager's or proxy advisory firm's voting policy
for consistency with the regulation, which could result in increased
costs that would ultimately be borne by plan participants. Commenters
also stated that the provision's requirement to take into account plan-
specific factors did not adequately recognize that investment managers
do not have information on plan holdings they do not directly manage.
Commenters further indicated that, with a focus on individual plans as
opposed to investment managers responsible for pools of plan assets,
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the proposal failed to consider situations
when several ERISA plans, particularly those with aligned objectives
and liabilities, may together hold a significant stake in a company. In
such cases, voting together could impact the investment and, as a
result, each investor's portfolio. They argued that the proposal, in
contrast, potentially would result in proxies being un-voted if each
``slice'' of the aggregate is too insignificant.
A commenter further suggested that an economic impact test, as
described in the proposal, was ill-suited to the purpose and role of
proxy voting. According to the commenter, many of the items on which
corporate law permits shareholders to have a say--for example, the
election of directors or ratification of auditors--are to mitigate risk
and assure prophylactic measures are in place to avoid threats to their
share of capital over the long term. The commenter questioned how a
fiduciary would determine that voting against a company-proposed
director for election to the board who was clearly unqualified and
incompetent would have an economic impact on the plan. Another
commenter explained that some votes, such as those supporting good
corporate governance practices (e.g., election of outside directors)
may not have an immediate measurable economic effect, but still be in
the interest of plan investors. Another commenter opined that a short-
term economic impact will be easier to prove or disprove in terms of
share price or other similarly rudimentary indicators, but questioned
whether the rule should encourage fiduciaries to think only in terms of
short-term economic gains. In this regard, several commenters requested
that the Department confirm that a fiduciary may take into
consideration the long-term nature of a plan's investment horizon. A
commenter also suggested that the Department expand the criteria for
voting to include issuer risk-based factors that ``promote long-term
growth and maximize return on ERISA plan assets.'' Another commenter
explained that proposals that encourage greater disclosure can result
in enhancing shareholder value or serve in a prophylactic manner to
prevent actions that might serve to diminish shareholder value. A
commenter also criticized the proposal as focusing on the impact on
individual plan investments. Commenters explained that modern portfolio
theory focuses on the role that an investment plays in the context of
an overall portfolio rather than on a stand-alone basis, and expressed
the view that the roles that proxy voting and shareholder voices play
in current portfolio risk management practices should be evaluated in
the context of the long-term and portfolio-wide strategy, with
consideration of the aggregate effects of shareholder votes and voices.
After considering these comments, the Department has modified
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) and (B). An important goal in proposing the
rule was to ensure that in making proxy voting decisions, fiduciaries
act for the exclusive purpose of financially benefitting plan
participants and not subordinating the interests of the plan and its
participants to goals and objectives unrelated to their financial
interests. Recent amendments to the Investment Duties regulation, which
applies generally to fiduciary decisions on investments and investment
courses of action, were adopted for much the same purpose.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the final rule requires that, when
deciding whether to exercise shareholder rights and when exercising
shareholder rights, a fiduciary must act solely in accordance with the
economic interest of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries.
The proposed requirement to prudently determine whether the economic
value of the plan's investment will be affected based on a
determination of risk and return over an appropriate investment horizon
has not been included in the final rule in order to address commenter
concerns that the impact of proxy voting may not be readily
quantifiable and to reduce potential compliance costs. In the
Department's view, the final rule provides sufficient flexibility for
fiduciaries to consider longer-term consequences and potential economic
impacts. Further, removal of the references to a plan's investment
objectives and funding policy responds to concerns that investment
managers responsible for only a portion of the plan assets may have
limited access and visibility into those objectives and funding
policies and such considerations may unnecessarily increase compliance
costs without a commensurate benefit for the plan or its participants.
The Department, however, cautions fiduciaries from applying an
overly expansive view as to what constitutes an economic interest for
purposes of paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the final rule. As previously
discussed, the costs incurred by a corporation to delay a shareholder
meeting due to lack of a quorum is an example of a factor that can be
appropriately considered as affecting the economic interest of the
plan. However, vague or speculative
[[Page 81667]]
notions that proxy voting may promote a theoretical benefit to the
global economy that might redound, outside the plan, to the benefit of
plan participants would not be considered an economic interest under
the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the proposal required consideration of
the likely impact on the investment performance of the plan based on
such factors as the size of the plan's holdings in the issuer relative
to the total investment assets of the plan, and the plan's percentage
ownership of the issuer. Similar to the changes made to paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(A) of the final rule, the Department has removed this
language to address concerns that where portions of the portfolio are
managed by different investment managers, a specific manager may not
know the plan's overall aggregate exposure to a single issuer.
Accordingly, paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the final rule has been revised
only to require a fiduciary consider the impact of any costs involved.
However, in the Department's view, where the plan's overall aggregate
exposure to a single issuer is known, the relative size of an
investment within a plan's overall portfolio and the plan's percentage
ownership of the issuer, may still be relevant considerations in
appropriate cases in deciding whether to vote or exercise other
shareholder rights.
Several commenters requested further guidance or examples of costs
that a fiduciary would be required to consider. In the view of the
Department, for purposes of paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(B) of the final rule,
the types of relevant costs would depend on the particular facts and
circumstances. Such costs could include direct costs to the plan,
including expenditures for organizing proxy materials; analyzing
portfolio companies and the matters to be voted on; determining how the
votes should be cast; and submitting proxy votes to be counted. If a
plan can reduce the management or advisory fees it pays by reducing the
number of proxies it votes on matters that have no economic consequence
for the plan that also is a relevant cost consideration. In some cases,
voting proxies may involve out-of-the-ordinary costs or unusual
requirements, such as may be the case of voting proxies on shares of
certain foreign corporations. Opportunity costs in connection with
proxy voting could also be relevant, such as foregone earnings from
recalling securities on loan or if, as a condition of submitting a
proxy vote, the plan will be prohibited from selling the underlying
shares until after the shareholder meeting.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(C) of the proposal provided that a fiduciary
must not subordinate the interests of the participants and
beneficiaries in their retirement income or financial benefits under
the plan to any non-pecuniary objective, or sacrifice investment return
or take on additional investment risk to promote goals unrelated to
these financial interests of the plan's participants and beneficiaries
or the purposes of the plan. A commenter took issue with this
requirement, suggesting that it was inconsistent with some client
expectations, as well as stewardship codes outside the United States
that do not limit significant votes to economic impact to the
portfolio. The Department disagrees and notes that the provision
reflects the fundamental fiduciary duty of loyalty as set forth in
ERISA section 404(a)(1)(A). The Department has modified the final rule
in order to avoid suggesting that a fiduciary may exercise proxy voting
and other shareholder rights with the goal of advancing non-pecuniary
goals unrelated to the financial interests of the plan's participants
and beneficiaries so long as it does not result in increased costs to
the plan or a decrease in value of the investment. Thus, paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(C) of the final rule states that a fiduciary must not
subordinate the interests of the participants and beneficiaries in
their retirement income or financial benefits under the plan to any
non-pecuniary objective, or promote non-pecuniary benefits or goals
unrelated to these financial interests of the plan's participants and
beneficiaries.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal provided that a fiduciary
must investigate material facts that form the basis for any particular
proxy vote or other exercise of shareholder rights. The provision
further stated that the fiduciary may not adopt a practice of following
the recommendations of a proxy advisory firm or other service provider
without appropriate supervision and a determination that the service
provider's proxy voting guidelines are consistent with the economic
interests of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries, as
defined in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the proposal.
A commenter suggested the provision's requirement to investigate
material facts was overly broad, and explained that there may be
instances when routine or recurring proxy votes, such as annual proxy
votes on the same subject, may not require a separate and distinct
investigation in order for a fiduciary to make a prudent determination.
A commenter indicated that paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) is overly
burdensome, and that issues are addressed in paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(F)
and (e)(2)(iii) (relating to selection of service providers and
delegation to investment managers). The commenter recommended deletion
of the provision.
On the other hand, another commenter suggested that the Department
go further with the fiduciary requirement to investigate material facts
by explicitly referencing review of the issuer response statements
required by recently-adopted SEC proxy solicitation rules. The
commenter indicated these filings may include significant, material
information that could impact a voting decision (including decisions
about whether to vote and how to vote) that by definition would not be
considered by the proxy advisory firm in drafting its recommendation.
Additionally, according to the commenter, recent SEC guidance on the
proxy voting responsibilities of investment advisers encourages
investment advisers to have policies and procedures in place to
consider the information available to them about proxy advisory firms
themselves under the SEC's new proxy solicitation rules (e.g.,
disclosures of proxy advisory firm conflicts of interests) as well as
any information that comes to light after they have received a proxy
advisory firm's voting recommendations (e.g., additional soliciting
material setting forth an issuer's views on a recommendation). The
supplemental guidance further states that, under certain circumstances,
an investment adviser would likely need to consider such additional
information from an issuer prior to exercising voting authority in
order to demonstrate that it is voting in its client's best interest,
and that it should disclose how its policies and procedures address the
use of automated voting in cases where it becomes aware before the
submission deadline for proxies that an issuer intends to file or has
filed additional soliciting materials regarding a matter to be voted
upon.
Several commenters raised a number of concerns in connection with
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal about proxy advisory firms,
including conflicts of interest resulting from business relationships
with companies that are the subject of proxy recommendations, a ``one-
size-fits-all'' approach to corporate governance that does not take
into account differences in companies' business models, a lack of
transparency in the process by which proxy advisory firm
recommendations are developed, errors in proxy advisory firm reports
and recommendations, proxy advisory firms' resistance to
[[Page 81668]]
engaging in a dialogue with issuers to correct errors and
misunderstandings, automatic submission of votes for clients, cutting
plan managers out of the decision-making process, and depriving issuers
of a chance to correct the record or provide the market with additional
information.
After considering the comments, the Department is modifying
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) by requiring a fiduciary to evaluate, rather
than investigate, material facts. This change is to remove any
implication that plan fiduciaries would be expected to conduct their
own investigation of material facts, which was not intended by the
Department. Instead, the intent of this provision was to ensure that in
making informed proxy voting decisions, fiduciaries should consider
information material to a matter that is known or that is available to
and reasonably should be known by the fiduciary. In this regard, the
Department notes that, as described by the commenter above, as a result
of recent SEC actions, clients of proxy advisory firms may become aware
of additional information from an issuer which is the subject of a
voting recommendation.\39\ An ERISA fiduciary would be expected to
consider the relevance of such additional information if material.
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the final rule thus provides that a
fiduciary must evaluate material facts that form the basis for any
particular proxy vote or other exercise of shareholder rights.
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\39\ 2020 SEC Supplemental Guidance, 85 FR at 55155-57.
Fiduciaries may retain proxy advisory firms and other service
providers, subject to any applicable requirements of paragraphs
(e)(2)(ii)(F) and (e)(2)(iii) and (iv), as part of satisfying the
fiduciaries' obligations to evaluate material facts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters also suggested that the Department strengthen the
rule by including specific regulatory text that generally disallows
``robovoting,'' a term some commenters describe as automatic voting
mechanisms relying on proxy advisors. A commenter questioned whether
robovoting is consistent with ERISA's stringent standards. Another
commenter suggested that robovoting is an abridgment of fiduciary
responsibility. Some commenters also suggested that the Department
should prohibit robovoting for significant, contested, and
controversial proxy votes. Commenters also suggested that the
Department consider placing conditions on the use of robovoting, such
as allowing robovoting only if a company that is the subject of a proxy
advisory firm's recommendations has not submitted a response to the
recommendation.
The Department intended that the provisions in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal address the sort of concerns raised by
these comments and provide appropriate guidelines for ERISA
fiduciaries. The provision in the proposal stated, in relevant part,
that a fiduciary may not adopt a practice of following the
recommendations of a proxy advisory firm or other service provider
without appropriate supervision and a determination that the service
provider's proxy voting guidelines are consistent with the economic
interests of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries as defined
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of the proposal. The Department does not
dispute that proxy advisory firms can play a role in providing
information to fiduciaries and economizing investors' ability to
exercise shareholder rights and proxy voting. However, public comments
submitted in connection with the proposal, and recent SEC actions in
this area described above, highlight aspects of the proxy advisory
firms' recommendations and services that can be problematic in a
variety of ways. For example, the Department acknowledges some
commenters noted that many ERISA plans rely on proxy advisory firms'
pre-population and automatic submission mechanisms for proxy votes,
which can provide a cost-effective way to exercise their shareholder
voting rights in cases where the proxy advisor has processes which
assure that its voting recommendations conform to the obligations that
plan managers hold as fiduciaries. However, adopting such a practice
for all proxy votes effectively outsources their fiduciary decision-
making authority. Rather, as the Department noted in the preamble to
the proposed rule, ``certain proposals may require a more detailed or
particularized voting analysis.'' \40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ 85 FR at 55224. The SEC 2019 Guidance for Investment
Advisers similarly cautioned that a higher degree of analysis ``may
be necessary or appropriate'' for certain types of matters,
including corporate events such as mergers and acquisitions, or
matters that are ``highly contested or controversial.'' Commission
Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment
Advisers, 84 FR 47420, 47423-24 (Sept. 10, 2019). Release Nos. IA-
5325; IC-33605, available at www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/FR-2019-09-10/pdf/2019-18342.pdf.
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In light of other changes in paragraph (e)(2) intended to adopt a
more principles-based approach in the final rule, the Department has
concluded that it would be better to address these proxy advisory firm
issues in a separate paragraph in the final rule, which is described
under paragraph (e)(2)(iv).
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) of the proposal required a fiduciary to
maintain records on proxy voting activities and other exercises of
shareholder rights, including records that demonstrate the basis for
particular proxy votes and exercises of shareholder rights. Recognizing
that ERISA's prudence obligation carries with it a requirement to
maintain records and document fiduciaries' decisions, most commenters
did not seriously object to the proposal's general obligation to
maintain records on proxy voting activities and other exercises of
shareholder rights. Commenters did, however, express concern that the
proposal included particularized recordkeeping mandates that were both
unnecessary and costly. One commenter suggested an alternative that
fiduciaries must make prudent efforts to maintain accurate records that
include proxy voting activities and, where authority is delegated,
require the same of that person. Other commenters complained that the
requirement to maintain specific records demonstrating the basis for
particular votes was unnecessary and costly. Some commenters observed
that such a level of recordkeeping would exceed that required for other
potentially more impactful investment decisions. Another noted that the
provision appeared to require a level of recordkeeping greater than
described in current guidance, and complained that the Department did
not adequately explain the reason for this change. The commenter noted
that the Department stated in 2011 that there was no basis to impose
more onerous documentation requirements that treat proxy voting
differently from other fiduciary activities.\41\ Some commenters
requested general clarification on the types of documents that would be
necessary to demonstrate the basis for a vote. A commenter suggested a
specific clarification that proxy voting activity that is consistent
with an applicable proxy voting policy does not require additional
explanation or documentation. Further, as discussed below, commenters
expressed concern that the requirement in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) of
the proposal to maintain documents demonstrating the basis for
particular votes, as well as a similar requirement in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii) of the proposal (relating to delegation of responsibilities
to investment managers), suggested that the proposal would create new
and heightened monitoring obligations for fiduciaries
[[Page 81669]]
that delegate responsibilities to investment managers.
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\41\ See Dep't of Labor Office of Inspector Gen. Report No. 09-
11-001-12-121 (March 31, 2011). The commenter cited the EBSA
response to OIG conclusion that EBSA does not have adequate
assurances that fiduciaries or third parties voted proxies solely
for the economic benefit of plans.
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It has long been the view of the Department that compliance with
the duty to monitor necessitates proper documentation of the activities
that are subject to monitoring. However, the Department agrees that a
less prescriptive approach to recordkeeping obligations is appropriate.
The Department is retaining the general recordkeeping requirement, but
is removing the requirement to maintain documents that would be
necessary to demonstrate the basis for a vote to avoid any inferences
related to responsibilities in monitoring investment managers, which
are addressed in paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the final rule. Thus,
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) of the final rule requires fiduciaries to
maintain records on proxy voting activities and other exercises of
shareholder rights. In general, the extent of the documentation needed
to satisfy the monitoring obligation will depend on individual
circumstances, including the subject of the proxy voting and its
potential economic impact on the plan's investment. For fiduciaries
that are SEC-registered investment advisers, the Department intends
that the recordkeeping obligations under paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(E) be
applied in a manner that aligns to similar proxy voting recordkeeping
obligations under the Advisers Act.\42\
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\42\ See infra note 43 and accompanying text.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the proposal required that fiduciaries
exercise prudence and diligence in the selection and monitoring of
persons, if any, selected to advise or otherwise assist with exercises
of shareholder rights, such as providing research and analysis,
recommendations regarding proxy votes, administrative services with
voting proxies, and recordkeeping and reporting services.
Various commenters supported the Department's effort to better
regulate proxy advisory firms and the proxy advisory process and
suggested additional steps the Department should take in a final rule.
Some suggested mandating disclosure of fees paid by investment managers
to proxy voting advisors, prohibiting proxy advisory firms from
consulting with companies when they also make recommendations on voting
issues for that company, and establishing a baseline disclosure
standard to which all proxy voting advice businesses must adhere.
Others suggested placing specific conditions on a fiduciary's ability
to rely on a proxy advisory firm's voting recommendation, such as
requiring the proxy advisory firm to demonstrate that it had researched
and analyzed evidence that would support a conclusion contrary to the
proxy advisory firm's conclusion. A commenter suggested that the
Department should make more specific reference to proxy advisory firm
conflict of interest disclosures required by the recently amended SEC
proxy solicitation rules. According to the commenter, the SEC rules
require that proxy advisory firms provide specific, prominent
disclosures of their conflicts of interest and of any policies and
procedures designed to mitigate said conflicts. Additionally, these
disclosures must be specific to the company on which the proxy advisory
firm is issuing a report. The commenter recommended that the
fiduciaries should be required to review a proxy advisory firm's
conflicts disclosure, and that the Department should caution ERISA
fiduciaries against relying on a proxy advisory firm's recommendations
if the disclosures reveal a conflict with respect to an issuer that
calls into question the firm's ability to provide objective advice.
Another commenter suggested that the Department should wait until
implementation of the SEC's new regulations to determine if any further
action is necessary, and that the Department's approach to regulating
fiduciary use of proxy advisory firms should align with the approach
taken by the SEC so that SEC-registered investment advisers are subject
to a consistent standard regarding their use of proxy advisory firms.
On the other hand, some commenters criticized the Department's focus on
proxy advisory firms as being based on unsupported allegations of proxy
advisory firm critics, without the Department either substantiating
those criticisms or noting the self-interest of the persons making
those allegations.
After considering the public comments, the Department is adopting
paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) in the final rule unmodified. It provides that
fiduciaries must exercise prudence and diligence in the selection and
monitoring of persons, if any, selected to advise or otherwise assist
with exercises of shareholder rights, such as providing research and
analysis, recommendations regarding proxy votes, administrative
services with voting proxies, and recordkeeping and reporting services.
The provision is essentially a restatement of the general fiduciary
obligations that apply to the selection and monitoring of plan service
providers, articulated in the context of fiduciary and other service
providers that advise or assist with exercises of shareholder rights.
Thus, as a general matter, fiduciaries will be expected to assess the
qualifications of the provider, the quality of services offered, and
the reasonableness of fees charged in light of the services provided.
The process also must avoid self-dealing, conflicts of interest or
other improper influence. In considering any proxy recommendation,
fiduciaries should assure that they are fully informed of potential
conflicts of proxy advisory firms and the steps such firms have taken
to address them. Furthermore, to the extent applicable, fiduciaries
will be expected to review the proxy voting policies and/or proxy
voting guidelines and the implementing activities of the person being
selected. If a fiduciary determines that the recommendations and other
activities of such person are not being carried out in a manner
consistent with those policies and/or guidelines, then the fiduciary
will be expected to take appropriate action in response.
A commenter suggested deleting the list of services related to
proxy voting. The commenter explained that the list is incomplete, and
that codifying it might create confusion as to the types of services
that may be necessary or appropriate for a particular voting activity.
The Department does not believe it necessary to modify the provision as
it is clear that the provision is not attempting to limit in any way
the types of services that a plan or plan fiduciary may utilize in
connection with exercising shareholder rights. Also, although the
Department agrees that it would be important for a fiduciary to
consider the proxy advisory conflict of interest disclosure required
under recent SEC guidance, and that a fiduciary should consider whether
potential conflicts may affect the quality of services to be provided,
the Department does not believe it appropriate to expressly require
review of such disclosure in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the final rule
because the provision could become outdated as disclosure obligations
change over time. Rather, the Department believes that a general
principles-based provision is adequate and would require ERISA
fiduciaries to review disclosures of conflicts of interest required by
SEC rules or guidance.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iii)
Paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the proposal required that, where the
authority to vote proxies or exercise shareholder rights has been
delegated to an investment manager pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(2),
or a proxy voting firm or other person performs advisory services as to
the voting of proxies, a responsible plan fiduciary must require
[[Page 81670]]
such investment manager or proxy advisory firm to document the
rationale for proxy voting decisions or recommendations sufficient to
demonstrate that the decision or recommendation was based on the
expected economic benefit to the plan, and that the decision or
recommendation was based solely on the interests of participants and
beneficiaries in obtaining financial benefits under the plan. The
preamble explained that the proposal required fiduciaries to require
documentation of the rationale for proxy-voting decisions so that
fiduciaries can periodically monitor those decisions.
Commenters expressed concern that paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the
proposal appeared to require a delegating fiduciary to, in effect, peer
over the shoulder of an investment manager and supervise each voting
decision to confirm the voting decision was made based on the economic
impact on the plan. Commenters noted that such a monitoring obligation
for proxy voting would be higher than for other fiduciary activities,
and would be inconsistent with ERISA's general rules and prior
Department guidance related to delegation of fiduciary
responsibilities. Commenters asked for clarification that fiduciaries
would not be required to monitor every proxy vote or second-guess other
fiduciaries' specific proxy voting decisions, unless the fiduciary
knows or should know the designated fiduciary is violating ERISA with
their proxy voting procedures.
Another commenter recommended removal of the requirement that a
fiduciary require its investment managers and proxy advisory firms to
document each voting decision along with the rationale for each
decision, indicating that it would create unmanageable liability risk
for fiduciaries by suggesting an obligation to review every voting
decision made. Commenters indicated that the documentation requirement
would be costly for investment managers, believing they would need to
justify and communicate their decisions regarding the benefit of each
proxy agenda item to each plan client. Another commenter suggested
industry practice is that, when votes are exercised in accordance with
approved proxy voting guidelines generally, only votes contrary to
approved guidelines warrant specific documentation. Other commenters,
however, believed documentation would be beneficial in protecting plan
interests and suggested that further access to information and analyses
from proxy advisory firms would help plan fiduciaries understand how
the advisory firms developed their recommendations.
The Department did not intend to create a higher standard for a
fiduciary's monitoring of an investment manager's proxy voting
activities than would ordinarily apply under ERISA with respect to the
monitoring of any other fiduciary or fiduciary activity. Thus, the
Department has revised the provision in the final rule to eliminate the
requirement for documentation of the rationale for proxy voting
decisions, and instead replaced it with a more general monitoring
obligation. Specifically, paragraph (e)(2)(iii) of the final rule
provides that where the authority to vote proxies or exercise
shareholder rights has been delegated to an investment manager pursuant
to ERISA section 403(a)(2), a proxy voting firm or other person who
performs advisory services as to the voting of proxies, a responsible
plan fiduciary shall prudently monitor the proxy voting activities of
such investment manager or proxy advisory firm and determine whether
such activities are consistent with paragraphs (e)(2)(i)-(ii) and
(e)(3) of the final rule. The Department notes that while the provision
does not contain a specific documentation requirement, an SEC rule
requires investment advisers registered with the SEC under the Advisers
Act to maintain a record of each proxy vote cast on behalf of a client,
retain documents created by the adviser that were material to a
decision on how to vote or that memorialize the basis for that
decision, and to maintain each written client request for information
on how the adviser voted proxies on behalf of the client and any
written response by the investment adviser to any (written or oral)
client request for information on how the adviser voted proxies on
behalf of the requesting client.\43\ These requirements may be helpful
to responsible plan fiduciaries in fulfilling monitoring requirements
under paragraph (e)(2)(iii).
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\43\ SEC Rule 204-2, 17 CFR 275.204-2; see also SEC Rule 206(4)-
6(b) and (c), 17 CFR 275.206(4)-6(b) and (c) (relating to certain
disclosures about proxy voting by an investment adviser that must be
provided to, or may be requested by, a client of the investment
adviser).
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Commenters also raised concerns about the statement in the preamble
to the proposal that suggested uniform proxy policies may sometimes
jeopardize responsible plan fiduciaries' satisfaction of their duties
under ERISA as suggesting that ERISA plans should require investment
managers to use customized policies. A commenter explained that
currently investment managers with voting discretion may vote
consistently across client accounts as appropriate (i.e., on those
proposals for which objectives of the accounts are consistent and
divergent economic interests or client-specific preferences are not
present). Similarly, another commenter indicated that many investment
advisers registered with the SEC use consistent proxy voting policies
across client accounts, including accounts held by ERISA plans and
pooled investment vehicles, because they believe those policies are in
the best interest of clients.
Some commenters believed that developing customized policies for
particular ERISA plans or collective investment vehicles used by ERISA
plans would increase costs for plans and investment managers without
incremental benefit to participants and beneficiaries. A commenter
noted that investment managers might need to run a parallel voting
process for ERISA and non-ERISA assets, which would create additional
administrative burden and costs. A commenter also asserted that due to
increased risk, some managers might move in the direction of not
undertaking voting responsibilities, which would then require plans to
make their own assessments and invariably result in increased costs.
A commenter suggested that the proposal's approach to regulating
fiduciary use of proxy advisory firms should align with the approach
taken by the SEC so that SEC-registered investment advisers are subject
to a consistent standard regarding their use of proxy advisory firms. A
commenter noted similar concerns in the context of proxy advisory
services, indicating that paragraph (e)(2)(iii) implied that proxy
advisors must tailor their rationale for every recommendation to each
specific plan (and its participants) whose asset manager uses its
research. A commenter believed such a requirement would be
unnecessarily plan specific and unworkable. The commenter explained
that proxy advisory firms support their clients, such as asset managers
to retirement plans, by providing recommendations based on their chosen
proxy voting policy, which is usually a custom policy the asset manager
has selected to serve the interest of its client (e.g., a retirement
plan and its participants). According to the commenter, the client's
decisions as to what its policy should be and how it should vote are at
the sole discretion of the asset manager.
With respect to uniform proxy policies being utilized by investment
managers, it was not the Department's intention to suggest that plans
must require investment managers to vote
[[Page 81671]]
according to custom policies. Rather, the Department's statement
reflected a general concern that responsible fiduciaries might be
accepting investment managers' proxy voting policies without sufficient
review as to whether those policies comply with ERISA and, if so,
whether the investment managers were complying with those policies. The
Department believes that the revisions to the recordkeeping requirement
in the final rule described above appropriately address that issue.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv)
In light of other changes in paragraph (e)(2) intended to adopt a
more principles-based approach in the final rule, some provisions
related to proxy advisory firms that were in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of
the proposal have been moved to a new paragraph (e)(2)(iv) in the final
rule. Specifically, paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal stated that
the fiduciary may not adopt a practice of following the recommendations
of a proxy advisory firm or other service provider without appropriate
supervision and a determination that the service provider's proxy
voting guidelines are consistent with the economic interests of the
plan and its participants and beneficiaries as defined in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(A) of the proposal.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final rule generally includes the same
fiduciary obligations with respect to the use of proxy advisory firms
and other service providers that were described in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(D) of the proposal, with some modifications to strengthen
the oversight obligations of fiduciaries who retain proxy advisory
firms or other service providers. In response to the public comments
that cited fiduciary practices that carry a high risk of noncompliance
with ERISA, paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final rule has been modified so
that a fiduciary that chooses to follow the recommendations of a proxy
advisory firm or other service provider must determine that the firm or
service provider's proxy voting guidelines are consistent with the five
factors set forth in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A)-(E) of the final rule,
rather than only paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A). Because paragraph
(e)(2)(ii)(F) of the final rule covers the exercise of prudence and
diligence in the selection and monitoring of proxy advisory firms and
other service providers, it would not generally be applicable to the
proxy voting guidelines of a proxy advisory firm or other service
provider.
Paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final rule removes the appropriate
supervision requirement since that requirement duplicates the
monitoring obligations set forth in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) of the
final rule. A fiduciary that retains a proxy advisory firm or other
service provider, however, remains subject to the prudence and
diligence obligations described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(F) regarding
the selection of that person and, if the fiduciary adopts a practice of
following the recommendations of that person, the fiduciary is subject
to the additional requirements of paragraph (e)(2)(iv) of the final
rule.
(iii) Paragraph (e)(3)
Paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal, which would have
required fiduciaries in certain circumstances to vote or not to vote
proxies, were removed from the final rule, as discussed above.
Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal expressly acknowledged the
appropriateness of ERISA fiduciaries' adoption of proxy voting policies
to help them more cost-effectively comply with their obligations under
the proposal. Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal provided for
adoption of general proxy voting policies or procedures and provided
three examples of policies that could be utilized by fiduciaries
(sometimes referred to as ``permitted practices'') in paragraphs
(e)(3)(iii)(A)-(C) of the proposal. The proposed permitted practices
included conditions intended to require a fiduciary to make prudence-
based judgments about the policies.
The Department received a number of general comments on paragraph
(e)(3)(iii) of the proposal. Several commenters supported use of proxy
voting policies to help fiduciaries reduce costs and compliance
burdens, but suggested that the scope of relief for fiduciaries under
paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal was unclear, noting that clear
``safe harbor'' relief was not afforded by the proposal. Commenters
also asked about the extent to which fiduciaries following permitted
practices would still be required to comply with particular provisions
of the proposal that seemed more directed as evaluations of individual
votes, e.g., some of the recordkeeping provisions in the proposal.
Commenters recommended that the permitted practices should be made
clear safe harbors indicating that fiduciaries are deemed to satisfy
their prudence and loyalty obligations under ERISA. Commenters argued
that without such treatment the permitted practices would not offer
effective options for easing compliance burdens and associated costs as
intended by the Department. Commenters also requested confirmation that
plan fiduciaries have flexibility to adopt proxy voting policies in
addition to the specific examples described in the rule. Other
commenters did not support paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal,
asserting that the proposal would effectively compel ERISA plans to
adopt one of the permitted practices by imposing the proposal's
burdensome cost-benefit analysis requirements.
The Department has decided to retain, with modifications, the
framework for adoption of proxy voting policies as set forth in
paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal as paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the
final rule. The provision in the final rule has been modified to more
clearly provide safe harbor relief. The safe harbors apply to a
fiduciary's duties of loyalty and prudence with respect to decisions on
whether to vote, but do not apply to decisions on how to vote. Thus, a
fiduciary will not breach its fiduciary responsibilities under sections
404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA with respect to decisions on
whether to vote, provided such policies are developed in accordance
with a fiduciary's obligations under ERISA as set forth in the
applicable provisions of paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final
rule. Because the compliance burdens under the rule should be
significantly reduced by other changes from the proposal described
elsewhere (e.g., the principles-based approaches and elimination of
proposed paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii)), the Department does not
believe that fiduciaries will be compelled to adopt the proxy voting
policies described in paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the final rule but rather
will use them, as the Department intended, to provide cost-effective
options for exercising shareholder rights in compliance with their
fiduciary obligations under ERISA.
Thus, paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the final rule provides that in
deciding whether to vote a proxy pursuant to paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and
(ii) of the final rule, fiduciaries to plans may adopt proxy voting
policies under which voting authority shall be exercised pursuant to
specific parameters prudently designed to serve the plan's economic
interest. The final rule further provides that paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A)
and (B) set forth optional means for satisfying the fiduciary
responsibilities under section 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA, provided such
policies are developed in accordance with a fiduciary's prudence
obligations under ERISA as set forth in the applicable provisions of
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the final rule. These safe harbors are
intended to be applied flexibly rather than in a binary ``all or none''
manner, and may be used either
[[Page 81672]]
independently or in conjunction with each other. The safe harbors are
thus a means of establishing general proxy voting practices that allow
plans to efficiently operationalize and manage shareholder rights
consistent with the applicable fiduciary principles in paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii). Paragraph (e)(3)(i) also makes clear that
paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) are not intended to set forth an
exclusive list of the policies that plans could adopt that would
satisfy their responsibilities under the fiduciary principles in
paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii).
Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(A) sets forth the first of two safe harbor
policies contained in the final rule. It describes a policy that voting
resources will focus only on particular types of proposals that the
fiduciary has prudently determined are substantially related to the
issuer's business activities or are expected to have material effect on
the value of the investment. The provision is substantively similar to
the permitted practice described in paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(B) of the
proposal. However, the proposed provision listed types of proposals
that a fiduciary might prudently consider focusing voting resources on:
Proposals relating to corporate events (mergers and acquisitions
transactions, dissolutions, conversions, or consolidations), corporate
repurchases of shares (buybacks), issuances of additional securities
with dilutive effects on shareholders, or contested elections for
directors. Commenters expressed concern that the Department did not
provide any economic analysis for why matters listed in proposed
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(B) would be more material to shareholders than
other issues, and argued that voting on a variety of issues not
included in that list would be in the interest of ERISA plans. For
example, a commenter pointed out that mutual fund proposals, which may
present difficulties for these funds in achieving quorum as compared to
solicitations made by corporate issuers, and votes to approve auditors
were not included in the list but could be considered material to
investors.
The list of matters included in the proposal was not intended as an
exhaustive list of particular matters that merit consideration by
fiduciaries. Nor was it intended to limit a fiduciary's flexibility to
prudently consider other matters. The Department continues to believe
that the listed issues are examples of matters that generally would be
expected to have an economic impact on the value of the investment.
Nonetheless, to avoid the potential for such a misperception, the
Department is not including the list in paragraph (e)(3)(i)(A) of the
final rule.
The final provision slightly revises the language used to describe
the fiduciary's prudence determination to reflect a pecuniary-based
analysis. The final rule also broadly references the value of the
investment rather than the plan's investment to make it clear that the
evaluation could be at the investment manager level dealing with a pool
of investor's assets or at the individual plan level. Paragraph
(e)(3)(i)(A) of the final rule thus describes a policy that voting
resources will focus only on particular types of proposals the
fiduciary has prudently determined are substantially related to the
issuer's business activities or are expected to have a material effect
on the value of the investment.\44\
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\44\ The final rule uses the term ``material effect'' rather
than ``significant impact.'' No substantive change is intended by
the revision as the Department believes that ``significant impact''
is generally equivalent to ``material effect'' in this context. Use
of the term materiality is intended to align the terminology
consistent with the rest of the Investment Duties regulation. The
Department believes that fiduciaries and investment managers are
generally familiar with the concept of materiality from its use in
connection with both ERISA and the Federal securities laws.
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Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(B) of the final rule sets forth the second safe
harbor policy and is based on paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C) of the proposal.
The proposal provided that a fiduciary could adopt a policy of
refraining from voting on proposals or particular types of proposals
when the plan's holding of the issuer relative to the plan's total
investment assets is below quantitative thresholds that the fiduciary
prudently determines, considering its percentage ownership of the
issuer and other relevant factors, is sufficiently small that the
matter being voted upon is unlikely to have a material impact on the
investment performance of the plan's portfolio (or investment
performance of assets under management in the case of an investment
manager). The proposal indicated that the Department was considering a
specific quantitative upper limit for the threshold (i.e., a cap) under
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C), and solicited comments on setting this upper
limit, including whether a maximum cap should be defined and, if so,
what factors should be considered in setting a cap. In particular, the
Department solicited comments on whether a five percent cap would be
appropriate, or some other percent level of plan assets.
A commenter expressed the view that the permitted practice
described in paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C) to refrain from proxy voting
would violate the requirement in ERISA section 404(a)(1)(B) that plan
fiduciaries act ``with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under
the circumstances then prevailing [as] a prudent man acting in a like
capacity and familiar with such matters.'' According to the commenter,
the overwhelming majority of prudent experts--i.e., the expert
professionals who make up the investment management community--have
determined that proxy voting is in their clients' interests. Another
commenter disagreed with the Department's statement that voting shares
of plan holdings that comprise a small portion of total plan assets
rarely advances plans' economic interests. The commenter indicated
that, depending on the size of a plan, even small relative positions
can have a large dollar value.
Commenters also expressed concerns about potential negative
unintended consequences of widespread adoption of the permitted
practice. According to a commenter, if the majority of a plan's
investments in portfolio companies fell within the parameters described
in the permitted practice, this could leave the majority of the plan's
portfolio un-voted, which in the aggregate would expose the plan
investor to material risk even if the risk associated with each
individual company was small. Additionally, according to commenters,
non-voting by small plan investors could result in concentrating proxy
votes in the hands of other investors whose interests might not align
with the long-term interests of ERISA plans. Furthermore, non-voting by
plans could result in companies with substantial portions of un-voted
shares, and could also result in quorum requirements going unmet.
With respect to the Department's request for input on whether a
percent cap would be appropriate, commenters generally opposed such a
provision and suggested that the Department avoid specifying a
percentage cap on the portion of the plan's portfolio that must be
represented by an issuer for proxy votes to be considered.
The Department is not persuaded that the type of policy described
in paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(C) of the proposal should be excluded from the
final rule's safe harbor provision. The provision was designed to
provide a fiduciary with flexibility to prudently tailor a quantitative
threshold for a plan's portfolio, below which the outcome of the vote
is unlikely to have a material impact on the performance of the plan's
portfolio or, in situations where only a portion of the portfolio is
being managed by an investment manager, the performance of the plan
assets under
[[Page 81673]]
management. The Department believes that providing such an option in
the final rule may be helpful to plans in reducing costs. The
Department further believes that it can be prudent for a fiduciary to
refrain from expending plan resources to vote on matters pertaining to
a holding that makes up an immaterial portion because a fiduciary may
prudently expect that voting on such matters will not have a material
effect on performance. With respect to setting a cap, the Department
does not believe it received sufficient information from comments to
establish an upper limit in the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(i)(B) of the final rule thus describes as the
second safe harbor a policy of refraining from voting on proposals or
particular types of proposals when holding in a single issuer relative
to the plan's total investment assets, or the portion of a plan's
assets being managed by an investment manager, is below a quantitative
threshold that the fiduciary prudently determines, considering its
percentage ownership of the issuer and other relevant factors, is
sufficiently small that the matter being voted upon is not expected to
have a material effect on the investment performance.\45\ The final
rule does not require a specific performance period for determining
whether a material effect exists; fiduciaries must therefore prudently
decide an appropriate performance period for use in its proxy voting
policies under this safe harbor.
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\45\ The proposal referred to ``the outcome of the vote,''
rather than ``the matter being voted upon.'' This final rule uses
``the matter being voted upon'' to make it clear that whether the
fiduciary's voting power could sway the vote one way or the other is
not relevant to application of the safe harbor. Rather, the point is
that the plan's holding would be sufficiently small that any outcome
of the vote (and any consequent changes to the value of the
underlying asset) would have no material effect on the investment
performance of the plan.
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The Department notes that paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(A) of the proposal
is not being incorporated in the final rule. Paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(A)
of the proposal described a policy of voting proxies in accordance with
the voting recommendations of a corporation's management on proposals
or types of proposals that the fiduciary prudently determined would be
unlikely to have a significant impact on the value of the plan's
investment, subject to any conditions determined by the fiduciary as
requiring additional analysis because the matter being voted upon
concerns a matter that may present heightened management conflicts of
interest or is likely to have a significant economic impact on the
value of the plan's investment. Commenters expressed the view that this
permitted practice would be unprecedented, indicating that the
Department has never previously indicated that a fiduciary may assume
that another person is acting in the best interest of the plan. Rather,
according to a commenter, the Department's consistent position is that
a fiduciary must prudently select and monitor both fiduciary and non-
fiduciary service providers. The commenter questioned this provision's
consistency with other provisions of the proposal, noting that under
other provisions of the proposal plan fiduciaries would be required to
increase their due diligence on proxy advisory firms consistent with
prudence and loyalty obligations, but this permitted practice would
allow them to follow corporate directors in deciding what is in the
best interest of the fiduciaries' plan participants without undertaking
similar due diligence.
A commenter specifically noted that proxy advisory firms that are
registered with the SEC under the Advisers Act owe their clients
fiduciary duties of care and loyalty and suggested that if the
permitted practice for management recommendations under paragraph
(e)(3)(iii)(A) was adopted, then the Department should create a
permitted practice for fiduciaries to rely on such firms. Commenters
also questioned the safeguards offered by a permitted practice that
relies on fiduciary duties that officers and directors owe to a
corporation based on state corporate laws. A commenter stated that such
a standard is lower that the fiduciary standard of care under ERISA.
The commenter further stated that Delaware corporate law authorizes
companies to waive director liability for breaches of the duty of care,
and that corporate conflicts of interest with the company may also be
waived upon approval of non-interested directors. Another commenter
criticized reliance on fiduciary duties under state corporate law by
noting that the law imposes these duties because management's interests
can and do differ from those of the company's shareholders, and state
corporate law requires shareholder votes precisely because managers'
fiduciary duties alone are not adequate to align management's and
shareholders' interests.
The Department notes that some of the commenters may have misread
paragraph (e)(3)(iii)(A) as establishing unconditional blanket reliance
on management recommendations. The proposal expressly limited reliance
on management recommendations to proposals or types of proposals that
the fiduciary had prudently determined would be unlikely to have a
significant impact on the value of the plan's investment. Nonetheless,
based on concerns expressed by commenters, and on the Department's
separate decision to remove the requirement not to vote in certain
situations, the Department decided to not adopt this permitted practice
in the final rule's safe harbor provisions.
Commenters also provided several suggestions for additional
permitted practices, none of which the Department has adopted. Several
recommended a policy based on a determination that voting would not
result in material additional costs to the plan. There is no need to
include this permitted practice (or safe harbor) because the final rule
does not have an express prohibition on voting based on the balance of
economic effect and costs. Other commenters suggested permitted
practices for following prudently designed and applied proxy voting
guidelines. The Department does not believe it is necessary or
appropriate to include such a safe harbor. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) already
states that fiduciaries may adopt proxy voting policies providing that
the authority to vote a proxy shall be exercised pursuant to specific
parameters prudently designed to serve the plan's economic interest.
Another commenter suggested that if the rule retains a permitted
practice that permits a fiduciary to follow management recommendations,
then the Department should add a permitted practice that permits
following recommendations of the proxy advisory firm if the adviser
owes a fiduciary duty to its clients. The Department has not retained
the permitted practice regarding following management recommendations
and believes that proxy advisory firms are adequately addressed in
other provisions of the final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the final rule relates to the review of
proxy voting policies adopted under paragraph (e)(3)(i). The
corresponding provision at paragraph (e)(3)(iv) of the proposal,
applicable to the proposal's permitted practices, required plan
fiduciaries to review any proxy voting policies adopted pursuant to
paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the proposal at least once every two years.
The Department explained that the proposed requirement was appropriate
to ensure a plan's proxy voting policies remain prudent given ongoing
changes in financial markets and the investment world, but solicited
comments on whether some other maximum interval for review would be
appropriate.
Commenters suggested that a two-year requirement would be
unnecessary and recommended removal. Commenters
[[Page 81674]]
expressed the view that review of permitted practices should be based
on facts and circumstances and left to the fiduciary to decide. A
commenter also expressed concern that a specific review requirement in
the rule could create potential liability for fiduciaries in their
ongoing monitoring of other plan policies, such as investment policy
statements, fiduciary charters, plan expenses and other policies, or in
connection with the frequency of requests for proposals.
After considering comments, the Department has decided to remove
the specific two-year requirement and provide a general requirement for
periodic review of policies. The Department understands that general
industry practice is to review investment policy statements
approximately every two years and expects that fiduciaries will review
proxy voting policies with roughly the same frequency. Nevertheless,
the Department is persuaded that it is unnecessary to set an exact
deadline and that doing so could create liability based on a technical
temporal violation of the rule. As a result, paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of
the final rule provides that plan fiduciaries shall periodically review
proxy voting policies adopted pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the
final rule.
Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the final rule relates to the effect of
proxy voting policies adopted under the final rule's safe harbor
provision. It is based on paragraph (e)(3)(v) of the proposal, which
provided that no policies adopted under paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the
proposal would have precluded, or imposed liability for, submitting a
proxy vote when the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon would have an economic impact on the plan after taking
into account the costs involved, or for refraining from voting when the
fiduciary prudently determines that the matter being voted upon would
not have an economic impact on the plan after taking into account the
costs involved.
A commenter indicated that paragraph (e)(3)(v) of the proposal was
not sufficient to provide safe harbor relief for fiduciaries following
permitted practices under the proposal. Another commenter expressed the
view that the provision was not broad enough and should expressly
permit fiduciaries to consider any prudent alternative courses of
action for any particular proxy issue that may otherwise fall within
the description of a permitted practice.
The Department believes that paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the final rule
provides sufficient clarity with respect to the Department's intended
safe harbor treatment of proxy voting policies adopted under paragraph
(e)(3) of the final rule. The Department also believes that the
principles-based approach in the final rule provides sufficient
flexibility for fiduciaries to exercise prudent judgment in making
proxy voting determinations. Changes have been made to paragraph
(e)(3)(iii) of the final rule to reflect this principles-based
approach.
Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the final rule provides that no proxy
voting policies adopted pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section
shall preclude, or impose liability for, submitting a proxy vote when
the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter being voted upon is
expected to have a material effect on the value of the investment or
the investment performance of the plan's portfolio (or investment
performance of assets under management in the case of an investment
manager) after taking into account the costs involved, or refraining
from voting when the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon is not expected to have such a material effect after
taking into account the costs involved. In light of the potentially
large number of individual proxy votes that may need to be considered
on an annual basis, the safe harbor provisions are intended to apply
and operationalize the fiduciary principles described in the final rule
for a particular plan in a cost-efficient manner and provide an
alternative to retaining a proxy advisory firm to provide advice on
each vote. Paragraph (e)(3)(iii) of the final rule shields a fiduciary
from liability to the extent that the fiduciary deviates from policies
adopted pursuant to the safe harbors based on the fiduciary's
conclusion that a different approach in a particular case is in the
economic interests of the plan considering the specific facts and
circumstances.
(iv) Paragraph (e)(4)
Paragraphs (e)(4)(i) and (ii) of the final rule, like the proposal,
reflect longstanding interpretive positions published in the
Department's prior Interpretive Bulletins. Paragraph (e)(4)(i)(A) of
the proposal stated that the responsibility for exercising shareholder
rights lies exclusively with the plan trustee, except to the extent
that either (1) the trustee is subject to the directions of a named
fiduciary pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(1), or (2) the power to
manage, acquire, or dispose of the relevant assets has been delegated
by a named fiduciary to one or more investment managers pursuant to
ERISA section 403(a)(2). Paragraph (e)(4)(i)(B) of the proposal
provided that where the authority to manage plan assets has been
delegated to an investment manager pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(2),
the investment manager has exclusive authority to vote proxies or
exercise other shareholder rights appurtenant to such plan assets,
except to the extent the plan or trust document or investment
management agreement expressly provides that the responsible named
fiduciary has reserved to itself (or to another named fiduciary so
authorized by the plan document) the right to direct a plan trustee
regarding the exercise or management of some or all of such shareholder
rights.
A commenter indicated that paragraph (e)(4)(i) of the proposal was
unclear as to trustee responsibilities with respect to voting directed
by plan participants pursuant to plan provisions. As discussed below, a
new paragraph (e)(5) was added to the final rule to address ``pass-
through'' or ``participant-directed'' voting. Paragraph (e)(4)(i)(A) in
the final rule is unchanged from the proposal, with a correction of a
typographical error. Paragraph (e)(4)(i)(B) in the final rule is
unchanged from the proposal.
Paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal described obligations of an
investment manager of a pooled investment vehicle that holds assets of
more than one employee benefit plan. It stated that an investment
manager of a pooled investment vehicle that holds assets of more than
one employee benefit plan may be subject to an investment policy
statement that conflicts with the policy of another plan. It also
provided that compliance with ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) requires the
investment manager to reconcile, insofar as possible, the conflicting
policies (assuming compliance with each policy would be consistent with
ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D)). In the case of proxy voting, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the investment manager must vote (or
abstain from voting) the relevant proxies to reflect such policies in
proportion to each plan's economic interest in the pooled investment
vehicle. Such an investment manager may, however, develop an investment
policy statement consistent with Title I of ERISA and the Investment
Duties regulation, and require participating plans to accept the
investment manager's investment policy, including any proxy voting
policy, before they are allowed to invest. In such cases, a fiduciary
must assess whether the investment manager's investment policy
[[Page 81675]]
statement and proxy voting policy are consistent with Title I of ERISA
and the Investment Duties regulation before deciding to retain the
investment manager.
Commenters indicated that the proposal's requirement to reconcile
conflicting policies of investing plans and engage in proportionate
voting to reflect conflicting policies would be highly burdensome for
investment managers. A commenter noted that it is sometimes not
possible to instruct a single client's holding within the fund
differently than other clients, as ``split-voting'' is not permitted
practice in certain markets or custodian banks. Commenters also
indicated that paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal did not reflect
current industry standard practice that investment in a plan asset
vehicle is generally conditioned on acceptance of the investment
objectives, guidelines, and policies that apply to the vehicle. Some
commenters recommended deletion of the proposed requirement to
reconcile conflicting policies of ERISA plans. Other commenters
suggested deleting paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the proposal entirely.
Commenters requested that the language in paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of
the proposal addressing a plan's acceptance of an investment manager's
proxy voting policy be modified to clarify that the investment
manager's investment policy statement or proxy voting policy must be
consistent with Title I of ERISA, but are not required to be consistent
with the proposed rule. Commenters indicated that investment managers
would have difficulties performing the plan-specific evaluations
required by the proposal. These issues are discussed more generally
above. A commenter also indicated that even if the rule were to allow
elimination of the plan-specific evaluation, the task to make changes
to an investment manager's policies would still be enormous. According
to the commenter, the trust's proxy voting guidelines would likely
require revision, and once revised, would need to be presented,
explained, and accepted by each participating plan, including non-ERISA
plans not subject to the rule. Similarly another commenter suggested
that the subtle differences between paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the
proposal and the analogous provision in IB 2016-01 might cause an
investment manager, in order to protect all of its clients, to adopt a
revised investment policy statement that it would require participating
plans to accept, and that the process would involve both drafting that
policy and obtaining consent from investing plans.
The Department is not persuaded to remove paragraph (e)(4)(ii) from
the final rule or change the language regarding reconciliation of
conflicting policies of investing plans or proportionate voting.
Similar guidance has been consistently part of the Department's prior
Interpretive Bulletins in this area. As to the requirement that
policies must be consistent with Title I of ERISA and the final rule
and difficulties associated with plan specific evaluations, the
Department believes that changes in paragraph (e)(2)(i) and (ii) of the
final rule should address commenters' concerns. With respect to the
commenter's identification of subtle differences between paragraph
(e)(4)(ii) of the proposal and the relevant portion of IB 2016-01, the
Department acknowledges that the language is not identical.\46\
However, the Department did not intend the language changes to
fundamentally alter that guidance. Like IB 2016-01, paragraph
(e)(4)(ii) recognizes that there may be circumstances under which an
investment manager of a pooled investment vehicle that holds assets of
more than one plan may be subject to conflicting policies of investing
plans, but that the manager may avoid conflicting policies by requiring
investors to accept the investment manager's policies before they are
allowed to invest.\47\ However, paragraph (e)(4)(ii) adds language that
describes the associated obligations of plan fiduciaries in making the
decision to accept the investment manager's policies. Commenters did
not question whether an ERISA fiduciary should assess an investment
manager's investment policy statement for consistency with ERISA prior
to accepting it. To the extent that the commenter's concerns about
differences from the relevant portion of IB 2016-01 relate to the
requirement that the manager's policies must be consistent with the
final rule, the Department believes changes in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of
the final rule, as described above, should address this concern. As a
result, paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of the final rule is being adopted
substantially as proposed.
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\46\ Specifically, IB 2016-01 stated: ``An investment manager of
a pooled investment vehicle that holds assets of more than one
employee benefit plan may be subject to a proxy voting policy of one
plan that conflicts with the proxy voting policy of another plan.
Compliance with ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) would require the
investment manager to reconcile, insofar as possible, the
conflicting policies (assuming compliance with each policy would be
consistent with ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D)) and, if necessary and to
the extent permitted by applicable law, vote the relevant proxies to
reflect such policies in proportion to each plan's interest in the
pooled investment vehicle. If, however, the investment manager
determines that compliance with conflicting voting policies would
violate ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) in a particular instance, for
example, by being imprudent or not solely in the interest of plan
participants, the investment manager would be required to ignore the
voting policy that would violate ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) in that
instance. Such an investment manager may, however, require
participating investors to accept the investment manager's own
investment policy statement, including any statement of proxy voting
policy, before they are allowed to invest. As with investment
policies originating from named fiduciaries, a policy initiated by
an investment manager and adopted by the participating plans would
be regarded as an instrument governing the participating plans, and
the investment manager's compliance with such a policy would be
governed by ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D).''
\47\ See 59 FR 38860, 38863 (July 29, 1994) (``Nothing in ERISA,
however, prevents such an investment manager from maintaining a
single investment policy, including a proxy voting policy, and
requiring all participating investors to give their asse[n]t to such
policy as a condition of investing.'').
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(v) Paragraph (e)(5)
A number of commenters indicated that the proposal did not
specifically address proxy rights passed through to plan participants.
A commenter explained that participants may invest in publicly-traded
companies, as well as mutual funds and other securities, through a
self-directed brokerage window offered by their plans. According to the
commenter, self-directed brokerage windows involve the broker passing
voting rights through to the participants. Further, participant-
directed plans, such as those structured to meet ERISA section 404(c)
and related regulations, sometimes allow participants to invest in
company stock and pass through voting to them. According to the
commenter, many ERISA-covered plans have been drafted to explicitly
provide that plan participants are deemed to be ``named fiduciaries''
when they vote securities held by their plan accounts. Commenters
argued that the structure and provisions of the proposed regulation did
not account for such ``pass-through'' or ``participant-directed''
voting activity, and requested that the Department expressly exclude
such voting activity from the rule or provide clarification as to
application of the proposed rule's requirements in the context of pass-
through of voting rights, including the responsibilities of trustees in
connection with the actual votes of participants and whether
participants when exercising their proxy voting rights would be treated
as fiduciaries under the rule.
The Department agrees that the proposal was not intended to address
[[Page 81676]]
the sort of pass-through voting that the commenters described.
Accordingly, the final rule includes an express provision in new
paragraph (e)(5) stating that the final rule does not apply to voting,
tender, and similar rights with respect to such securities that are
passed through pursuant to the terms of an individual account plan to
participants and beneficiaries with accounts holding such securities.
That should not be read as an indication that plan trustees and other
plan fiduciaries do not have fiduciary obligations with respect to such
practices. Prior Department guidance recognized that in certain
circumstances a trustee may follow the instructions of participants in
an eligible individual account plan that expressly states that a
trustee is subject to the direction of plan participants with respect
to certain decisions regarding the management of their account. In such
a case, under section 403(a)(1) of ERISA, the trustee must follow the
direction of participants if those directions are proper, made in
accordance with plan terms, and not contrary to ERISA.\48\ Plan
trustees and other fiduciaries would continue to have to comply with
ERISA's prudence and loyalty provisions with respect to the pass
through of votes to plan participants and beneficiaries, and can
continue to rely on the Department's prior guidance with respect to
such participant-directed voting, including 29 CFR 2550.404c-1
implementing ERISA section 404(c)(1) to participant-directed pass
through voting.
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\48\ See Letter from Deputy Assistant Secretary Lebowitz to
Thobin Elrod (Feb. 23, 1989); Letter from Assistant Secretary Berg
to Ian Lanoff (Sept. 28, 1995).
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(vi) Paragraphs (g) and (h)
Paragraph (g) provides the applicability dates for the final rule.
Under paragraph (g), the final rule will be applicable thirty days
after the date this final rule is published in the Federal
Register.\49\ One commenter requested clarity with respect to whether
the proposed applicability date applied only to paragraph (e) or to the
entirety of Sec. 2550.404a-1. Paragraphs (g)(1) and (g)(3) of the
final rule state that the applicability date for paragraph (e) is
thirty days after the date this final rule is published in the Federal
Register and shall apply to exercises of shareholder rights after such
date. A number of commenters on the proposal stated that the proposed
30-day effective date period would not accommodate the essential and
lengthy transition processes that would be necessary for plan
fiduciaries to fully comply with the rule.\50\ These commenters
requested extensions up to 12 or 18 months after publication of a final
rule. Alternatively, or in addition to extending the applicability
date, commenters requested that if the Department retains the 30-day
provision, that the final rule include guidance that would permit
affected parties a more reasonable amount of time to comply with the
rule. Commenters proffered a variety of suggestions that would help
plan fiduciaries and others manage this new process, including a
different applicability date, a transition rule, a grandfather rule for
existing voting arrangements, and a temporary non-enforcement policy.
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\49\ One commenter argued that the rule is a ``major rule''
under the Congressional Review Act and thus may not be effective
earlier than 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. As
discussed in the Regulatory Impact Analysis below, the Office of
Management and Budget has determined this rule is not a ``major
rule'' for Congressional Review Act purposes and is therefore not
subject to the delayed 60-day effective date.
\50\ Commenters pointed out that plan sponsors and other
fiduciaries would need to review, amend, and possibly renegotiate
existing contracts with investment managers, proxy advisory firms,
and other service and investment providers. Some commenters also
expressed more specific concerns, for example, that, with respect to
pooled investment vehicles, it may be necessary to obtain approval
of revised investment policy statements from participating plans,
which would be difficult to obtain in only 30 days.
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The Department is not extending the applicability date,
particularly given the benefits this final rule affords to participants
and beneficiaries. Furthermore, the Department believes that the final
rule does not represent so significant a change from existing guidance
that fiduciaries can reasonably claim impossibility in timely
implementing most of its requirements. However, the Department agrees
that for certain portions of the final rule, a later applicability date
will address concerns of some commenters with respect to their ability
to comply with the rule within the 30-day effective period. Paragraph
(g)(3) grants fiduciaries until January 31, 2022, to comply with the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E), (e)(2)(iv), and
(e)(4)(ii) of the final rule. This delay gives fiduciaries additional
time in making any modifications with respect to their use of proxy
advisory firms and other service providers and for reviewing any proxy
voting policies of pooled investment vehicles by investment managers.
However, fiduciaries that are investment advisers registered with the
SEC must comply with the 30-day effective date with respect to
paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E) as such provisions are intended to be
aligned with existing obligations under the Advisers Act, including
Rules 204-2 and 206(4)-6 thereunder and the 2019 SEC Guidance and 2020
SEC Supplemental Guidance.\51\
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\51\ The final rule includes a technical language change in
paragraph (g) to conform paragraph (g) to Federal Register drafting
conventions regarding the use of ``effective date'' versus
``applicability date'' terminology.
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Finally, paragraph (h) of the final rule, as proposed, continues to
provide that should a court of competent jurisdiction hold any
provision of the rule invalid, such action will not affect any other
provision. Including a severability clause describes the Department's
intent that any legal infirmity found with part of the final rule
should not affect any other part of the rule. The exact same paragraph
is included in the final rule on Financial Factors in Selecting Plan
Investments.
4. Interpretive Bulletin 2016-01 (IB 2016-01) and Field Assistance
Bulletin 2018-01 (FAB 2018-01)
The final rule also withdraws IB 2016-01 and removes it from the
Code of Federal Regulations. Accordingly, as of publication of the
final rule, IB 2016-01 may no longer be relied upon as reflecting the
Department's interpretation of the application of ERISA's fiduciary
responsibility provisions to the exercise of shareholder rights and
written statements of investment policy, including proxy voting
policies or guidelines.
FAB 2018-01 concerned both ``ESG Investment Considerations'' and
``Shareholder Engagement Activities.'' The portion of FAB 2018-01 under
the heading of ``ESG Investment Considerations'' was superseded by the
Department's final rule on ``Financial Factors in Selecting Plan
Investments.'' \52\ Similarly, the portion of FAB 2018-01 under the
heading ``Shareholder Engagement Activities'' will be superseded by
this final rule and this accompanying preamble. Since that discussion
is the sole remaining substantive portion of FAB 2018-01, as of the
effective date of the final rule, FAB 2018-01 will no longer be
considered current guidance issued by the Department.
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\52\ 85 FR at 72872.
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C. Miscellaneous Issues
Constitutional Issues
A number of commenters raised concerns that the proposal, or
specific provisions of the proposal, may be inconsistent with certain
rights afforded shareholders by the First and Fifth Amendments in the
Constitution's Bill of Rights. The Department disagrees
[[Page 81677]]
with these constitutional arguments and, further, believes that the
lack of merit of those arguments is even more pronounced in light of
modifications to the proposed rule adopted in the final rule. Rather,
the final rule is designed to help these ERISA fiduciaries meet
statutory standards, in particular the requirement that ERISA
fiduciaries must carry out their duties relating to the exercise of
shareholder rights prudently and solely for the economic benefit of
plan participants and beneficiaries. The Department's view of the scope
of factors to be considered by an ERISA fiduciary when managing plans
assets was articulated as recently as 2014 by the Supreme Court in
Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer, 573 U.S. 409, 421 (2014) (the
``benefits'' to be pursued by ERISA fiduciaries as their ``exclusive
purpose'' do not include ``nonpecuniary benefits'').
First Amendment Free Speech and Exercise of Religion
Some commenters asserted that the proposal may violate the First
Amendment's protection of free speech. The decision to vote shares or
engage in shareholder activism is, they argued, a form of speech, and
they claimed that the Department established strict conditions and
costly burdens on the established mechanism by which shareholders (and
therefore their representatives) are able to communicate their
interests and provide for companies to take (or refrain from taking)
certain actions. They also argued that the proposal was targeted at
preventing support of ESG-related initiatives and, by increasing the
costs associated with determining whether it is acceptable to vote,
would force fiduciaries to use a permitted practice either to not
support those initiatives or to vote with corporate management; thus,
the commenters concluded that the proposal was both a content- and
viewpoint-based restriction. The proposal, according to these
commenters, could mandate that assets are managed in a manner that is
inconsistent with the values and interests of ERISA investors.
Similarly, a few commenters claimed that the proposal also may violate
the First Amendment's protections for freedom of religion, because it
would curtail the rights of religious organizations to vote in
accordance with their beliefs.
The First Amendment bars the government from abridging freedom of
speech or the right to assemble peaceably and from prohibiting the free
exercise of religion.\53\ The right of free speech protects the open
expression of ideas without fear of government reprisal. Some
commenters stated that the right to vote a proxy consistent with the
participants' and beneficiaries' values is protected speech, and argued
that the proposed rule's requirements would unconstitutionally limit
this right.
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\53\ U.S. Const., amend. I.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These commenters relied predominantly on the premise that the
proposal effectively would force fiduciaries either to not vote or to
vote with management. As one commenter argued, the proposal would
``impose unique and burdensome restrictions on shareholder activities
that may be contrary to the interests of a favored group, while
removing those restrictions when the expressive activity favors the
preferred group.'' However, the Department in this final rule has
removed the provisions that these commenters argued would create a fait
accompli, allegedly stifling fiduciaries' speech-through-proxy-vote.
Because of those changes, these arguments are moot.
To the extent commenters would still argue that the final rule
might run afoul of the Free Speech Clause, this argument is overbroad
and inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent. ERISA requires
fiduciaries to manage plan assets for the ``exclusive purpose'' of
providing benefits and defraying expenses. Even if voting by a
shareholder speaking for herself could be speech, as some commenters
argued, proxy voting by a plan, which holds its shares in trust for its
participants and beneficiaries, should appropriately and correctly be
considered conduct. Consistent with Dudenhoeffer, fiduciary plan asset
management activity must focus exclusively on providing ``benefits.''
That term refers to financial benefits (such as retirement income), and
not to non-pecuniary goals. The final rule's provisions require that
any proxy decision serves those financial benefits of participants and
beneficiaries, a duty derived directly from the ERISA statute.
To the extent proxy voting by a plan is speech, ERISA's
requirements and the final rule's standards of diligence and
consideration of cost plainly satisfy the independent scrutiny that is
required for regulations of commercial speech.\54\ Moreover, the final
rule is content- and viewpoint-neutral. The final rule does not require
fiduciaries to say (or refrain from saying) anything in particular or
take (or refrain from taking) any particular position, nor does it
require fiduciaries to take action only on certain topics. The final
rule instead requires that fiduciaries exercise authority over their
proxies with the same loyalty and prudence applicable to all other
aspects of their management of plan assets. And any restriction to
express beliefs imposed by the rule still leaves open ample alternative
channels to freely express those same beliefs.\55\
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\54\ See Cent. Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Pub. Serv. Comm'n of
New York, 447 U.S. 557, 564 (1980). Commenters generally argued that
Central Hudson's commercial speech test would apply.
\55\ Clark v. Community for Creative NonViolence, 468 U.S. 288,
293 (1984).
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The Department also does not agree that the final rule violates the
First Amendment's Free Exercise clause. The final rule is a neutral
rule of general applicability and does not target any religious
view.\56\ The final rule's provisions aim solely to ensure that
fiduciaries base proxy decisions of any kind exclusively on the
financial benefits of participants and beneficiaries, as required by
ERISA.\57\ The impact on religion, if any, would be incidental and not
violate the First Amendment.\58\ Moreover, pursuant to ERISA section
4(b)(2), church plans, as defined in ERISA section 3(33), are not
subject to ERISA and this regulation.\59\
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\56\ Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah, 508
U.S. 520, 531 (1993) (``In addressing the constitutional protection
for free exercise of religion, our cases establish the general
proposition that [a law that is neutral and of general applicability
need not be justified by a compelling governmental interest even if
the law has the incidental effect of burdening a particular
religious practice.], Employment Div., Dept. of Human Resources of
Ore. v. Smith, 495 U.S. 872 (1990)'').
\57\ Fraternal Order of Police of Newark v. City of Newark, 170
F.3d 359, 360 (3d Cir. 1999) (``Because the Department makes
exemptions from its policy for secular reasons and has not offered
any substantial justification for refusing to provide similar
treatment for officers who are required to wear beards for religious
reasons, we conclude that the Department's policy violates the First
Amendment'').
\58\ See Fraternal Order of Police of Newark, 170 F.3d at 360;
Smith, 495 U.S. at 878-79.
\59\ See 29 U.S.C. 1002(33).
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Fifth Amendment Takings
A few commenters raised a different Constitutional concern--that
the proposal may violate the Fifth Amendment's ``takings'' clause.
Characterizing the right to vote a proxy as a plan asset, these
commenters argue that the proposed rule would require ERISA plans to
use their votes in a specific way, or relinquish them. The proposed
rule's requirements, the commenters posited, are so burdensome as to
prevent fiduciaries from fully exercising their voting rights.
The Department disagrees that the provisions of the final rule
violate the Takings Clause. The Fifth Amendment prohibits the
government from taking
[[Page 81678]]
private property for public use without just compensation.\60\ A
``regulatory taking'' is one in which a government regulation is ``so
onerous that its effect is tantamount to a direct appropriation or
ouster.'' \61\ The Government action must (1) affect a property
interest and (2) go ``too far'' in so doing (i.e., amount to a
deprivation of all or most economic use or a permanent physical
invasion of property).\62\ How far is too far depends upon several
factors, including ``the character of the governmental action, its
economic impact, and its interference with reasonable investment-backed
expectations.'' \63\
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\60\ U.S. Const. amend. V.
\61\ Lingle v. Chevron U.S.A. Inc., 544 U.S. 528, 537 (2005).
\62\ Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.S. 986, 1000-01, 1005
(1984).
\63\ Id. at 1005 (quoting PruneYard Shopping Ctr. v. Robins, 447
U.S. 74, 832 (1980)).
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At the outset, the Takings Clause applies only when ``property'' is
``taken.'' The Department has stated that the act of voting proxy
shares is a fiduciary act of managing plan assets.\64\ The Department
is not aware of any judicial authority that has addressed whether a
shareholder right appurtenant to a share of stock, as opposed to the
share of stock itself, is ``property'' for purposes of the Takings
Clause and whether the ``taking'' analysis would involve an evaluation
of the regulation's impact on the overall value of the stock.
Nonetheless, even if the right to vote a proxy itself constitutes a
constitutionally-protected property interest, neither the proposal nor
this final rule ``takes'' that right or the underlying shares. Instead,
the rule fully preserves the right to vote proxies in the economic
interests of the plan. It is designed to protect, not diminish,
participants' and beneficiaries' interests in their retirement benefits
and the plan's economic interests by ensuring proxy votes do not
subordinate those interests to non-pecuniary factors. The fiduciary
maintains discretion to vote or not vote consistent with these
interests. Given the Department's longstanding position that the plan's
pecuniary interests guide the exercise of shareholder rights, there is
no reasonable expectation that plans can make proxy voting decisions
based on anything but plans' pecuniary interests.\65\ Further, both
plans and securities are already subject to extensive regulation under
state and federal law.\66\ Finally, the rule does not ``take'' property
for public use, such as for public safety or historical preservation,
but instead places parameters around proxy voting conduct that would
fall outside of the prudence and loyalty duties found in the ERISA
statute itself.
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\64\ Avon Letter, supra note 6.
\65\ Penn Central Transp. Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104,
127 (1978) (finding historical preservation law not a taking in part
because it permitted owner to obtain a reasonable return on its
investment.).
\66\ See, e.g., Ruckelshaus, 467 U.S. at 1007 (1984) (noting
that expectations are necessarily adjusted in areas that ``ha[ve]
long been the source of public concern and the subject of government
regulation''); Franklin Mem'l Hosp. v. Harvey, 575 F.3d 121, 128
(1st Cir. 2009) (holding that a claimant's investment-backed
expectations were ``tempered by the fact that it operate[d] in the
highly regulated hospital industry'').
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Administrative Procedure Act
A few commenters suggested that the Department's proposal was
arbitrary and capricious and, more specifically, failed to comply with
the Administrative Procedure Act. Also, although not necessarily framed
in terms of the Department's compliance with the Administrative
Procedure Act, a number of commenters asserted that the Department
lacked sufficient evidentiary support for proposing the rule. For
example, commenters pointed out that the Department suggested an
increase in shareholder proposals as justification for the rule, which
they argued is not relevant to whether fiduciaries are confused about
their fiduciary obligations with respect to proxy voting, and that the
Department did not cite to any enforcement action or other evidence
that ERISA plan participants have been harmed or that ERISA plan
fiduciaries are actually confused about their responsibilities. Other
commenters disagreed and believed that the Department established
sufficient evidence to support its proposal--for example, evidence that
politically charged shareholder proposals result in the incursion of
sometimes significant costs but do not demonstrably enhance shareholder
value--and that the Department, therefore, is correct to limit voting
on such proposals. Commenters supporting the rule also discussed
evidence that proxy advisory firms, which exert massive amounts of
influence over public companies, have well-documented deficiencies,
including conflicts of interest, errors, and a lack of transparency.
Some commenters also argued that the proposal was a significant
departure from prior Departmental guidance on shareholder rights
without sufficiently establishing the existence of a problem to be
solved, or otherwise providing a reason why the rule otherwise is
necessary. Commenters also argued that no further clarification of the
existing Interpretive Bulletin and Field Assistance Bulletin regarding
fiduciaries' ERISA obligations with respect to proxy voting is
necessary.
With respect to the arguments of commenters concerning the
Administrative Procedure Act, the Department believes that there are
sufficient reasons to justify the promulgation of this final rule,
including the lack of precision and consistency in the marketplace with
respect to ERISA fiduciary obligations with respect to exercises of
shareholder rights, shortcomings in the rigor of the prudence and
loyalty analysis by some fiduciaries and other market participants, and
perceived variation in some aspects of the Department's past guidance.
Further, the iterative Interpretive Bulletins since 1994, followed by
the Field Assistance Bulletin issued in 2018, and the number of
advisory opinions and information letters historically issued on this
topic demonstrate the need for notice and comment guidance issued under
the Administrative Procedure Act.\67\ The Department does not believe
that there needs to be specific evidence of fiduciary misbehavior or
demonstrated injury to plans and plan participants in order to issue a
regulation addressing the application of ERISA's fiduciary duties to
the exercise of shareholder rights, including proxy voting, the use of
written proxy voting policies and guidelines, and the selection and
monitoring of proxy advisory firms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\67\ See Executive Order 13891, 84 FR 55235 (Oct. 15, 2019),
promoting notice-and-comment rulemaking for guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The need for this regulation was also demonstrated by the
disagreements among commenters on fundamental aspects of the proposal,
which itself confirmed that a lack of clarity in fact exists and that
ERISA fiduciaries and other market stakeholders would benefit from the
Department's guidance in this final rule, as well as the confusion
regarding the scope of fiduciaries' duties with respect to proxy voting
and shareholder rights evidenced by the number of statements by
stakeholders and others expressing a belief that fiduciaries are
required by ERISA to always vote proxies. Moreover, under the
Department's authority to administer ERISA, the Department may
promulgate rules that are preemptive in nature and is not required to
wait for widespread harm to occur. The Department can take steps to
ensure that plans and plan participants and beneficiaries are protected
prospectively and has the ability to issue regulations
[[Page 81679]]
to ensure that fiduciaries follow their statutory duties and mitigate
the possibility of future violations.
The Department also believes that proceeding through notice-and-
comment rulemaking rather than promulgating further interpretive
guidance has other benefits, including the benefit of public input and
the greater stability of codified rules. Proceeding in this manner is
also consistent with the principles of Executive Order 13891 and the
Department's recently issued PRO Good Guidance rule, which emphasize
the importance of public participation, fair notice, and compliance
with the Administrative Procedure Act.
Tension With State Corporate Law
Some commenters argued that the proposal, if finalized, would
undermine state corporate laws, which reflect the inherent value of
shareholder voting, threaten good corporate governance, and impede
shareholders' voting rights. The Department is, according to these
commenters, overstepping its authority and substituting its opinion for
that of shareholders, the owners of corporations, as to what is
important for corporate management and business affairs. Shareholders'
exercise of voting rights is a critical ``check'' on the principal-
agent conflict that arises from the separation of ownership and
management in modern corporate law. Other commenters asserted that, in
addition to potentially conflicting with corporate law, the
Department's rule may conflict with corporations' and institutional
investors' existing policies for shareholder voting, policies that have
evolved over time, in response to real economic and financial
developments, to enhance the efficiency and efficacy of the shareholder
voting process.
The Department disagrees with commenters that this rulemaking
creates any real conflict with state corporate laws. Although the rule
will affect ERISA plan fiduciaries as to whether and how they exercise
certain shareholder rights, the rule will not impact such rights
themselves. Commenters failed to provide specific examples
demonstrating any material conflict or compliance issue concerning
these state laws.
Coordination With Other Federal Laws and Policies
Some commenters expressed their concern that the rule, if
finalized, could negatively impact the U.S. securities markets to the
extent the rule interferes with other federal agencies' objectives--for
example, by making it more difficult for the SEC to perform its mission
of protecting securities markets and investors. According to
commenters, in efficient markets shareholders are assumed to exercise
their voting rights to ensure that investments are managed in their
best interests, and the proposed rule would frustrate evolving market
efficiencies concerning when and how shareholders vote proxies.
Commenters also alleged that potential conflicts could arise for
financial market stakeholders who are subject to the laws of other
federal agencies, including the SEC, the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The Department believes that the changes made to the final rule
mitigate any concerns with respect to potential conflicts with other
regulatory regimes. For example, the final rule is intended to align
with comparable SEC requirements imposed on investment advisers with
respect to recordkeeping.\68\ Both the proposed and final rules were
sent to the SEC and other federal agencies as part of the inter-agency
review conducted by the Office of Management and Budget pursuant to
Executive Order 12866. Also, the final rule, as described above, adopts
a principles-based approach that is fundamentally consistent with the
Department's published interpretive guidance in this area beginning in
1994. Accordingly, the Department does not agree that the final rule
will make it more difficult for the SEC or any other federal agency to
perform their missions or that the final rule will have any negative
impact on the U.S. securities markets. Rather, many public comments
welcomed the final rule as appropriately describing the prudence and
loyalty obligations of ERISA fiduciaries in connection with the
exercise of shareholder rights.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\68\ In pursuing its consultations with other regulators, the
Department aimed to avoid conflict with other federal laws and
minimize duplicative provisions between ERISA and federal securities
laws. However, the governing statutes do not permit the Department
to make obligations under ERISA identical in all respects to duties
under federal securities laws.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistency With International Practices and Regulatory Trends
A few commenters also raised concerns about how the proposal, if
finalized, would impact international investment. For example, one
commenter, a financial services provider, claimed that the rule's
mandate that proxy voting be based solely on an ERISA plan's economic
interests is inconsistent with the provider's clients' expectations,
and also with investment stewardship standards outside of the United
States. The commenter claimed that asset managers in the European Union
and other developed nations are increasingly subject to standards
exactly opposite to those proposed by the Department, which incorporate
(and sometimes require) consideration of ESG factors. Further, some
international securities issuers require that investors vote proxies,
and commenters queried what a plan fiduciary should do in such cases.
This final rule reflects ERISA's requirements. Fiduciaries of
ERISA-covered pension and other benefit plans are statutorily bound to
manage those plans, including shareholder rights appurtenant to shares
of stock, with a singular goal of maximizing the funds available to pay
benefits under the plan. The duties of prudence and loyalty under ERISA
may not be the same investment standards the commenters referenced
under which international regulation of proxy voting and other
exercises of shareholder rights is taking place. Accordingly,
international trends or the actions of regulators in other countries
are not an appropriate gauge for evaluating ERISA's requirements as
they apply to fiduciary management of investments, including the topics
covered by this final rule relating to the exercise of shareholder
rights, including proxy voting, the use of written proxy voting
policies and guidelines, and the selection and monitoring of proxy
advisory firms. Moreover, to the extent foreign legal and financial
standards condone sacrificing returns to consider non-pecuniary
objectives, they are inconsistent with the fiduciary obligations
imposed by ERISA.
As to commenters' assertion that some international securities
issuers require that investors vote proxies, as discussed above, the
final rule does not carry forward the provision from the proposal
stating that a plan fiduciary must not vote any proxy unless the
fiduciary prudently determines that the matter being voted upon would
have an economic impact on the plan after considering those factors
described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule, taking into
account the costs involved (including the cost of research, if
necessary, to determine how to vote). The Department also believes that
such a voting requirement by an issuer of securities held by a plan
would be a relevant consideration for the plan fiduciary when applying
the more principles-based approach adopted in the final rule when
deciding whether to vote. However, the Department has previously noted
that in deciding
[[Page 81680]]
whether to purchase shares that may involve out-of-the-ordinary costs
or unusual requirements--specifically referencing as an example voting
proxies on shares of certain foreign corporations--the responsible
fiduciary should consider whether the difficulty and expense of voting
the shares is reflected in the market price.\69\ Similarly, in the
Department's view, in deciding whether to purchase or retain shares, a
fiduciary would have to consider proxy voting requirements of an issuer
that conflict with the fiduciary's duties of prudence and loyalty under
ERISA or that interfere with the fiduciary's ability to comply with
those duties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ See, e.g., 29 CFR 2509.2016-01 (last paragraph in the
section entitled ``Proxy Voting'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Regulatory Impact Analysis
This section analyzes the regulatory impact of the Department's
final regulation amendments to the ``Investment Duties'' regulation in
29 CFR 2550.404a-1 addressing the application of the prudence and
exclusive purpose responsibilities under ERISA with respect to the
exercise of shareholder rights, including proxy voting, the use of
written proxy voting policies and guidelines, and the selection and
monitoring of proxy advisory firms. As stated earlier in this preamble,
in connection with proxy voting, the Department's longstanding position
articulated in sub-regulatory guidance that was first issued in the
1980s is that the fiduciary act of managing plan assets includes the
management of voting rights (as well as other shareholder rights)
appurtenant to shares of stock. In carrying out these duties, ERISA
mandates that fiduciaries act ``prudently'' as well as ``solely in the
interest'' and ``for the exclusive purpose'' of providing benefits to
participants and their beneficiaries.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\70\ ERISA section 404(a)(1). See also ERISA section 403(c)(1)
(``[T]he assets of a plan shall never inure to the benefit of any
employer and shall be held for the exclusive purposes of providing
benefits to participants in the plan and their beneficiaries'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This regulatory project was initiated because the Department
believes there is a persistent misunderstanding among some fiduciaries
and other stakeholders with respect to ERISA's requirements regarding
proxy voting and the exercise of shareholder rights. This
misunderstanding may be due in part to varied statements the Department
has made on the consideration of non-pecuniary or non-financial factors
in sub-regulatory guidance about those activities. This final rule
provides certainty to plan administrators and benefits ERISA plan
participants by eliminating the misunderstanding that exists among some
stakeholders that ERISA fiduciaries are required to vote all proxies
rather than only proxies determined to have a net positive economic
impact on the plan. The final rule also supplements the Department's
sub-regulatory guidance by specifying actions fiduciaries can take to
ensure they are meeting their long-standing obligation under ERISA to
act prudently, solely in the interests of participants and
beneficiaries, and for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits and
defraying reasonable plan expenses.
While the Department expects that this final rule will benefit
plans and participants overall, it also will impose some compliance
costs to the extent that fiduciaries do not currently meet specific
requirements found in the final rule. However, as discussed in the cost
section below, the Department has made significant modifications to the
proposal in the final rule by taking a less prescriptive, principles-
based approach to the subject matter that focuses on whether a
fiduciary has a prudent process for voting and other exercises of
shareholder rights. These changes will significantly reduce the
potential compliance costs for fiduciaries.
The benefits, costs, and transfer impacts associated with the final
rule depend on the number of plan fiduciaries that are currently not
following or misinterpreting the Department's existing sub-regulatory
guidance. While the Department does not have sufficient data to
estimate the number of such fiduciaries, the Department expects the
number is small because the Department believes that most fiduciaries
largely comply with the Department's existing sub-regulatory guidance
in this area, which is consistent with the principles-based
requirements of the final rule. The Department expects that the
benefits of the rule will be appreciable for participants and
beneficiaries covered by plans with noncompliant investment
fiduciaries. If the Department's assumption regarding the number of
noncompliant fiduciaries is understated, the proposed rule's benefits,
costs, and transfer impacts will be proportionately higher; however,
even in this instance, the Department believes that the final rule's
benefits still justify its costs.
1. Relevant Executive Orders
The Department has examined the effects of this rule as required by
Executive Order 12866,\71\ Executive Order 13563,\72\ Executive Order
13771,\73\ the Congressional Review Act,\74\ the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995,\75\ the Regulatory Flexibility Act,\76\ Section 202 of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995,\77\ and Executive Order
13132.\78\
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\71\ Regulatory Planning and Review, 58 FR 51735 (Oct. 4, 1993).
\72\ Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review, 76 FR 3821
(Jan. 18, 2011).
\73\ Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs, 82 FR
9339 (Jan. 30, 2017).
\74\ 5 U.S.C. 804(2) (1996).
\75\ 44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A) (1995).
\76\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (1980).
\77\ 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. (1995).
\78\ Federalism, 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct agencies to assess the
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 rules, and of promoting
flexibility.
Under Executive Order 12866, ``significant'' regulatory actions are
subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Section
3(f) of the Executive order 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 in any one year, 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''); (2) creating a 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.
OMB has determined that this rule is not economically significant
within the meaning of section 3(f)(1) of the Executive Order 12866, but
that it is significant within the meaning of section 3(f)(4) of the
Executive order. Therefore, the Department provides an assessment of
the potential costs, benefits, and transfers associated with
[[Page 81681]]
this final rule below. OMB has reviewed the final rule pursuant to the
Executive order. Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, OMB has
determined that this final rule is not a ``major rule,'' as defined by
5 U.S.C. 804(2).
1. Introduction
ERISA plan assets comprise a substantial stake of the shares of
public companies. In 2018, pension plan assets contained stock holdings
of $1.7 trillion; such holdings made up 27 percent of large defined
benefit plan assets and 25 percent of large defined contribution plan
assets.\79\ However, ERISA pension holdings represent a decreasing
share of all corporate equity. ERISA defined benefit and defined
contribution plans held just 5.5 percent of total corporate equity in
2019, down from a high of 22 percent in 1985.\80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ Department estimates are based on Form 5500 annual reports
filed by plans with 100 or more participants. These estimates
include only stocks held directly or through Direct Filing Entities,
not through mutual funds.
\80\ Department calculations are based on U.S. Federal Reserve
statistics. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
Financial Accounts of the United States--Z.1 (Sept. 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to its annual meeting, a publicly traded company sets a
record date and sends out a list of proposals on which shareholders
will vote. A shareholder must hold shares as of the record date in
order to vote at a shareholder meeting. There are two types of
proposals: Management proposals and shareholder proposals. Management
proposals--including director elections, audit firm ratification
proposals, and proposals regarding the company's executive compensation
program (also known as ``say-on-pay'' proposals)--account for 98
percent of proposals and are largely mandated by law or exchange
listing requirements. From 2011 to 2017, shareholder proposals
accounted for about two percent of proposals but often were more
controversial and thus received more attention than management
proposals.\81\ Shareholder votes on some proposals, such as director
elections, are binding. Votes on many other proposals, including
shareholder proposals and say-on-pay proposals, are not binding and
serve only as shareholder recommendations for the company's board.\82\
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\81\ Morris Mitler, Dorothy Donohue & Sean Collins, Proxy Voting
by Registered Investment Companies, 2017, Investment Company
Institute Research Perspective (July 2019), at 4 (hereinafter ``ICI
Proxy Voting Report'').
\82\ Id., at 6; see also 15 U.S.C. 78n-1.
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1.1. Need for Regulation
As discussed above in section A, Background and Purpose of
Regulatory Action, the Department believes that this final rule is
necessary to provide clarity and certainty regarding the application of
fiduciary obligations of loyalty and prudence with respect to exercises
of shareholder rights, including proxy voting. Despite past efforts to
make clear fiduciary obligations in this regard, the Department is
concerned that its existing sub-regulatory guidance may have
inadvertently created the perception that fiduciaries must vote proxies
on every shareholder proposal to fulfill their obligations under ERISA.
This belief may have caused some fiduciaries to pursue proxy proposals
that have no connection to increasing the value of investments used to
pay benefits or defray reasonable plan administrative expenses.
For example, some fiduciaries may feel obligated to vote proxies
for non-pecuniary proposals related to environmental, social, or public
policy agendas. The situation is concerning due to the recent increase
in the number of environmental and social shareholder proposals
introduced. From 2011 through 2017, shareholders submitted 462
environmental proposals and 841 social shareholder proposals, and
resubmitted at least once 41 percent of environmental and 51 percent of
social proposals.\83\ These proposals increasingly call for disclosure,
risk assessment, and oversight, rather than for specific policies or
actions, such as phasing out products or activities.\84\ The Department
believes it is likely that many of these proposals have little bearing
on share value or other relation to plan financial interests.\85\ The
Department also has reason to believe that responsible fiduciaries may
sometimes rely on third-party proxy voting advice without taking
sufficient steps to ensure that the advice is impartial and rigorous.
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\83\ Procedural Requirements and Resubmission Thresholds under
Exchange Act Rule 14a-8, 84 FR 66458, 66491 (Dec. 4, 2019).
\84\ See 2019 ISS Proxy Voting Trends, supra note 20.
\85\ See John G. Matsusaka, Oguzhan Ozbas, & Irene Yi, Can
Shareholder Proposals Hurt Shareholders? Evidence from SEC No-Action
Letter Decisions, U.S.C. CLASS Research Paper No. CLASS17-4 (2019),
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2881408, at 25;
Joseph P. Kalt, L. Adel Turki, Kenneth W. Grant, Todd D. Kendall &
David Molin, Political, Social, and Environmental Shareholder
Resolutions: Do They Create or Destroy Shareholder Value?, National
Association of Manufacturers (June 2018), www.shopfloor.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/nam_shareholder_resolutions_survey.pdf.
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The Department's objective in issuing this final rule is to ensure
that plan fiduciaries act solely in accordance with the economic
interest of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries and
consider only pecuniary factors when deciding whether to vote proxies
or exercise shareholder rights. The Department believes that addressing
these issues in the final rule will help safeguard the interests of
participants and beneficiaries in their plan benefits.
1.2. Affected Entities
This final rule would affect ERISA-covered pension, health, and
other welfare plans that hold shares of corporate stock. It would
affect plans with respect to stocks they hold directly, as well as with
respect to stocks they hold through ERISA-covered intermediaries, such
as common trusts, master trusts, pooled separate accounts, and 103-12
investment entities. The final rule would not affect plans with respect
to stock held through registered investment companies, because the
final rule does not apply to such funds' internal management of such
underlying investments. The final rule also does not apply to voting,
tender, and similar rights with respect to securities that are passed
through pursuant to the terms of an individual account plan to
participants and beneficiaries with accounts holding such securities.
ERISA-covered plans with 100 or more participants (large plans)
annually report data on their stock holdings on Form 5500 Schedule H
(see Table 1). Approximately 27,000 defined contribution plans and
5,000 defined benefit plans, with approximately 84 million
participants, either hold common stocks or are an Employee Stock
Ownership Plan (ESOP). Additionally, 573 health and other welfare plans
file the schedule H and report holding common stocks either directly or
indirectly. In total, large pension plans and welfare plans hold
approximately $1.7 trillion in stock value. Common stocks constitute
about 25 percent of total assets of those pension plans that are not
ESOPs and hold common stock. Out of the 25,400 pension plans that hold
common stock and are not ESOPs, about 20,000 plans hold common stock
through an ERISA-covered intermediary and approximately 3,500 plans
hold common stock directly. A smaller number of plans hold stock both
directly and indirectly.\86\ In total, there are approximately 32,000
plans holding either common stock or employer stock, comprised of large
plans, welfare plans, and ESOPs. In addition to the large pension
plans, approximately 629,000
[[Page 81682]]
small pension plans hold assets and some may invest in stock.\87\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ DOL estimates from the 2018 Form 5500 Pension Research
Files.
\87\ The Form 5500 does not require these plans to categorize
the assets as common stock, so the Department does not know if they
hold stock.
Table 1--Number of Pension and Welfare Plans Holding Common Stocks or ESOP by Type of Plan, 2018 a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Common Stock (no employer Defined Defined Total pension Total all
securities) benefit contribution plans Welfare plans plans
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Direct Holdings Only............ 1,272 2,286 3,558 569 4,127
Indirect Holdings Only.......... 2,792 17,591 20,383 3 20,386
Both Direct and Indirect........ 941 586 1,527 1 1,528
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................... 5,005 20,463 25,468 573 26,041
ESOP (No Common Stock).......... .............. 5,809 5,809 .............. 5,809
Common Stock and ESOP........... .............. 591 591 .............. 591
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Total All Plans Holding 5,005 26,863 31,868 573 32,441
Stocks.....................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ DOL calculations from the 2018 Form 5500 Pension Research Files.
While this final rule would directly affect ERISA-covered plans
that possess the relevant shareholder rights, the activities covered
under the final rule would be carried out by responsible fiduciaries on
plans' behalf. Many plans hire asset managers to carry out fiduciary
asset management functions, including proxy voting. In 2018, large
ERISA plans reportedly used approximately 17,800 different service
providers, some of whom provide services related to the exercise of
plans' shareholder rights. Such service providers include trustees,
trust companies, banks, investment advisers, and investment
managers.\88\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ DOL estimates are derived from the 2018 Form 5500 Schedule
C.
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In addition, this final rule will indirectly affect proxy advisory
firms.\89\ Currently, this market is dominated by two firms:
Institutional Shareholder Services, Inc. (ISS) and Glass, Lewis & Co.,
LLC (Glass Lewis). It has been estimated that in 2013, the combined
market share of these two firms was 97 percent (61 percent for ISS and
36 percent for Glass Lewis).\90\ Each year, ISS covers approximately
44,000 shareholder meetings and executes 10.2 million ballots on behalf
of clients holding 4.2 trillion shares. Glass Lewis covers about 20,000
shareholder meetings annually and provides services to more than 1,300
clients that collectively manage more than $35 trillion in assets.\91\
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\89\ One commenter pointed out that in a proprietary survey of
the largest pension funds and defined contribution plans,
approximately 92 percent of the respondents indicated that they have
formally delegated proxy voting responsibilities to another named
fiduciary (e.g., an Investment Manager), and approximately 42
percent of respondents engage a proxy advisory firm (directly or
indirectly) to help with voting some or all proxies.
\90\ Glassman, James K., and J.W. Verret, ``How to Fix our
Broken Proxy Advisory System.'' Arlington, VA: Mercatus Center
(2013).
\91\ Exemptions from the Proxy Rules for Proxy Voting Advice, 85
FR 55082 (Sept. 3, 2020) (2020 SEC Proxy Voting Advice Amendments).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ERISA plans' demand for proxy advice might decline if fiduciaries
refrain from voting shares under the provisions of this final rule or
under proxy voting policies adopted pursuant to the safe harbors
provided in paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B). Plan fiduciaries may want
customized recommendations about which particular proxy proposals would
have a material effect on the investment performance of their
particular plan and how they should cast their vote. Plans' preferences
for proxy advice services could shift to prioritize services offering
more rigorous and impartial recommendations. These effects may be more
muted, however, if the SEC rule amendments enhance the transparency,
accuracy, and completeness of the information provided to clients of
proxy voting firms in connection with proxy voting decisions.
1.3. General Comments on the Proposed Regulatory Impact Analysis
Comments on the proposed regulatory impact analysis included
comments that supported the proposal and others that challenged the
Department's analytical approach, assumptions, and conclusions,
including criticizing the Appendix A ``illustrative'' analysis as a
fundamentally flawed approach to the measurement of possible costs,
benefits, and transfers associated with the proposed rule.
As noted, a few commenters agreed with the Department's conclusion
that the rule would provide certainty to plan administrators and
benefits ERISA plan participants by eliminating the misunderstanding
that exists among some stakeholders that ERISA fiduciaries are required
to vote all proxies rather than only proxies determined to have a net
positive economic impact on the plan analysis. One commenter stated
that outside of clear cases of economic gain, the benefits of proxy
voting ``are dubious at best.'' Another commenter dismissed the
argument that the benefits of shareholder engagement may include
realizing gains over the long term and asserted that short-term costs
are non-trivial and long-term future benefits are highly speculative. A
commenter stated that the rule will add elements of transparency and
accountability to the proxy voting process.
Many commenters, however, challenged the Department's proposed
Regulatory Impact Analysis and criticized the Department's analysis of
the relevant literature.
With respect to the literature, commenters criticized DOL's
assertion that the evidence on the effectiveness of and benefits from
proxy voting is ``mixed.'' The Department continues to believe that the
research studies have a wide range of findings. Some studies have found
that the adoption of shareholder proposals has a positive effect on
financial performance. For example, Dimson, Karakas, and Li's research,
which examines U.S. public companies, finds that the adoption of ESG
shareholder proposals increases the returns of companies.\92\ Flammer's
research, which examines shareholders proposals of U.S. publicly traded
companies, also finds that the adoption of shareholder proposals
related to corporate social responsibility improves the financial
performance of
[[Page 81683]]
companies.\93\ In addition, Martin's research finds that the adoption
of shareholder proposals relating to corporate social responsibility
increases the returns and market share of companies.\94\ Finally,
Cu[ntilde]at, Gin[eacute], and Guadalupe's research, which examines
shareholder proposals filed with the SEC, finds that adoption of
shareholder proposals relating to executive pay improves the market
value and the long-term profitability of firms.\95\ In contrast, other
studies have found shareholder proposals to have a negative effect on
financial performance. Cai and Walking's research finds that the
announcement of labor-sponsored shareholder proposals results in a
negative market reaction.\96\ Prevost and Rao's research finds that
firms that receive shareholder proposals for the first time experience
transitory declines in market returns, while firms that repeatedly
receive shareholder proposals experience permanent declines in market
returns.\97\ In addition, Larcker, McCall, and Ormazabal's research,
which examines Russell 3000 companies, finds that changes in
compensation contracts made to comply with proxy advisor voting
policies results in a negative stock market reaction.\98\ Finally,
Woidtke's research, which examines Fortune 500 companies, finds that an
increase in shareholder activism by public pension funds is negatively
associated with stock returns.\99\ Furthermore, there are studies with
inconclusive results. Karpoff, Malatesta, and Walking's research finds
that shareholder proposals have a negligible effect on the share values
and operating returns of firms.\100\ Wahal's research, which examines
firms targeted by pension funds with a social agenda, finds that firms
that receive proxy proposals do not experience significant abnormal
returns.\101\ Wahal's research also finds no evidence of long-term
improvement in the performance of the firm.\102\ Similarly, Del Guercio
and Hawkins' research, which examines firms that received shareholder
proposals from large pension funds, finds no evidence of significant
abnormal long-term returns.\103\ Smith's research, which also examines
firms targeted by CalPERS, finds that there is no statistically
significant change in the operating performance.\104\
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\92\ Dimson, Elroy, O[gbreve]uzhan Karaka[scedil], and Xi Li.,
Active Ownership, 28 The Review of Financial Studies 12 (2015).
\93\ Flammer, Caroline, Does Corporate Social Responsibility
Lead to Superior Financial Performance? A Regression Discontinuity
Approach, 61 Management Science 11 (2015).
\94\ Martins, Fernando, Corporate Social Responsibility,
Shareholder Value, and Competition. (2020).
\95\ Cu[ntilde]at, Vicente, Mireia Gin[eacute], and Maria
Guadalupe, Say Pays! Shareholder Voice and Firm Performance, 20
Review of Finance 5 (2016).
\96\ Cai, Jie, and Ralph A. Walkling., Shareholders' Say on Pay:
Does it Create Value?, Journal of Financial and Quantitative
Analysis (2011).
\97\ Prevost, Andrew K., and Ramesh P. Rao, Of What Value are
Shareholder Proposals Sponsored by Public Pension Funds, 73 Journal
of Business 2 (2000).
\98\ Larcker, David F., Allan L. McCall, and Gaizka Ormazabal,
Outsourcing Shareholder Voting to Proxy Advisory Firms, 58 Journal
of Law and Economics 18 (2015).
\99\ Woidtke, Tracie, Agents Watching Agents?: Evidence from
Pension Fund Ownership and Firm Value, 63 Journal of Financial
Economics 1 (2002).
\100\ Karpoff, Jonathan M., Paul H. Malatesta, and Ralph A.
Walkling, Corporate Governance and Shareholder Initiatives:
Empirical Evidence, 42 Journal of Financial Economics 3 (1996).
\101\ Wahal, Sunil, Pension Fund Activism and Firm Performance,
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis (1996).
\102\ Id.
\103\ Del Guercio, Diane, and Jennifer Hawkins, The Motivation
and Impact of Pension Fund Activism, 52 Journal of Financial
Economics 3 (1999).
\104\ Smith, Michael, Shareholder Activism by Institutional
Investors: Evidence from CalPERS, 51 Journal of Finance 1 (1996).
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With respect to the Department's analysis, assumptions, and
conclusions, although several commenters noted that the costs and
benefits associated with a proxy vote are highly uncertain and
difficult to quantify, commenters argued that the Department's analysis
overstated the current costs of proxy voting, understated the new costs
that ERISA plans will incur if the proposal were finalized, and
neglected to account for benefits to proxy voting that the proposal
would appear to classify as non-economic in nature yet have been linked
to better financial performance. One commenter cited the research of a
team of academics that found benefits of shareholder voting for the
market value of shares.\105\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ Vicente Cu[ntilde]at & Mireia Gin[eacute] & Maria
Guadalupe, 2012. ``The Vote Is Cast: The Effect of Corporate
Governance on Shareholder Value,'' Journal of Finance; Vicente
Cu[ntilde]at & Mireia Gin[eacute] & Maria Guadalupe, 2016. ``Say
Pays! Shareholder Voice and Firm Performance,'' Review of Finance,
European Finance Association, vol. 20(5), at 1799-1834.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many commenters asserted that the proposed rule will discourage
voting, and some suggested that less proxy voting by ERISA investors
will increase the influence of non-ERISA investors. Several of the
commenters expressed concerns that the costs imposed by the rule would
cause fiduciaries not to vote proxies, even when economically
beneficial, or to adopt the permitted practices described in the
proposal which they argued would benefit corporate management at the
expense of plan participants and beneficiaries. A commenter asserted
that because abstentions may have the effect of a ``no'' or ``yes''
vote, the rule may tip votes one way or the other.\106\ Some commenters
argued that having proxy votes cast by individuals who are not experts,
for example by activists or hedge fund managers rather than by stable,
expert, fiduciary shareholders, would not be in the interests of ERISA
beneficiaries. Several commenters stated that the rule could lead to a
concentration of voting power among a few large firms whose proxy votes
are large enough to make an economic impact on the plan's investment.
Several commenters noted that proxy voting serves as an important
vehicle for checks and balances to keep corporate management
accountable, focused on long-term value creation, and to prevent
opportunistic behavior.\107\ Another commenter suggested that there is
significant uncertainty with respect to the economic impact of any
proxy vote and that the proposal's requirement to determine the
economic impact of voting proxies requires a level of precision that is
inconsistent with the way fiduciaries operate. Other commenters
expressed concern about determining whether to vote proxies in relation
to ESG issues; many criticized the rule for ignoring academic evidence
supporting the pecuniary impact of issues the proposal deemed to be
non-economic, such ESG concerns that involve significant risks to
companies--such as litigation, reputational harm, or stranded assets--
and business activities that cause adverse impacts to individuals,
employees, and communities.\108\ They argued such
[[Page 81684]]
matters are critical to performing due diligence risk analysis and have
become increasingly germane to assessing company strategy and long-term
financial viability. One commenter criticized the Department for
allowing the permitted practice of voting with management but not
allowing a similar permitted practice of voting with proxy advisors.
The commenter asserted that voting with proxy advisors costs less and
that proxy advisors are subject to fewer and less severe conflicts than
management.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\106\ Data on abstentions not tipping votes is suggestive, but
not definitive. Figure 9 of the ICI's 2017 research on proxy voting
(www.ici.org/pdf/per25-05.pdf), indicates that the percentage of
shares voting ``for'' various proposals (the overwhelming number of
which were management proposals) as 95.2% in favor of management
proposals and 29.2% in favor of shareholder proposals. The data is
aggregated for all votes and not focused on specific proposals,
which could indicate that there are no close votes or at least some
close votes which could be tipped. Based on this uncertainty, the
Department cannot quantify the number of close votes that could be
tipped based on the available data, especially for shareholder
proposals. While the Department received multiple comments
expressing concern that the rule would make it more difficult to
reach a quorum, the commenters did not include any data supporting
this assertion, and the Department is not aware of any data sources
that would support a qualitative or quantitative analysis of the
final rule's impact on reaching a quorum.
\107\ For the CFA Institute Code of Ethics and Standards of
Professional Conduct and the CFA Institute Corporate Governance
Manual, please see www.cfainstitute.org/en/ethics-standards/ethics/code-of-ethics-standards-of-conduct-guidance.
\108\ Some commenters cited a 2015 survey by the CFA Institute
that reported that 73 percent of global investors take ESG factors
into account in their investment analysis and decisions. They also
refer to a McKinsey study that reports that ESG companies create
value disproportionate to their peers. Similarly, by citing many
studies made by the investment industry, some commenters asserted
that there is a substantial, and growing, body of empirical research
that has identified meaningful links between a company's ESG
characteristics and financial performance. These include studies
produced by MSCI, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Allianz Global
Investors, Nordea Equity Research, Goldman Sachs, Morningstar, and
Deutsche Asset & Wealth Management. Some commenters cited an
academic study that uses ISS and FactSet data to present evidence of
a positive causal effect of the passing of corporate social
responsibility shareholder proposals, the ones that are presumably
tied to ESG investing motives, to the correspondent shareholder
returns. Martins, Fernando, Corporate Social Responsibility,
Shareholder Value, and Competition (July 1, 2020). Available at
SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3651240 or https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3651240. The same commenter cited an observational
study that reaches the same conclusion: www.hbs.edu/faculty/conferences/2013-sustainability-and-corporation/Documents/Active_Ownership_-_Dimson_Karakas_Li_v131_complete.pdf. One
commenter referred to a meta-study showing that there is a
correlation between sustainability business practices and economic
performance. Clark, Gordon L. and Feiner, Andreas and Viehs,
Michael, From the Stockholder to the Stakeholder: How Sustainability
Can Drive Financial Outperformance (March 5, 2015). Available at
SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2508281 or https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2508281.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, some commenters focused specifically on proxy advisory
firms. Some commenters disagreed with the Department's expectation that
the rule may reduce plans' demand for proxy advice. A commenter pointed
to a report from the Manhattan Institute that suggested that some ERISA
fiduciaries are using proxy advisors as a low-cost way of meeting their
own fiduciary voting obligations, despite the fact that the proxy
advisor firms themselves are not held to a fiduciary standard. One
commenter argued that proxy advisors are in a resource-constrained
environment that adversely affects the advice they provide. In support,
the commenter cites a study suggesting that ISS provides lower quality
advice during the proxy season, when the firm is at its busiest, and
higher quality advice during other times. This result suggests that
during the busy proxy season, when proxy advisor firms' resources are
most constrained, such firms are unable to maintain the same quality of
service as provided during other periods.
After reviewing the public comments, the Department agrees that
there is uncertainty regarding the costs and benefits of proxy voting
activities of ERISA plans, both currently and under the terms of the
proposed regulation. The Department presented an illustration of an
analytical approach to evaluating the possible impacts of the proposed
rule. The Department presented the data it had to estimate the impacts
of the rule and also highlighted places where it lacked data to
accurately measure key parameters. In so doing, the Department
solicited comments and data to allow the accurate estimation of the
impact of the rule's requirement and the permitted practices. The
Department received comments on the illustration and its assumptions
that sought to estimate the costs of the proposed rule. Commenters did
not provide explicit data or estimates for a per vote burden to conduct
research or required documentation, nor did they provide alternative
estimates of the number of proxies that would be impacted by the
proposal. Thus, notwithstanding the solicitation of such data, the
Department still lacks critical information that would allow it to use
or modify the model to try to produce a more accurate measure of the
cost of the final rule's requirements.
The Department included the illustration to solicit public input on
one possible way to envision and quantify the potential cost burden and
costs savings that could be associated with the proposal. The
Department emphasized that the illustration was based on speculative
assumptions due to insufficient data, and, as noted above, many of the
commenters criticized its basis. Based on the public comments and the
fact that commenters did not provide data or estimates that would
support continued use of the illustration as part of this final
regulatory impact analysis, the Department has concluded that the
illustrative analysis that was presented for public comment as part of
the proposal does not represent a reliable construct for evaluating the
costs, benefits, and transfers associated with the final rule. Perhaps
more importantly, however, as discussed above and below, the Department
has made substantial changes to the proposed rule that have reduced
much of the cost burden associated with the final rule and thus the
illustrative analysis, even with its challenges identified by the
commenters, no longer reflects the potential burdens associated with
the rule.
1.4. Benefits
This final rule would benefit plans by providing improved guidance
regarding how ERISA's fiduciary duties apply to proxy voting. As
discussed above, sub-regulatory guidance that the Department has
previously issued over the years may have led to a misunderstanding
among some that fiduciaries are required to vote on all proxies
presented to them. This misunderstanding may have led some plans to
expend plan assets unnecessarily to research and vote on proxy
proposals not likely to have a pecuniary impact on the value of the
plan's investments. The final rule is intended to eliminate that
confusion and includes specific language in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
clearly stating that plan fiduciaries do not have an obligation to vote
all proxies. The rule also includes a ``safe harbor'' provision under
which plan fiduciaries may adopt proxy voting policies and parameters
prudently designed to serve the plan's economic interest. This will
encourage ERISA fiduciaries to execute shareholder rights in an
appropriate and cost-efficient manner.
The final rule clarifies the duties of fiduciaries with respect to
proxy voting and the monitoring of proxy advisory firms. Specifically,
in order to meet their fiduciary obligations to manage shareholder
rights, plan fiduciaries must (i) act solely in accordance with the
economic interest of the plan and its participants and beneficiaries
considering the impact of any costs involved; (ii) not subordinate the
interests of the participants and beneficiaries in their retirement
income or financial benefits under the plan to any non-pecuniary
objective, or promote non-pecuniary benefits or goals; and (iii)
prudently monitor the proxy voting activities of investment managers or
proxy advisory firms to whom that authority to vote proxies or exercise
shareholder rights has been delegated.
Accordingly, plan fiduciaries will be better positioned to conserve
plan assets by having clear direction and the option to prudently adopt
voting policies that (i) focus voting resources only on particular
types of proposals that the fiduciary has prudently determined are
substantially related to the issuer's business activities or are
expected to have a material effect on the value of the investment; and
(ii) refrain from voting on proposals or particular types of proposals
when the plan's holding in a single issuer relative to the plan's total
investment assets is below a quantitative threshold that the fiduciary
prudently determines, considering its percentage ownership of the
issuer and
[[Page 81685]]
other relevant factors, is sufficiently small that the matter being
voted upon is not expected to have a material effect on the investment
performance of the plan's portfolio. Thus, votes will be cast that more
frequently advance plans' economic interests. Cost savings and other
benefits to plans would flow to plan participants and beneficiaries and
plan sponsors.
The final rule will replace existing guidance on fiduciary
responsibilities for exercising shareholders' rights. The final rule
will provide more certainty than the existing sub-regulatory guidance,
and unlike such guidance, the final rule sets forth binding, specific
requirements.
The final regulation could increase investment returns on plan
assets by specifying when plan fiduciaries should or should not
exercise their shareholder rights to vote proxies. Plan fiduciaries are
responsible for maximizing the economic benefits to the plan, including
in their management of proxy voting rights, which may involve voting
proxies or declining to vote them. If the cost of obtaining information
that informs the vote exceeds the likely economic benefits to the plan
of voting, then fiduciaries should not vote. This course of action will
save resources and increase societal benefits.
The resources freed for other uses due to voting fewer proxies
(minus potential upfront transition costs) would represent benefits of
the rule. To the extent that the final regulation increases the
investment return on plan assets, it would enhance participants' and
beneficiaries' retirement security, thereby strengthening a central
purpose of ERISA. For the plans and participants that would be affected
by the final rule, the benefits they would experience from higher
investment returns, compounded over many years, could be considerable.
The increased returns would be associated with investments
generating higher pre-fee returns, which means the higher returns
qualify as benefits of the rule. However, to the extent that there are
any externalities, public goods, or other market failures, those might
generate costs to society on an ongoing basis. For example, a fiduciary
may vote for a proposal on a corporate merger or acquisition
transaction to maximize shareholder value even though implementation of
the proposal would bring about impacts in an affected geographic area
that would be adverse for local businesses or residents. Finally, some
portion of the increased returns would be associated with transactions
in which there is an opposite party experiencing a decreased return of
equal magnitude. This portion of the rule's impact would, from a
society-wide perspective, be appropriately categorized as a transfer as
discussed further in the Transfers section below (though it should be
noted that, if there is evidence of wealth differing across the
transaction parties, it would have implications for marginal utility of
the assets).
1.5. Costs
The Department received several comments regarding estimated costs
for the proposed rule. Commenters were divided in their opinions about
whether the illustration over or under estimated the proposed rule's
total costs.
Several commenters expressed concern that the rule will increase
plan costs. One commenter said that conducting a cost-benefit analysis
for each vote is ``unworkable'' and will ``create a dramatic cost
burden.'' Some commenters asserted that the proposed rule would
substantially increase costs because the commenters claimed that the
current cost to vote proxies was small, with one commenter even
suggesting it was approaching zero. Other commenters argued that the
Department's cost estimates were suspect because the Department
estimates that saving resulting from adopting the proposal's permitted
practices were significantly larger than the entire revenues of the
proxy advisory market. One commenter suggested their cost to provide
services would increase by 10 to 20 times their current rate. Other
commenters pointed out that although the model showed large costs,
actual costs would be even larger, approaching $13 billion a year.
A few of the commenters criticized that the rule places a higher
emphasis on short-term costs and performance, as the short-term
economic impact is often easier to quantify with less uncertainty. The
commenters argued that this would lead fiduciaries to focus on short-
term economic implications at the expense of long-term value, which
some commenters argued would be in violation of a fiduciary's duty.
One commenter stated the proposal was onerous and that it may not
even be possible for a plan fiduciary to do the proposal's mathematical
exercises to determine the economic impact, let alone defend the
determination, of every proxy vote in a detailed way and document it.
The commenter felt this would raise the costs of even routine proxy
votes. The commenter also said plans may need to hire additional
service providers to help determine the economic impact on the plan of
each vote. The need to have additional reviews and recordkeeping
procedures would increase costs for voting analysis. Several commenters
noted that the Department's economic analysis overlooked costs
associated with the proposed rule, such as the cost of analyzing
whether to abstain from a vote and the overhead costs of voting with
management.
A commenter said plans do not have the expertise nor the desire to
vote the proxies themselves but instead rely on asset managers. The
commenter suggested the proposed rule would make proxy advisory
services more expensive, and the need to independently investigate the
basis of the proxy advisor's recommendation will be costly. Another
commenter reported that they would need to charge a rate 10 to 20 times
the firm's current rate due to the proposal. The commenter stated that
such a high cost to vote would force plans to either not vote or defer
to management.
Another commenter expressed the view that the cost to use ERISA
3(38) investment managers will increase as they will have to bifurcate
their processes, policies, and voting to accommodate ERISA and non-
ERISA accounts. Additionally, the commenter argued that institutional
investors already approach their proxy voting methodically and
professionally.
Several commenters noted that the analysis failed to address
opportunity costs or externalities. With reference to externalities,
one commenter referred to academic research on corporate voting and
elections that highlights the voters' motivation of communication with
the board of directors.\109\ According to this research, voting can be
used as a channel of communication with boards of directors, and
protest voting can lead to significant changes in corporate governance
and strategy. In such scenarios, voting success would not only be
assessed by examining the returns to individual targeted firms' stocks,
but also by the impact on the behavior of other companies throughout
their portfolios. Another commenter noted, as an example of a negative
externality, a study by Arjuna Capital that emphasized the negative
environmental effects of carbon
[[Page 81686]]
emissions, which could potentially be addressed through proxy
voting.\110\
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\109\ David Yermack, Shareholder Voting and Corporate
Governance, 2 Ann Rev. Fin. Econ. 2.1, 2.15 (2010); Frederick
Alexander, The Benefit Stance: Responsible Ownership in The Twenty-
First Century, 36 Oxford Rev. Econ Policy 341, 355 (2020); Robert G.
Hansen and John R. Lott, Externalities and Corporate Objectives in a
World with Diversified Shareholder/Consumers, Journal Of Financial
And Quantitative Analysis, 1996, vol. 31, issue 1, 43-68.
\110\ See https://arjuna-capital.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/Climate_Change_from_the_Investor_s_Perspective.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One commenter stated they currently incur minimal costs to execute
proxy votes in a way that they believe best protects the interests of
participants and beneficiaries. Another commenter said that any
increased costs would be minimal and suggested that to ensure the rule
imposes a minimal burden on plan managers and proxy advisory firms, the
Department could allow these firms to make the data used for voting
shareholder decisions publicly available for external economic
analysis, allowing academics, think tanks, and concerned citizens to
provide additional economic analysis.
Finally, commenters expressed concern that by requiring plan
fiduciaries to determine economic materiality and to document that
determination, the proposed rule would increase litigation risk for
plan fiduciaries. A few of the commenters specifically alluded to
increased litigation risk from plan participants, alleging improper
voting activity. Some of the commenters stated that this risk would
discourage plan fiduciaries to vote proxy votes.
After carefully considering such comments, the Department made
several modifications to the proposed rule. The most significant
adjustment from the proposal results from the Department's agreement
with the recommendation of some commenters that the final rule take a
more principles-based approach to this subject matter. The Department
estimates that the more principles-based approach will reduce much of
the cost burden associated with the proposed rule. As discussed earlier
in this preamble, the most significant revision in the final rule
eliminates paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) from the proposal.
Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal provided that a plan fiduciary
must vote any proxy where the fiduciary prudently determines that the
matter being voted upon would have an economic impact on the plan,
after considering those factors described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of
the proposal and taking into account the costs involved (including the
cost of research, if necessary, to determine how to vote). Paragraph
(e)(3)(ii) of the proposal provided that a plan fiduciary must not vote
any proxy unless the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon would have an economic impact on the plan after
considering those factors described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the
proposal and taking into account the costs involved.
As stated above, commenters criticized these provisions of the
proposal as requiring a fiduciary to undertake an economic impact
analysis in advance of each issue that is the subject of a proxy vote
in order to even consider voting. A commenter further noted that a
fiduciary may not discover until after the analysis is performed that
the cost involved in determining whether to vote outweighs the economic
benefit to the plan.
The Department is persuaded by the comments that the requirements
contained in paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal should not
be incorporated in the final rule. The Department recognizes the
concerns expressed regarding potential increased costs and liability
exposure, as well as potential risks to plan investments that could
result from fiduciaries not voting when prudent to do so. Due to this
and other changes the Department has made in the final rule that are
discussed above, the Department expects that the incremental costs of
the final rule provisions will be minimal on a per-plan basis.
The Department recognizes that plans will need to spend time
reviewing the final rule, evaluating how it affects their proxy voting
practices, and implementing any necessary changes. The Department
estimates that this review process will require a lawyer to spend
approximately four hours to complete, resulting in a cost burden of
approximately $34.3 million.\111\ The Department believes that these
processes will likely be performed for most plans by a service provider
that likely oversees multiple plans. Therefore, the Department's
estimate likely represents an upper bound, because it is based on the
number of affected plans. The Department does not have sufficient data
that would allow it to estimate the number of service providers acting
in such a capacity for these plans.
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\111\ The burden is estimated as follows: (63,911 plans * 4
hours) = 255,644 hours. A labor rate of $138.41 is used for a
lawyer. The cost burden is estimated as follows: (63,911 plans * 4
hours * $138.41) = $34,309,915.
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The Department believes that many fiduciaries already are compliant
with the final rule, because they are meeting the requirements of the
Department's sub-regulatory guidance and prudently conducting their
business operations to satisfy their fiduciary obligations as required
by ERISA.\112\ The Department acknowledges that such practices are not
universal. In the course of its enforcement activity, the Department
sometimes encounters instances where documentation is absent or does
not meet the requirements of this final rule. The Department
additionally believes that the availability of economies of scale
limits the costs of this final rule. The Department understands that
under the final rule, most of the relevant fiduciary duties will reside
with, and most of the required activities will be performed by, third-
party asset managers, as is already common practice. Such asset
managers are often large and provide the relevant fiduciary services
for a large number of plans. The Department estimates that plan
fiduciaries or investment managers will require a half hour annually
and a half hour of help from clerical staff to maintain or document the
required information, resulting in an annual cost burden estimate of
$6.05 million.\113\ For a more in-depth discussion on the costs for
maintaining the required documentation, please refer to the Paperwork
Reduction Act section of this document below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ 29 CFR 2509.2016-01 (81 FR 95879, Dec. 29, 2016).
\113\ The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911 plans * 0.5
hours = 31,955.4 hours for both a plan fiduciary and clerical staff.
A labor rate of $134.21 is used for a plan fiduciary and a labor
rate of $55.14 for clerical staff (31,955.4 * $134.21 = $4,288,739
and 31,955.4 * $55.14 = $1,762,023).
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Several of the commenters noted that the Department failed to
recognize the additional costs associated with developing or updating
policies or procedures to reflect the requirements of the proposed
rule. One commenter, however, asserted that most fiduciaries have
thoughtful proxy policies. Another commenter stated that, contrary to
the DOL assumption that there are ``cost savings'' because of the
provisions in the rule that allow the adoption of proxy voting
policies, proxy voting policies already exist and the rule would impose
additional costs because such policies will need to be reviewed on an
initial and ongoing basis. After further deliberation, the Department
agrees that plans are likely to incur such costs, particularly plans
that choose to adopt the safe harbors contained in paragraphs
(e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of the final rule. The Department believes that
the final rule largely comports with industry practice for ERISA
fiduciaries; therefore the Department estimates that on average, it
will take a legal professional two hours to update policies and
procedures for each of the estimated 63,911 plans affected by the rule.
This results in a cost of $17.2 million in the first year.\114\
[[Page 81687]]
The requirement in paragraph (e)(3)(ii) to periodically review proxy
voting policies already is required for fiduciaries to meet their
obligations under ERISA; therefore, the Department does not expect that
plans will incur additional cost associated with the periodic review.
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\114\ The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911 plans * 2 hours
= 127,821.8. A labor rate of $134.21 is used for a plan fiduciary:
(127,821.8 * $134.21 = $17,154,957).
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The Department generally does not expect that this final rule will
change the costs associated with plans' remaining voting activity.
Provisions requiring responsible fiduciaries to monitor and document
voting policies and activities would generally be satisfied by current
best practices that satisfy earlier Departmental guidance. Neither does
the Department expect plans to incur substantial costs from proxy
advisory firms' potential efforts to help fiduciaries meet the final
rule's requirements. If they do not already meet the standards detailed
in the final regulation, plans that currently exercise shareholder
rights, including proxy voting activities, will incur the costs
associated with deciding whether to exercise shareholder rights
pursuant to this final rule. The Department, however, does not have
sufficient information to document such costs.
It is possible that proxy advisory firms would take steps to avoid
or mitigate conflicts of interest, strengthen factual and analytic
rigor, better match their research and recommendations with ERISA
plans' interests, or increase transparency as a result of the final
rule. The Department notes, however, that proxy advisory firms are
likely to take at least some of these steps in response to recent SEC
policy initiatives and spread their related costs across all of their
clients, not just ERISA plans.\115\ At the same time, the final rule
may reduce plans' demand for proxy advice. However, this reduction in
demand is beneficial to plans as they previously were purchasing more
advice than they would have otherwise chosen due to their
misunderstanding that they were required to vote all proxies. This
reduced demand will lower the market price and the amount of advice
purchased. Consequently, any compliance costs passed on from proxy
advisory firms to ERISA plans are likely to be at least partially
offset by plans' cost savings from purchasing a smaller amount of
advice. It should be noted that proxy advisory firms will see a
reduction in revenues as a result of the decreased demand for their
services. In addition, proxy advisory firms' efforts to satisfy any SEC
requirements might ease responsible fiduciaries' efforts to comply with
this final rule. For example, it may be easier to monitor proxy
advisory firms if those firms provide additional disclosure about their
conflicts of interest and their policies and procedures to address such
conflicts.
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\115\ The SEC's rule amendments require proxy advisory firms
engaged in a solicitation to provide conflicts of interest
disclosure, to adopt and publicly disclose policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure that the company subject of the proxy
voting advice has such advice made available to it at or prior to
the time the advice is disseminated, and to provide a mechanism by
which its clients can become aware of any written statements by the
company in response to the proxy advice. The SEC also modified its
proxy solicitation antifraud rule to specifically include material
information about the proxy advisor's methodology, sources of
information, or conflicts of interest, as examples of when the
failure to disclose could, depending upon the particular facts and
circumstances, be considered misleading. See 2020 SEC Proxy Voting
Advice Amendments, at 242-246.
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The Department estimates that the final rule would impose
incremental costs of approximately $57.52 million in the first year and
$6.05 million in subsequent years. Over 10 years, the associated costs
would be approximately $90.6 million with an annualized cost of $12.90
million, using a seven percent discount rate.\116\ Using a perpetual
time horizon (to allow the comparisons required under Executive Order
13771), the annualized costs in 2016 dollars are $6.76 million at a
seven percent discount rate.\117\
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\116\ The costs would be $101.58 million over 10-year period
with an annualized cost of $11.91 million, applying a three percent
discount rate.
\117\ The annualized costs in 2016 dollars would be $6.31
million applying a three percent discount rate.
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1.6. Transfers
Proxy advisory firms that respond best to this final rule will
likely gain a relative competitive advantage. Firms that limit or
eliminate conflicts of interest and modify their services to better
align with the guidance of these final regulations could gain market
share relative to firms that do not. Firms that are willing to tailor
their voting guidelines, strategies, and costs according to each plan's
investment guidelines could gain market share relative to firms that do
not.
The final rule may reduce plans' demand for proxy advice, lowering
the market price, the amount of advice purchased, and revenues. This
represents a transfer from proxy advisory firms to plans, who will
benefit as they previously were purchasing more advice than they would
have chosen to due to their misunderstanding that plan fiduciaries were
required to vote all proxies.
The Department also notes, however, that the market for proxy
advisors could also change as a result of the final rule. Such changes
could lead to increased competition among proxy advisory firms. In such
a scenario, it is possible that the rule will result in a reduction in
the expenses plans incur to purchase proxy advisory services. Although
the Department does not have sufficient data to quantify this
possibility, it would result in a transfer from proxy advisory firms to
plans.
Moreover, as noted previously, if some portion of rule-induced
increases in returns would be associated with transactions in which the
opposite party experiences decreased returns of equal magnitude, then
this portion of the final rule's impact would, from a society-wide
perspective, be appropriately categorized as a transfer.
1.7. Regulatory Alternatives
As discussed above, the Department considered retaining paragraphs
(e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal
provided that a plan fiduciary must vote any proxy where the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan, after considering those factors described
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and taking into account the
costs involved (including the cost of research, if necessary, to
determine how to vote). Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal provided
that a plan fiduciary must not vote any proxy unless the fiduciary
prudently determines that the matter being voted upon would have an
economic impact on the plan after considering those factors described
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of the proposal and taking into account the
costs involved.
After carefully considering comments, the Department was persuaded
to eliminate paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) and adopt a more principles-
based, less prescriptive approach in the final rule that will reduce
much of the cost burden associated with the proposed rule. Commenters
criticized these provisions of the proposal as requiring a fiduciary to
undertake an economic impact analysis in advance of each issue that is
the subject of a proxy vote in order to even consider voting. A
commenter further noted that a fiduciary may not discover until after
the analysis is performed that the cost involved in determining whether
to vote outweighed the economic benefit to the plan. The Department
recognizes the concerns expressed regarding potential increased costs
and liability exposure associated with these provisions, as well as
potential risks to plan investments
[[Page 81688]]
that could result from fiduciaries not voting when prudent to do so.
1.8. Uncertainty
The Department's economic assessment of this final rule's effects
is subject to uncertainty. Specific areas of uncertainty are discussed
below:
Cost Savings--As noted earlier, the Department lacks complete data
on plans' exercise of their shareholder rights appurtenant to their
stock holdings, including proxy voting activities, and on the attendant
costs and benefits. Many of the commenters criticized that the
Department lacks data and evidence to support its cost-benefit analysis
and remarked that the Department should not move forward with the rule
until the associated costs and benefits are more certain. The
Department firmly disagrees and believes that the impact of the rule
has been reasonably assessed based on the best available data.
Demand for New Services--The Department solicited comments
regarding whether the final rule would create a demand for new
services, and if so, what alternate services or relationships with
service providers might result and how overall plan expenses could be
impacted. The Department did not receive comments that specifically
addressed this question.
Other Securities--The final rule will generally govern plans'
exercise of shareholder rights appurtenant to their stock holdings of
individual companies, but not to their holdings of other securities.
The Department cannot determine whether some plans nonetheless would
modify their practices with respect to other securities because of this
final rule. As noted earlier, ERISA pensions held just 5.5 percent of
total corporate equity in 2019, down from a high of 22 percent in 1985.
Mutual funds, in contrast, held 22 percent of all corporate equity in
2019, up from 6 percent in 1985.\118\ As ERISA-covered pensions have
shifted from defined benefit to defined contribution plans, both the
proportion of pension assets invested in mutual funds and the
proportion of all mutual fund shares owned by pensions have increased
dramatically. In 2019, ERISA-covered pensions held 25 percent of all
mutual fund shares, up from 8 percent in 1985. ERISA would apply to any
proxy votes for mutual fund shares and shares of other funds registered
with the SEC for which the plan fiduciary is responsible. ERISA does
not govern the management of the portfolio internal to a fund
registered with the SEC, including such fund's exercise of its
shareholder rights appurtenant to the portfolio of stocks it holds,
though ERISA would apply to similar funds organized as collective
investment trusts. One commenter stated that if plans do not
participate in the proxy process, it may prevent issuers from reaching
quorum for their shareholder meetings, and this would impose costs on
plans.
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\118\ Department calculations based on U.S. Federal Reserve
statistics, Financial Accounts of the United States--Z.1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-ERISA Investors--Many asset managers serve both ERISA plans and
other investors. The Department believes such uniform voting for ERISA
and non-ERISA clients may sometimes jeopardize responsible fiduciaries'
satisfaction of their duties under ERISA. However, as noted earlier in
the preamble, this concern may be mitigated in the case of investment
managers subject to the SEC's jurisdiction by the fact that federal
securities law requires investment advisers to make the determination
in their client's best interest and not to place the investment
adviser's own interests ahead of their client's.\119\ Where an SEC
registered investment adviser has assumed the authority to vote on
behalf of its client, the SEC has stated that the investment adviser,
among other things, must have a reasonable understanding of the
client's objectives and must make voting determinations that are in the
client's best interest.
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\119\ See Commission Interpretation Regarding Standard of
Conduct for Investment Advisers, 84 FR 33669, 33673 (July 12, 2019)
(discussing an adviser's obligation to make a reasonable inquiry
into its client's financial situation, level of financial
sophistication, investment experience and financial goals and have a
reasonable belief that the advice it provides is in the best
interest of the client based on the client's objectives); Commission
Guidance Regarding Proxy Voting Responsibilities of Investment
Advisers, Release No. IA-5325 (Aug. 21, 2019) (82 FR 47420 (Sep. 10,
2019) (clarifying investment advisers' duties when voting
shareholder proxies). See also Rule 206(4)-6 under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, 17 CFR 275.206(4)-6 (Under rule 206(4)-6, it
is a fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative act, practice or course
of business within the meaning of section 206(4) of the Investment
Advisers Act for an investment adviser to exercise voting authority
with respect to client securities, unless the adviser (i) has
adopted and implemented written policies and procedures that are
reasonably designed to ensure that the adviser votes proxies in the
best interest of its clients, which procedures must include how the
investment adviser addresses material conflicts that may arise
between the adviser's interests and interests of their clients; (ii)
discloses to clients how they may obtain information from the
investment adviser about how the adviser voted with respect to their
securities; and (iii) describes to clients the investment adviser's
proxy voting policies and procedures and, upon request, furnishes a
copy of the policies and procedures to the requesting client.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under this final rule, responsible fiduciaries might increase their
demands for asset managers to implement separate policies customized
for particular ERISA plans or for ERISA plans generally, such as
policies that align with the proposed permitted practices in paragraph
(e)(3)(iii). One commenter noted that policies would increase costs for
plans and investment without an incremental benefit to participants and
beneficiaries. The Department discusses the impact of updating policies
and procedures in the cost section above.
Asset Allocation--This final rule could exert influence on a plan's
asset allocation. For example, the quantitative threshold provision in
paragraph (e)(3)(i)(B) would permit responsible fiduciaries, after
prudently considering the relevant factors, to adopt proxy voting
policies allowing them to refrain from voting on proposals or
particular types of proposals when the plan's holding in a single
issuer is sufficiently small relative to the plan's total investment
that the outcome of the vote is not expected to have a material impact
on the investment performance of the plan's portfolio. This provision
might produce additional economic benefits by promoting fuller and more
optimal diversification where it may otherwise have been lacking. That
is, the quantitative threshold could prompt a fiduciary to diversify
what otherwise would have been a concentration of more than the
specified threshold amount of a plan's portfolio in a single stock.
Vote Categories--Proxy votes can be tallied in four ways: For,
against/withhold, abstain, and not voted. The vast majority of
outstanding shares are held in ``street name'' by intermediaries, such
as broker-dealers. Broker-dealers may have discretionary authority to
vote proxies without receiving voting instructions from the owner of
the shares for routine and noncontroversial matters, such as the
ratification of a company's independent auditors. For matters in which
a broker-dealer does not have discretionary authority to vote, a broker
non-vote is required. For matters that require approval of a majority
of shares present and voting, abstentions (which are cast neither for
nor against a proposal) and broker non-votes are not counted in the
final tally. For matters that require approval of a majority of the
shares issued and outstanding, abstentions or broker non-votes are
treated as votes against the proposal. If an investor is unsure about a
matter or unsure whether her interests and management's interests are
aligned, the investor arguably should abstain.
[[Page 81689]]
1.9. Conclusion
The final rule would benefit ERISA-covered plans, as it provides
guidance regarding how ERISA's fiduciary duties apply to proxy voting
and in particular when fiduciaries should refrain from voting. Plan
fiduciaries will be able to conserve plan assets as they refrain from
researching and voting on proposals that are unlikely to have a
material effect on the investment performance of the plan's portfolio,
and thereby increase the return on plan assets. The Department
estimates that the final rule's cost impact is substantially less than
the proposal due to significant revisions to the required actions of a
plan fiduciary that were made in the final rule in response to comments
on the proposal.
2. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA 95) (44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)), the Department solicited comments concerning the
information collection request (ICR) included in the Fiduciary Duties
Regarding Proxy Voting and Shareholder Rights ICR (85 FR 55219). At the
same time, the Department also submitted an information collection
request (ICR) to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d).
The Department received comments that specifically addressed the
paperwork burden analysis of the information collection requirement
contained in the proposed rule. The Department took into account such
public comments in developing the revised paperwork burden analysis
discussed below.
In connection with publication of this final rule, the Department
is submitting an ICR to OMB requesting approval of a new collection of
information under OMB Control Number 1210-0165. The Department will
notify the public when OMB approves the ICR.
A copy of the ICR may be obtained by contacting the PRA addressee
shown below or at www.RegInfo.gov. PRA ADDRESSEE: G. Christopher Cosby,
Office of Regulations and Interpretations, U.S. Department of Labor,
Employee Benefits Security Administration, 200 Constitution Avenue NW,
Room N-5718, Washington, DC 20210; [email protected]. Telephone: 202-
693-8410; Fax: 202-219-4745. These are not toll-free numbers.
It has long been the view of the Department that the duty to
monitor necessitates proper documentation of the activities that are
subject to monitoring.\120\ Accordingly, the Department's final rule
requires that plan fiduciaries maintain records on proxy voting
activities and other exercises of shareholder rights. This requirement
applies to all pension plans with investments, including those that
have shareholder rights and proxy votes that may need to be exercised.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\120\ 29 CFR 2509.2008-2 (73 FR 61731 (Oct. 17, 2008)).
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The Department believes that most plan fiduciaries have followed
the Department's prior sub-regulatory guidance or already are
performing most if not all of the documentation requirements of the
final rule as a prudent practice in their normal course of business.
While the incremental burden of the final rule is generally small,
perhaps even de minimis, the Department discussed the full burden of
such requirements below to allow for full evaluation of the
requirements in the information collection.
According to the most recent Form 5500 data there are 721,876
pension plans (92,480 large plans and 629,396 small plans) and 8,475
health or welfare plans (5,626 large plans filing a schedule H, and
2,849 small plans filing a schedule I).\121\ While the Schedule H
collects information on a plan's stock holdings, Schedule I lacks the
specificity to determine if small plans hold stocks. As shown in Table
1, 31,868 pension plans hold stocks and would have shareholder rights
they may need to exercise. Additionally, 573 health and other welfare
plans file the schedule H and report holding either common stocks or
employer stocks. The Department lacks information on the number of
small plans that hold stock. Small plans are significantly less likely
to hold stock than larger plans. For purposes of estimating the burden,
five percent of small plans are presumed to hold stock resulting in
31,470 small plans needing to comply with the information collection.
Therefore, a total of 63,911 plans will need to comply with this
information collection.
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\121\ EBSA estimates using 2018 Form 5500 filing data.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2.1. Maintain Documentation
The final rule requires that the named plan fiduciary must maintain
records on proxy voting activities and other exercises of shareholder
rights. Where the authority to vote proxies or exercise shareholder
rights has been delegated to an investment manager pursuant to ERISA
section 403(a)(2), or a proxy voting firm or another person performs
advisory services as to the voting of proxies, plan fiduciaries must
prudently monitor the proxy voting activities of such investment
manager or proxy advisory firm and determine whether such activities
are consistent with paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) and (e)(3) of this
section.
Much of the information needed to fulfill these requirements is
generated in the normal course of business. Plans may need additional
time to maintain the proper documentation, but this burden is likely to
be reduced by the adoption of policies by plan fiduciaries that
incorporate one or more of the final rule's safe harbors.
Commenters expressed concerns that the proposed rule would be
onerous, since it would not be feasible for plan fiduciaries to
determine the economic impact of every proxy vote in a detailed way and
document it. Thus, commenters suggested that the Department
underestimated the amount of time that fiduciaries and clerical staff
would spend documenting and maintaining documentation for votes. As
discussed above in Section 1.5, after carefully considering these
comments, the Department was persuaded to adopt a more principles-
based, less prescriptive approach in the final rule that does not carry
forward specific documentation and recordkeeping provisions in the
proposal that were identified by commenters as burdensome and
unnecessary. The Department believes that with this revision, the final
rule's documentation and recordkeeping requirements should result in
less burden than the proposal's requirements, because the final rule
requirements mirror previous guidance and align with existing fiduciary
duty of documentation.
However, in light of the public comments that argued that the
Department underestimated the recordkeeping burden and because of the
uncertainty involved in determining which plans will need to change
recordkeeping practices to comply with the final rule, the Department
is retaining the documentation time estimate from the proposal. This is
responsive to the commenters' assertion and is a step intended to avoid
underestimating the average time required for plan fiduciaries to
comply with the final rule.
The Department estimates that plan fiduciaries or investment
managers will require a half hour annually and a half hour of help from
clerical staff to maintain or document the required information. This
is likely an overestimate, because many, if not most, plans use
investment managers. These investment managers provide similar services
for many plans. This results in
[[Page 81690]]
an annual cost burden estimate of $6,050,762.\122\
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\122\ The burden is estimated as follows: 63,911 plans * 0.5
hours = 31,955.4 hours for both a plan fiduciary and clerical staff.
A labor rate of $134.21 is used for a plan fiduciary and a labor
rate of $55.14 for clerical staff (31,955.4 * $134.21 = $4,288,739
and 31,955.4 * $55.14 = $1,762,023).
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These paperwork burden estimates are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: New collection.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Title: Fiduciary Duties Regarding Proxy Voting and Shareholder
Rights.
OMB Control Number: 1210-0165.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 63,911.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 63,911.
Frequency of Response: Occasionally.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 0.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $6,050,762.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) \123\ imposes certain
requirements with respect to federal rules that are subject to the
notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act \124\ and are likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Unless the head of an
agency certifies that a final rule is not likely to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, section 604
of the RFA requires the agency to present a final regulatory
flexibility analysis of the final rule.\125\
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\123\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (1980).
\124\ 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq. (1946).
\125\ 5 U.S.C. 604 (1980).
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For purposes of analysis under the RFA, the Employee Benefits
Security Administration (EBSA) considers employee benefit plans with
fewer than 100 participants to be small entities.\126\ The basis of
this definition is found in section 104(a)(2) of ERISA, which permits
the Secretary of Labor to prescribe simplified annual reports for plans
that cover fewer than 100 participants. Under section 104(a)(3) of
ERISA, the Secretary may also provide for exemptions or simplified
annual reporting and disclosure for welfare benefit plans. Pursuant to
the authority of section 104(a)(3), the Department has previously
issued (see 29 CFR 2520.104-20, 2520.104-21, 2520.104-41, 2520.104-46,
and 2520.104b-10) simplified reporting provisions and limited
exemptions from reporting and disclosure requirements for small plans,
including unfunded or insured welfare plans, that cover fewer than 100
participants and satisfy certain requirements. While some large
employers have small plans, small plans are maintained generally by
small employers. Thus, the Department believes that assessing the
impact of this final rule on small plans is an appropriate substitute
for evaluating the effect on small entities. The definition of small
entity considered appropriate for this purpose differs, however, from a
definition of small business based on size standards promulgated by the
Small Business Administration (SBA) \127\ pursuant to the Small
Business Act.\128\ The Department solicited comments on this assumption
in the proposed rule; however, no comments were received.
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\126\ The Department consulted with the Small Business
Administration Office of Advocacy in making this determination, as
required by 5 U.S.C. 603(c) and 13 CFR 121.903(c) in a memo dated
June 4, 2020.
\127\ 13 CFR 121.201 (2011).
\128\ 15 U.S.C. 631 et seq. (2011).
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The Department has determined that this final rule could have a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities during the
first year. Therefore, the Department has prepared a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis that is presented below.
3.1. Need for and Objectives of the Rule
The Department believes that this final rule is an appropriate way
to provide clarity and certainty regarding the application of fiduciary
obligations of loyalty and prudence with respect to exercises of
shareholder rights, including proxy voting. Despite past efforts to
make clear fiduciary obligations in this regard, the Department is
concerned that its existing sub-regulatory guidance may have
inadvertently created the perception that fiduciaries must vote proxies
on every shareholder proposal to fulfill their obligations under ERISA.
This belief may have caused some fiduciaries to pursue proxy proposals
that have no connection to increasing the value of investments used to
pay benefits or defray the reasonable plan administrative expenses.
Both of these concerns point to the risk that a plan's proxy voting
activity will sometimes impair rather than advance participants'
economic interest in their benefits. This final rule aims to ensure
that the costs plans incur to vote proxies and exercise other
shareholder rights are economically justified, and that responsible
fiduciaries' use of third-party advice supports rather than jeopardizes
their adherence to ERISA's fiduciary requirements.
The Department is monitoring other federal agencies whose statutory
and regulatory requirements overlap with ERISA. In particular, the
Department is monitoring SEC rules and guidance to avoid creating
duplicate or overlapping requirements with respect to proxy voting.
3.2. Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments in Response to the
IFRA and Changes Made to the Proposed Rule in Response
One of the most significant issue raised by commenters was that
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) of the proposal require a fiduciary to
undertake an economic impact analysis in advance of each issue that is
the subject of a proxy vote in order to even consider voting. A
commenter further noted that a fiduciary may not discover until after
the analysis is performed that the cost involved in determining whether
to vote outweighed the economic benefit to the plan. The Department
recognizes the concerns expressed regarding potential increased costs
and liability exposure associated with these provisions, as well as
potential risks to plan investments that could result from fiduciaries
not voting when prudent to do so. Therefore, after carefully
considering comments, the Department was persuaded to eliminate
paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) and adopt a more principles-based, less
prescriptive approach in the final rule that reduces the cost burden
associated with the proposed rule. This revision to the proposal is
further discussed in Section 3.5 below.
In the proposal, the Department included an illustration to try to
capture the cost burden on service providers from the rule. This
illustration was based on certain assumptions the Department described
as speculative in the proposal, and many of the commenters criticized
its basis. In response to the commenters and changes made to the rule
since the proposal, the Department has removed this illustration. For a
more detailed description about the Department's decision, please refer
to the Cost section above.
Some commenters were concerned that the rule would be burdensome on
small plan sponsors. One commenter expressed concern that the
requirements of the regulation will have a significant impact on small
entities because of their limited staff resources. The Department
acknowledges this concern as well as the concern that smaller plans may
not be able to absorb the additional burden of the regulation as easily
as larger plans. As described in the Cost section
[[Page 81691]]
above, the Department has amended the proposed rule's requirements and
adopted a less prescriptive, principles-based approach in the final
rule that mirrors and supplements requirements contained in the
Department's prior sub-regulatory guidance and industry best practices.
These changes will substantially reduce the Department's estimate of
the proposed rule's cost impact.
Another commenter expressed concern that the Department
substantially underestimated costs for small plans, as many small plans
would need to hire a service provider to produce additional
documentation to supplement existing investment policy statements. The
Department recognizes that plans may need to make various changes to
compliance policies and procedures to respond to the rule, so it has
added an additional cost for the time it takes to develop or update
such policies and procedures in the final rule.
3.2. Affected Small Entities
This final rule will affect ERISA-covered pension, health, and
welfare plans that hold stock either through common stock or employer
securities. This includes plans that indirectly hold stocks through
collective trusts, master trusts, pooled separate accounts, and other
similar plan asset investment entities. Plans that only hold their
assets in registered investment companies, such as mutual funds, will
be unaffected by the final rule.
There is minimal data available about small plans' stock holdings.
The primary source of information on assets held by pension plans is
the Form 5500. Schedule H, which reports data on stock holdings, is
filed almost exclusively by large plans. While the majority of
participants and assets are in large plans, most plans are small plans
(plans with fewer than 100 participants). It is likely that many small
defined benefit plans hold stock. Many small defined contribution plans
hold stock only through mutual funds, and consequently would not be
affected by this final rule. In 2018, there were 39,142 small defined
benefit plans and 590,254 small defined contribution plans. The
Department lacks sufficient data to estimate the number of small plans
that hold stock, but it assumes that small plans are significantly less
likely to hold stock than larger plans. The Department did not receive
any comments or additional data from commenters regarding the number of
small plans that hold stock directly or indirectly. As discussed
elsewhere, while the Department assumes that small affected entities
will spend some time familiarizing themselves with the rule, it expects
that even in the case of small plans that hold stock directly or
indirectly, these costs will be small, because the required activities
are reflected in common practice. Therefore, for purposes of
determining whether a substantial number of small plans are affected,
the Department presumes that five percent of small plans hold stock
resulting in as assumed 31,470 affected small plans.
The Department recognizes that service providers, including small
service providers who act as asset managers, could also be impacted by
this rule, if they provide compliance assistance to the plans they
serve. The Department does not have complete information on the number
of affected small service providers. However, the Department does not
believe that there will be more service providers than the 63,911
affected plans. The Department assumes the number of service providers
who will experience a substantial impact from the final rule will be
significantly smaller as only about 7.5 percent of service providers in
the NAICS categories that could be affected have revenues below
$100,000.\129\ As discussed in Table 2, below, the Department estimates
that compliance costs in the first year are less than $900. Therefore,
only service providers with revenues less than $100,000 could
experience a cost that is more than one percent of revenues. If service
providers incur compliance costs, they could pass some of these costs
onto plans and experience a smaller impact.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\129\ To capture the number of potentially affected service
providers, the Department looked at the number of small entities
with the following North American Industry Classification System
(NAICS) Codes: 523110 Investment Banking and Securities Dealing;
523920 Portfolio Management; 523930 Investment Advice; 523991 Trust,
Fiduciary, and Custody Activities; and 525910 Open-End Investment
Funds. Small entities were identified based on their revenue and the
size standards from the SBA. According to data provided by the SBA,
the Department estimates there are 8,616 small entities in these
industries with revenues less than $100,000. This accounts for 7.5
percent of all firms in these industries. The calculation of the
number of firms by industry is based on: NAICS. Businesses by NAICS,
https://www.naics.com/business-lists/counts-by-company-size/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3.4. Estimate Cost Impact of the Final Rule on Affected Small Entities
This final rule will benefit small plans, by providing guidance
regarding how ERISA's fiduciary duties apply to proxy voting and the
monitoring of proxy advisory firms, and in particular, when fiduciaries
should refrain from voting. Plan fiduciaries will be able to better
conserve plan assets by having clear direction to refrain from
researching and voting on proposals that they prudently determine have
no material effect on the investment performance of the plan's
portfolio (or investment performance of assets under management in the
case of an investment manager). The final rule also will benefit plans
by improving the frequency with which voting resources are expended on
matters that the fiduciary has prudently determined are substantially
related to the issuer's business activities or are expected to have a
material effect on the value of the investment. Cost savings and other
benefits to small plans will flow to plan participants and
beneficiaries in the form of more secure retirement income.
As discussed under the Costs section above, while the Department
assumes that small affected entities will spend some time familiarizing
themselves with the rule, it expects that these familiarization costs
will be small, because the required activities are reflected in common
practice. The Department estimates it will take four hours for an in-
house attorney to review the rule, at an hourly labor cost of
$138.41,\130\ resulting in an average cost of $536.84. The Department
believes small plans are likely to rely on service providers to monitor
regulatory changes and make necessary changes to the plan, so this is
likely an overestimate of the costs incurred by small plans to
familiarize themselves with the rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\130\ Labor costs are based on statistics from Labor Cost Inputs
Used in the Employee Benefits Security Administration, Office of
Policy and Research's Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork
Reduction Act Burden Calculation, Employee Benefits Security
Administration (June 2019), www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-and-regulations/rules-and-regulations/technical-appendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-opr-ria-and-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fiduciaries of plans must ensure that all investments are prudently
monitored. The final rule provides that fiduciaries responsible for the
exercise of shareholder rights must maintain records on proxy voting
activities and other exercises of shareholder rights in order to
demonstrate compliance with ERISA's fiduciary provisions. The
Department assumes that, because the documentation of fiduciary
decision-making is a common practice, responsible fiduciaries are
likely already recording and maintaining documentation related to their
own and investment managers' actions, including voting proxies and
exercising other shareholder rights.
The final rule will have a small impact on plans that are not
currently in full compliance, because their
[[Page 81692]]
fiduciaries will be required to maintain records or document decisions
related to voting proxies or exercising other shareholder rights. Much
of the information required to comply with this requirement is
generated by affected entities in the normal course of business;
however, additional time may be required to maintain the proper
documentation. The Department estimates that compliance with this final
regulation will require 30 minutes of a plan fiduciary's time and 30
minutes of a clerical worker's time. The Department assumes an hourly
rate of $134.21 for a plan fiduciary and an hourly rate of $55.14 for a
clerical worker,\131\ resulting in an estimated per-entity annual cost
of $94.68.\132\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\131\ Labor costs are based on statistics from Labor Cost Inputs
Used in the Employee Benefits Security Administration, Office of
Policy and Research's Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork
Reduction Act Burden Calculation, Employee Benefits Security
Administration (June 2019), www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-and-regulations/rules-and-regulations/technical-appendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-opr-ria-and-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
\132\ This cost is estimated as: 0.5 hours * $134.21 + 0.5 hours
* $55.14 = $94.68.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, the Department estimates that to comply with the
rule, many plans will need to either develop or update proxy-voting
policies and procedures. This is particularly true for plans choosing
to adopt one of the final rule's safe harbors. The Department estimates
that it will take two hours for a legal professional to develop or
update relevant policies and procedures. The Department assumes an
hourly rate of $134.21 for a legal professional, resulting in an
estimate per-entity cost of $268.42 in the first year.
Under these assumptions, the Department estimates the additional
requirements of the rule will increase costs by $899.94 per plan in the
first year and $94.68 per plan in subsequent years, on average. This is
illustrated in Table 2 below.
Table 2--Costs for Plans To Comply With Requirements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Affected entity Labor rate Hours Year 1 cost Year 2 cost
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Documentation: Plan Fiduciary................... $134.21 0.5 $67.11 $67.11
Documentation: Clerical workers................. 55.14 0.5 27.57 27.57
Rule Familiarization: Plan Fiduciary............ 134.21 4 536.84 0
Develop or Update Proxy-Voting Policies and 134.21 2 268.42 0
Procedures.....................................
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... .............. .............. 899.94 94.68
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: DOL calculations based on statistics from Labor Cost Inputs Used in the Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Office of Policy and Research's Regulatory Impact Analyses and Paperwork Reduction Act Burden
Calculation, Employee Benefits Security Administration (June 2019), www.dol.gov/sites/dolgov/files/EBSA/laws-and-regulations/rules-and-regulations/technical-appendices/labor-cost-inputs-used-in-ebsa-opr-ria-and-pra-burden-calculations-june-2019.pdf.
To put these costs in perspective, the Department looked at how the
additional cost from the proposed rule would compare to the average
total plan cost of 401(k) plans by assets. Plan costs include
investment fees as well as administrative and recordkeeping fees. The
way plan costs are paid vary by plan. A 2019 survey of 240 plan
sponsors found that 33 percent of defined contribution (DC) plans paid
all recordkeeping and administrative fees through investment revenue,
while 52 percent of DC plans paid recordkeeping and administrative fees
through a direct fee.\133\ Accounts from the industry purport that per-
participant recordkeeping fees are becoming the best practice standard;
this trend has been driven by digital recordkeeping technology that
requires the same amount of resources for large accounts as small
accounts.\134\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\133\ Deloitte. ``2019 Defined Contribution Benchmarking Survey
Report: the Retirement Landscape has Changed--Are Plan Sponsors
Ready?'' www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/human-capital/articles/annual-defined-contribution-benchmarking-survey.html.
\134\ Manganaro, John. ``Recordkeeping Fees Under the Microscope
Retirement Plans of All Sizes are Seeing Their Recordkeeping Fee
Schedules Questioned, Especially When Those Fees are Expressed as a
Percentage of Assets.'' Planadviser. (November 2019).
www.planadviser.com/recordkeeping-fees-microscope/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fees paid by plans also vary by firm size. A survey of 361 defined
contribution plans for the Investment Company Institute calculated an
``all-in'' fee that included both administrative and investment fees
paid by the plan and the participant. They found that small plans with
10 participants pay approximately 50 basis points more than plans with
1,000 participants. Further, small plans with 10 participants are
paying about 90 basis points more than large plans with 50,000
participants.\135\ Another study documented the same trend, noting that
larger plans tend to have lower fees because larger plans tend to have
a greater share of assets invested in index funds, which tend to have
lower expenses. Additionally, large 401(k) plans are able to spread the
fixed costs across more participants, lowering the per participant
fee.\136\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\135\ Deloitte Consulting and Investment Company Institute,
``Inside the Structure of Defined Contribution/401(k) Plan Fees,
2013: A Study Assessing the Mechanics of the `All-in' Fee'' (Aug.
2014).
\136\ BrightScope, ICI. ``The BrightScope/ICI Defined
Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at 401(k) Plans, 2017.''
(August 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this analysis, the Department relies on data from BrightScope
to establish a baseline of total plan fees, before the implementation
of this rule. In August of 2020, BrightScope released updated total
plan costs based on 2017 data. Their total plan cost includes asset-
based investment management fees, asset-based administrative and advice
fees, and other fees from the Form 5500 and audited financial
statements of ERISA-covered 401(k) plans.\137\ This data does not
include plans with fewer than 100 participants, the standard set for a
small plan in this analysis. However, the Department believes that the
median total plan costs, provided by BrightScope, serves as a helpful
reference point when considering the additional burden from this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\137\ BrightScope, ICI. ``The BrightScope/ICI Defined
Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at 401(k) Plans, 2017.''
(August 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 3 shows total plan costs from BrightScope; plan cost
information is based on categories of plans with assets less than $1
million, between $1 million and $10 million, and between $10 million
and $50 million. The Department provides as the impact of the rule the
additional cost plans will incur as a percent of plan assets, using the
median asset value of each category, to illustrate how the rule is
likely to affect plans with different amounts of assets. As seen in the
table below, the estimated burden in the first year will
[[Page 81693]]
increase the costs significantly for small plans with minimal assets.
The cost in subsequent years is negligible--less than one percent of
plan assets for even the smallest size category and for most plans less
than 0.25 percent of plan assets.
Table 3--Total First Year Plan Cost as a Percent of Plan Assets for Plans With Less Than 100 Participants
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of plans a Additional
-------------------------------- Beginning plan cost from
median total the rule c
Plan assets plan cost b ---------------
Defined Defined (percent) Percent of mid-
benefit contribution point in asset
range
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$1-24K.......................................... 12 1,750 1.24 d 7.500
$25-49K......................................... 8 1,072 1.24 d 2.368
$50-99K......................................... 37 1,716 1.24 d 1.200
$100-249K....................................... 188 3,638 1.24 d 0.514
$250-499K....................................... 300 4,124 1.24 d 0.240
$500K-999K...................................... 433 5,095 1.24 d 0.120
$1 Million to $10 Million....................... 547 6,458 1.05 0.018
$10 Million to $50 Million...................... 202 2,818 0.78 0.003
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ Calculated as five percent of plans in each asset range, based on data from the 2018 Form 5500 for the
distribution of pension plans with fewer than 100 participants by type of plan and plan assets. As the Form
5500 does not allow a determination of which small plans has stock, the actual size distribution is unknown.
The population distribution is used.
\b\ Total plan cost is BrightScope's measure of the total cost of operating the 401(k) plan and includes asset-
based investment management fees, asset-based administrative and advice fees, and other fees (including
insurance charges) from the Form 5500 and audited financial statements of ERISA-covered 401(k) plans. Total
plan cost is computed only for plans with sufficiently complete information. The sample is 53,856 plans with
$4.4 trillion in assets. BrightScope audited 401(k) filings generally include plans with 100 participants or
more. Plans with fewer than four investment options or more than 100 investment options are excluded from
BrightScope audited 401(k) filings for this analysis. The data does not include DB plans, but due to lack of
comparable data it is applied to DB plans as a proxy for their plan costs. Source: BrightScope, ICI. ``The
BrightScope/ICI Defined Contribution Plan Profile: a Close Look at 401(k) Plans, 2017.'' (August 2020).
\c\ The Department estimates that additional plan cost from the rule will be $899.94. The Department applied
this fixed cost as a percent of mid-point in each asset range.
\d\ BrightScope did not differentiate between plans with less than $1 million in assets; however, as most of the
small plans have less than $1 million in assets, the Department applied this broader estimate to smaller sub-
sets of assets to illustrate how small plans are likely to affected by the rule.
The Department believes that this is likely an overestimate of the
costs faced by small plans, as small plans are likely to rely on
service providers. The Department believes these service providers
offer economies of scale in meeting the requirements of the final rule;
however, the Department does not have data that would allow it to
estimate the number of service providers acting in such a capacity for
these plans.
The time required to make necessary changes to compliance policies
and procedures in response to the rule may vary widely between plans,
the Department believes the requirements in the final rule closely
resemble existing prior guidance and industry best practices. The
Department believes that, on average, the marginal cost to meet the
additional requirements regulation, outside of existing fiduciary
duties, will be small because the required activities are reflected in
common practice and the requirements are similar to prior guidance.
Further, plan fiduciaries would be able to conserve plan assets by
refraining from researching and voting on proposals that they prudently
determine do not have a material effect on the value of the plan's
investment. Thus, the final rule would result in cost savings and other
benefits for small plan sponsors.
3.5. Steps the Agency Has Taken To Minimize the Significant Economic
Impact on Small Entities
As discussed above, the Department's longstanding position is that
the fiduciary duties of prudence and loyalty under ERISA sections
404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) apply to the exercise of shareholder
rights, including proxy voting, proxy voting policies and guidelines,
and the selection and monitoring of proxy advisory firms. These duties
apply to all affected entities-large and small. Accordingly, no special
actions were taken into consideration for small entities.
As discussed above, after carefully considering comments, the
Department was persuaded to eliminate paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) and
adopt a more principle-based, less prescriptive approach in the final
rule that will reduce much of the cost burden associated with the
proposed rule. Paragraph (e)(3)(i) of the proposal provided that a plan
fiduciary must vote any proxy where the fiduciary prudently determined
that the matter being voted upon would have an economic impact on the
plan after considering those factors described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)
of the proposal and taking into account the costs involved (including
the cost of research, if necessary, to determine how to vote).
Paragraph (e)(3)(ii) of the proposal provided that a plan fiduciary
must not vote any proxy unless the fiduciary prudently determined that
the matter being voted upon would have an economic impact on the plan
after considering those factors described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of
the proposal and taking into account the costs involved. This is a
significant adjustment from the proposal that results in a less
prescriptive, more principles-based approach that will reduce much of
the cost burden associated with the proposed rule for all plans,
including small plans. See the section above entitled ``Elimination of
Paragraphs (e)(3)(i) and (ii) from the Proposal'' for a more detailed
discussion of this change.
4. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 \138\ requires
each federal agency to prepare a written statement assessing the
effects of any
[[Page 81694]]
federal mandate in a proposed or final agency rule that may result in
an expenditure of $100 million or more (adjusted annually for inflation
with the base year 1995) in any one year by state, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector. For purposes
of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, as well as Executive Order 12875,
this final rule does not include any federal mandate that the
Department expects would result in such expenditures by state, local,
or tribal governments, or the private sector. This final rule will not
result in an expenditure of $100 million or more in any one year,
because the Department is simply restating and modernizing fiduciary
practices related to voting rights and aligning its regulations to the
extent possible with guidance issued by the SEC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\138\ 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq. (1995).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Federalism Statement
Executive Order 13132 outlines fundamental principles of federalism
and requires federal agencies to adhere to specific criteria when
formulating and implementing policies that have ``substantial direct
effects'' on the states, the relationship between the national
government and states, or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government. Federal
agencies promulgating regulations that have federalism implications
must consult with state and local officials and describe the extent of
their consultation and the nature of the concerns of state and local
officials in the preamble to the final rule.
In the Department's view, this final rule does not have federalism
implications because it does not have direct effects on the states, the
relationship between the national government and the states, or the
distribution of power and responsibilities among various levels of
government. The final rule describes requirements and permitted
practices related to the exercise of shareholder rights under ERISA.
While ERISA generally preempts state laws that relate to ERISA plans,
and preemption typically requires an examination of the individual law
involved, it appears highly unlikely that the provisions in this final
regulation would have preemptive effect on general state corporate
laws.
Statutory Authority
This regulation is adopted pursuant to the authority in section 505
of ERISA (Pub. L. 93-406, 88 Stat. 894; 29 U.S.C. 1135) and section 102
of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978 (43 FR 47713, October 17, 1978),
effective December 31, 1978 (44 FR 1065, January 3, 1979), 3 CFR 1978
Comp. 332, and under Secretary of Labor's Order No. 1-2011, 77 FR 1088
(Jan. 9, 2012).
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Parts 2509 and 2550
Employee benefit plans, Employee Retirement Income Security Act,
Exemptions, Fiduciaries, investments, Pensions, Prohibited
transactions, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Department amends
parts 2509 and 2550 of subchapters A and F of chapter XXV of title 29
of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
Subchapter A--General
PART 2509--INTERPRETIVE BULLETINS RELATING TO THE EMPLOYEE
RETIREMENT INCOME SECURITY ACT OF 1974
0
1. The authority citation for part 2509 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1135. Secretary of Labor's Order 1-2003,
68 FR 5374 (Feb. 3, 2003). Sections 2509.75-10 and 2509.75-2 issued
under 29 U.S.C. 1052, 1053, 1054. Sec. 2509.75-5 also issued under
29 U.S.C. 1002. Sec. 2509.95-1 also issued under sec. 625, Pub. L.
109-280, 120 Stat. 780.
Sec. 2509.2016-01 [Removed]
0
2. Remove Sec. 2509.2016-01.
Subchapter F--Fiduciary Responsibility Under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974
PART 2550--RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY
0
3. The authority citation for part 2550 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 29 U.S.C. 1135 and Secretary of Labor's Order No. 1-
2011, 77 FR 1088 (January 9, 2012). Sec. 102, Reorganization Plan
No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. at 727 (2012). Sec. 2550.401c-1 also
issued under 29 U.S.C. 1101. Sec. 2550.404a-1 also issued under sec.
657, Pub. L. 107-16, 115 Stat 38. Sec. 2550.404a-2 also issued under
sec. 657 of Pub. L. 107-16, 115 Stat. 38. Sections 2550.404c-1 and
2550.404c-5 also issued under 29 U.S.C. 1104. Sec. 2550.408b-1 also
issued under 29 U.S.C. 1108(b)(1). Sec. 2550.408b-19 also issued
under sec. 611, Pub. L. 109-280, 120 Stat. 780, 972. Sec. 2550.412-1
also issued under 29 U.S.C. 1112.
0
4. Section 2550.404a-1 is amended by adding paragraph (e), revising
paragraph (g), and republishing paragraph (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 2550.404a-1 Investment duties.
* * * * *
(e) Proxy voting and exercise of shareholder rights. (1) The
fiduciary duty to manage plan assets that are shares of stock includes
the management of shareholder rights appurtenant to those shares, such
as the right to vote proxies.
(2)(i) When deciding whether to exercise shareholder rights and
when exercising such rights, including the voting of proxies,
fiduciaries must carry out their duties prudently and solely in the
interests of the participants and beneficiaries and for the exclusive
purpose of providing benefits to participants and beneficiaries and
defraying the reasonable expenses of administering the plan.
(ii) The fiduciary duty to manage shareholder rights appurtenant to
shares of stock does not require the voting of every proxy or the
exercise of every shareholder right. In order to fulfill the fiduciary
obligations under paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section, when deciding
whether to exercise shareholder rights and when exercising shareholder
rights, plan fiduciaries must:
(A) Act solely in accordance with the economic interest of the plan
and its participants and beneficiaries;
(B) Consider any costs involved;
(C) Not subordinate the interests of the participants and
beneficiaries in their retirement income or financial benefits under
the plan to any non-pecuniary objective, or promote non-pecuniary
benefits or goals unrelated to those financial interests of the plan's
participants and beneficiaries;
(D) Evaluate material facts that form the basis for any particular
proxy vote or other exercise of shareholder rights;
(E) Maintain records on proxy voting activities and other exercises
of shareholder rights; and
(F) Exercise prudence and diligence in the selection and monitoring
of persons, if any, selected to advise or otherwise assist with
exercises of shareholder rights, such as providing research and
analysis, recommendations regarding proxy votes, administrative
services with voting proxies, and recordkeeping and reporting services.
(iii) Where the authority to vote proxies or exercise shareholder
rights has been delegated to an investment manager pursuant to ERISA
section 403(a)(2), or a proxy voting firm or other person who performs
advisory services as to the voting of proxies, a responsible plan
fiduciary shall prudently monitor the proxy voting activities of such
investment manager or proxy advisory firm and determine whether such
activities are consistent with paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii) and (e)(3)
of this section.
[[Page 81695]]
(iv) A fiduciary may not adopt a practice of following the
recommendations of a proxy advisory firm or other service provider
without a determination that such firm or service provider's proxy
voting guidelines are consistent with the fiduciary's obligations
described in paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(A) through (E) of this section.
(3)(i) In deciding whether to vote a proxy pursuant to paragraphs
(e)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, fiduciaries may adopt proxy voting
policies providing that the authority to vote a proxy shall be
exercised pursuant to specific parameters prudently designed to serve
the plan's economic interest. Paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this
section set forth optional means for satisfying the fiduciary
responsibilities under sections 404(a)(1)(A) and 404(a)(1)(B) of ERISA
with respect to decisions whether to vote, provided such policies are
developed in accordance with a fiduciary's obligations under ERISA as
set forth in the applicable provisions of paragraphs (e)(2)(i) and (ii)
of this section. Paragraphs (e)(3)(i)(A) and (B) of this section do not
establish minimum requirements or the exclusive means for satisfying
these responsibilities. A plan may adopt either or both of the
following policies:
(A) A policy to limit voting resources to particular types of
proposals that the fiduciary has prudently determined are substantially
related to the issuer's business activities or are expected to have a
material effect on the value of the investment.
(B) A policy of refraining from voting on proposals or particular
types of proposals when the plan's holding in a single issuer relative
to the plan's total investment assets is below a quantitative threshold
that the fiduciary prudently determines, considering its percentage
ownership of the issuer and other relevant factors, is sufficiently
small that the matter being voted upon is not expected to have a
material effect on the investment performance of the plan's portfolio
(or investment performance of assets under management in the case of an
investment manager).
(ii) Plan fiduciaries shall periodically review proxy voting
policies adopted pursuant to paragraph (e)(3)(i) of this section.
(iii) No proxy voting policies adopted pursuant to paragraph
(e)(3)(i) of this section shall preclude submitting a proxy vote when
the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter being voted upon is
expected to have a material effect on the value of the investment or
the investment performance of the plan's portfolio (or investment
performance of assets under management in the case of an investment
manager) after taking into account the costs involved, or refraining
from voting when the fiduciary prudently determines that the matter
being voted upon is not expected to have such a material effect after
taking into account the costs involved.
(4)(i)(A) The responsibility for exercising shareholder rights lies
exclusively with the plan trustee except to the extent that either:
(1) The trustee is subject to the directions of a named fiduciary
pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(1); or
(2) The power to manage, acquire, or dispose of the relevant assets
has been delegated by a named fiduciary to one or more investment
managers pursuant to ERISA section 403(a)(2).
(B) Where the authority to manage plan assets has been delegated to
an investment manager pursuant to section 403(a)(2), the investment
manager has exclusive authority to vote proxies or exercise other
shareholder rights appurtenant to such plan assets in accordance with
this section, except to the extent the plan, trust document, or
investment management agreement expressly provides that the responsible
named fiduciary has reserved to itself (or to another named fiduciary
so authorized by the plan document) the right to direct a plan trustee
regarding the exercise or management of some or all of such shareholder
rights.
(ii) An investment manager of a pooled investment vehicle that
holds assets of more than one employee benefit plan may be subject to
an investment policy statement that conflicts with the policy of
another plan. Compliance with ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D) requires the
investment manager to reconcile, insofar as possible, the conflicting
policies (assuming compliance with each policy would be consistent with
ERISA section 404(a)(1)(D)). In the case of proxy voting, to the extent
permitted by applicable law, the investment manager must vote (or
abstain from voting) the relevant proxies to reflect such policies in
proportion to each plan's economic interest in the pooled investment
vehicle. Such an investment manager may, however, develop an investment
policy statement consistent with Title I of ERISA and this section, and
require participating plans to accept the investment manager's
investment policy statement, including any proxy voting policy, before
they are allowed to invest. In such cases, a fiduciary must assess
whether the investment manager's investment policy statement and proxy
voting policy are consistent with Title I of ERISA and this section
before deciding to retain the investment manager.
(5) This section does not apply to voting, tender, and similar
rights with respect to such securities that are passed through pursuant
to the terms of an individual account plan to participants and
beneficiaries with accounts holding such securities.
* * * * *
(g) Applicability date. (1) Except for paragraph (e) of this
section, this section shall apply in its entirety to all investments
made and investment courses of action taken after January 12, 2021.
(2) Plans shall have until April 30, 2022, to make any changes to
qualified default investment alternatives described in Sec. 2550.404c-
5, where necessary to comply with the requirements of paragraph (d)(2)
of this section.
(3) Paragraph (e) of this section applies on January 15, 2021.
Fiduciaries, other than investment advisers subject to 17 CFR
275.206(4)-6, shall have until January 31, 2022, to comply with the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(ii)(D) and (E) of this section. All
fiduciaries shall have until January 31, 2022 to comply with the
requirements of paragraphs (e)(2)(iv) and (e)(4)(ii) of this section.
(h) Severability. If any provision of this section is held to be
invalid or unenforceable by its terms, or as applied to any person or
circumstance, or stayed pending further agency action, the provision
shall be construed so as to continue to give the maximum effect to the
provision permitted by law, unless such holding shall be one of
invalidity or unenforceability, in which event the provision shall be
severable from this section and shall not affect the remainder thereof.
Signed at Washington, DC.
Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administration,
Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2020-27465 Filed 12-15-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P