Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions, 52118-52180 [2022-17995]
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52118
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 163 / Wednesday, August 24, 2022 / Notices
Labor, Room N–1515, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210.
See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below
for additional information regarding
comments.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain
Prohibited Transaction Restrictions
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
Comments
This document contains
notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of
proposed exemptions from certain of the
prohibited transaction restrictions of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the
Code). If granted, these proposed
exemptions allow designated parties to
engage in transactions that would
otherwise be prohibited provided the
conditions stated there in are met. This
notice includes the following proposed
exemptions: Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Association, D–12077; Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Kansas City, D–12039;
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona,
Inc., D–12035; Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Vermont, D–12055; Hawaii
Medical Service Association, D–12038;
BCS Financial Corporation, D–12036;
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Mississippi, D–12040; Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc., D–12041;
BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee,
Inc., D–12045; Triple-S Management
Corporation, D–12042; National
Account Service Company LLC, D–
12049.
DATES: All interested persons are invited
to submit written comments or requests
for a hearing on the pending
exemptions, unless otherwise stated in
the Notice of Proposed Exemption,
within 45 days from the date of
publication of this Federal Register
Notice.
ADDRESSES: All written comments and
requests for a hearing should be sent to
the Employee Benefits Security
Administration (EBSA), Office of
Exemption Determinations, U.S.
Department of Labor, Attention:
Application No. ll, stated in each
Notice of Proposed Exemption via email
to e-OED@dol.gov or online through
https://www.regulations.gov by the end
of the scheduled comment period. Any
such comments or requests should be
sent by the end of the scheduled
comment period. The applications for
exemption and the comments received
will be available for public inspection in
the Public Disclosure Room of the
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of
In light of the current circumstances
surrounding the COVID–19 pandemic
caused by the novel coronavirus which
may result in disruption to the receipt
of comments by U.S. Mail or hand
delivery/courier, persons are
encouraged to submit all comments
electronically and not to follow with
paper copies. Comments should state
the nature of the person’s interest in the
proposed exemption and the manner in
which the person would be adversely
affected by the exemption, if granted. A
request for a hearing can be requested
by any interested person who may be
adversely affected by an exemption. A
request for a hearing must state: (1) The
name, address, telephone number, and
email address of the person making the
request; (2) the nature of the person’s
interest in the exemption and the
manner in which the person would be
adversely affected by the exemption;
and (3) a statement of the issues to be
addressed and a general description of
the evidence to be presented at the
hearing. The Department will grant a
request for a hearing made in
accordance with the requirements above
where a hearing is necessary to fully
explore material factual issues
identified by the person requesting the
hearing. A notice of such hearing shall
be published by the Department in the
Federal Register. The Department may
decline to hold a hearing where: (1) The
request for the hearing does not meet
the requirements above; (2) the only
issues identified for exploration at the
hearing are matters of law; or (3) the
factual issues identified can be fully
explored through the submission of
evidence in written (including
electronic) form.
Warning: All comments received will
be included in the public record
without change and may be made
available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
claimed to be confidential or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. If you submit a
comment, EBSA recommends that you
include your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemptions.
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SUMMARY:
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(such as Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. However, if
EBSA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EBSA might not be
able to consider your comment.
Additionally, the https://
www.regulations.gov website is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EBSA will not know your
identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your
comment. If you send an email directly
to EBSA without going through https://
www.regulations.gov, your email
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public record and
made available on the internet.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions
will be provided to all interested
persons in the manner agreed upon by
the applicant and the Department,
unless otherwise stated in the Notice of
Proposed Exemption, within 15 days of
the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a
copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal
Register and shall inform interested
persons of their right to comment and to
request a hearing (where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were
requested in applications filed pursuant
to section 408(a) of the Act and/or
section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, and in
accordance with procedures set forth in
29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (76 FR
66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).1
Effective December 31, 1978, section
102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of
1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1 (1996), transferred
the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type
requested to the Secretary of Labor.
Therefore, these notices of proposed
exemption are issued solely by the
Department.
The applications contain
representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are
summarized below. Interested persons
are referred to the applications on file
with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and
representations.
1 The Department has considered exemption
applications received prior to December 27, 2011
under the exemption procedures set forth in 29 CFR
part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
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Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
Located in Chicago, Illinois
[Application No. D–12077]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield Association (the Plan) in the first
quarter of 2020.2
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield Association (BCBSA), to
make a series of payments to the Plan,
including: (1) the past payment of
$69,000,000, made on March 12, 2021;
and (2) the past payment of $13,500,000,
made on March 28, 2022 (the
Restorative Payments). If the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the
Restorative Payments amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to BCBSA.
Summary of Facts and
Representations 3
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1. BCBSA is a national association of
35 independent, community-based and
2 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Association; and/or (4) any person
or entity related to a person or entity described in
(1)–(3).
3 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12077 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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locally operated Blue Cross Blue Shield
companies. BCBSA owns and manages
the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
trademarks and names in more than 170
countries around the world and also
grants licenses to independent
companies to use the trademarks and
names in exclusive geographic areas.
2. The Plan is a defined benefit
pension plan that covers eligible
employees or participants of BCBSA
who, as of December 31, 2006, had
completed one year of service, reached
the age of 21, and remained
continuously employed. The Plan was
amended effective January 1, 2007 to
close participation to new entrants as of
December 31, 2006. As of August 31,
2020, the Plan held $104,789.042 in
total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the Applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
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fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$224,525,108. At the time, this
represented 77.66% of total Plan assets.4
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
4 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019, the market value for the Plan’s
assets totaled $289,100,229. As of March
31, 2020, the market value of total assets
for the Plan decreased to $97,181,664.
The Applicant represents that the Plan’s
total losses from the Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy was $183,368,144,
which caused the Plan to be
underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBSA took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 24, 2020, BCBSA and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, BCBSA agreed
to make the Restorative Payments to the
Plan consisting of: (a) a payment not to
exceed $74,000,000 by September 30,
2021; (b) a payment not to exceed
$20,000,000 by September 30, 2022; and
(c) a payment not to exceed $31,000,000
by September 30, 2023. Thereafter,
BCBSA made Restorative Payments to
the Plan of $69,000,000 on March 12,
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2021, and $13,500,000 on March 28,
2022.
12. On June 22, 2022, BCBSA and the
Plan amended the Restorative Payments
provision of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement to provide that
BCBSA’s Restorative Payments under
the Agreement will consist only of the
$69,000,000 payment made on March
12, 2021, and the $13,500,000 payment
made on March 28, 2022.
13. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBSA
its right to retain certain litigation and/
or settlement proceeds recovered from
the Claims (the Assigned Interests).5 Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon
litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer to BCBSA
a repayment (the Repayment) that does
not exceed the total Restorative
Payments made by BCBSA, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed
and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBSA to unrelated third
parties (the Attorney Fees). For the
purposes of this exemption, Attorney
Fees reimbursable to BCBSA do not
include: (a) legal expenses paid by the
Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by
BCBSA for representation of its own
interests or the interests of any party
other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBSA
under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBSA
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
14. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments ($82,500,000),
minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the
Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBSA has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBSA
will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payments actually made by
BCBSA, plus Attorney Fees. For
5 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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example, if BCBSA reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees and the Plan
receives $120,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBSA totaling
$82,600,000.
15. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBSA has made to the
Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBSA
the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if BCBSA has reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees and
the Plan receives $50,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make
a Repayment to BCBSA totaling
$50,100,000.
16. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
17. BCBSA retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
18. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
19. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBSA and any BCBSA affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
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approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
20. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
21. On November 23, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBSA
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount already received, plus
any reasonable legal expense paid to
non-BCBSA-related parties that were
incurred by, or allocated to, BCBSA as
a result of the Claims.6 Thus, if the
Plan’s ultimate recovery amount from
the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, BCBSA, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
6 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBSA in exchange for the Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
22. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBSA in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBSA would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. BCBSA, as
an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to
BCBSA with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBSA) in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBSA in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
23. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
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52121
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBSA fully complies with the
terms of this exemption and is for no
more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBSA or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBSA for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBSA to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBSA or the interests
of any party other than the Plan) where
BCBSA was not otherwise reimbursed
from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.7
24. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
7 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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conditions of the exemption have been
met.
25. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBSA; and/
or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c) of
this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBSA must
be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
26. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBSA before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBSA the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBSA in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
27. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBSA for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that BCBSA paid to non-BCBSA-related
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBSA or the interests
of any party other than the Plan) where
BCBSA was not otherwise reimbursed
by a non-Plan party.
28. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.8 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments substantially
improved the Plan’s funding status,
which enhanced the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBSA the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds
from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an
increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments
(less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by BCBSA to
unrelated third parties, as confirmed
and approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBSA;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)–(c).
Statutory Findings
8 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
29. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
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Summary
30. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.9
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by
BCBSA on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBSA to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes
of this exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBSA do not include:
(1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and
(2) legal expenses paid by BCBSA for
representation of BCBSA or the interests
of any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBSA’’ means Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Association.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement dated November 24,
2020, and its amendment that became
effective on June 22, 2022, containing
all material terms regarding BCBSA’s
agreement to make Required Restorative
Payments to the Plan in return for the
Plan’s potential Repayment to BCBSA of
an amount that is no more than lesser
of the Required Restorative Payment
Amount (as described in Section I(h)) or
the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCBSA in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
9 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBSA and
does not hold an ownership interest in
BCBSA or affiliates of BCBSA;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 10
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBSA or its affiliates during any
fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
two percent (2%) of the Independent
Fiduciary’s gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This
provision also applies to a partnership
or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBSA or from affiliates of BCBSA
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield Association.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$183,368,144 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
10 29
CFR 2509.75–4.
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breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBSA to
the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, defined above, consisting of: (1)
the past payment of $69,000,000 on
March 12, 2021; and (2) the past
payment of $13,500,000 on March 28,
2022. The sum of (1)–(2) is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBSA following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims; and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective November 24, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBSA’s
transfer of Restorative Payments to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCBSA,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment Amount or
the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than March 28, 2022;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBSA; and/
or (4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity identified in (1)–(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBSA is
for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to
BCBSA may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
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52123
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBSA must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBSA for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBSA to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBSA for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBSA to non-BCBSArelated parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
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Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBSA
under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBSA
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBSA must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
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Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Frank Gonzalez of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8553. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
$87,000,000 made to the Plan on
September 9, 2021, and additional
payments to the Plan totaling
$13,000,000 by December 31, 2024. If
the Plan receives litigation proceeds
from the Claims, the Plan will transfer
the lesser of the ligation proceeds
amount or the Restorative Payments
amount already received by the Plan,
plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS
KC.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Kansas City (the Plan) in the
first quarter of 2020.11
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Kansas City (BCBS KC),
to make a series of payments to the Plan,
including the past payment of
Summary of Facts and
Representations 12
1. BCBS KC is a not-for-profit
company that provides health insurance
products and services. BCBS KC is an
independent licensee of the Blue Cross
Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCBS
KC and employees of affiliated
employers. On June 30, 2013, the Plan
was closed to new entrants. As of
August 31, 2020, the Plan covered 1,212
participants and held $80,441,432 in
total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
11 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Kansas City; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
12 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12039 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas
City
Located in Kansas City, Missouri
[Application No. D–12039]
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(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$170,800,689, which represented
77.66% of total Plan assets.13
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
13 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019 the market value of Plan assets was
$219,924,260. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of Plan assets decreased to
$73,641,344. The Applicant represents
that the Plan’s total losses from the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$139,613,178, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS KC took steps to protect Plan
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52125
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 5, 2020, BCBS KC and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, BCBS KC
agreed to make $100,000,000 in
Restorative Payments to the Plan by
September 30, 2021. On September 9,
2021, BCBS KC made an $87,000,000
Restorative Payment to the Plan.
Subsequently, on September 23, 2021,
BCBS KC and the Plan amended the
Restorative Payments provision of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement to state that BCBS KC will
make $100,000,000 in Restorative
Payments to the Plan by December 31,
2024. The prior payment of $87,000,000
together with the required future
payment of $13,000,000 constitutes the
Required Restorative Payments under
this exemption.
12. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBS
KC its right to retain certain litigation
and/or settlement proceeds recovered
from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).14 Per the assignment, once
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS KC a repayment (the
Repayment) that does not exceed the
total Restorative Payments made by
BCBS KC as of that date, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS KC on behalf
of the Plan in connection with the
Claims, if such fees are reviewed and
approved by a qualified independent
fiduciary who confirms that the fees
were reasonably incurred and paid by
BCBS KC to unrelated third parties (the
Attorney Fees).
For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS KC
do not include: (a) legal expenses paid
by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid
by BCBS KC for representation of its
own interests or the interests of any
party other than the Plan. For purposes
of determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
KC under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
KC on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
14 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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KC in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS KC has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBS KC
will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payments actually made by
BCBS KC, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS KC has made
$100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the
Plan receives $120,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS KC totaling
$100,100,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS KC has made to the
Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS KC
the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if BCBS KC has made
$100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the
Plan receives $50,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS KC totaling
$50,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
16. BCBS KC retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
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has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS KC and any BCBS KC affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
20. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS KC
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount by the Plan, plus any
reasonable legal expense paid to nonBCBS KC-related parties that were
incurred by, or allocated to, BCBS KC as
a result of the Claims.15 Thus, if the
15 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
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Plan’s ultimate recovery amount from
the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, BCBS KC, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBS KC in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBS KC in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS KC would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. BCBS KC,
as an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to BCBS
KC with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS KC)
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCBS KC’s promise to make
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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additional Required Restorative
Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension
of credit between the Plan and a partyin-interest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS KC in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS KC fully complies with
the terms of this exemption and is for
no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBS KC or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS KC for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS KC or the
interests of any party other than the
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Plan) where BCBS KC was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.16
23. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS KC;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)-(c)
of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS KC
must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS KC before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS KC the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS KC in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
16 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS KC for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that BCBS KC paid to non-BCBS KCrelated parties for representation of the
Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS KC or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS KC was not otherwise
reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.17 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
17 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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Restorative Payments will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBS KC the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds
from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an
increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments
(less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by BCBS KC to
unrelated third parties, as confirmed
and approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS KC;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
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Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.18
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
KC on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims, if such fees are
reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third
parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBS KC do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the
18 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
BCBS KC for representation of BCBC KC
or the interests of any party other than
the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS KC’’ means Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS KC
and the Plan, dated November 5, 2020,
and its amendment that became
effective on September 23, 2021,
containing all material terms regarding
BCBS KC’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to BCBS KC of an amount
that is no more than lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
(as described in Section I(h)) or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCBS KC in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS KC and
does not hold an ownership interest in
BCBS KC or affiliates of BCBS KC;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 19
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS KC or its affiliates during
any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
19 29
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This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBS KC or from affiliates of BCBS KC
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Kansas City.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$139,613,178 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBS KC
to the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, defined above, consisting of: (1)
the past payment of $87,000,000 on
September 9, 2021; and (2) a second
installment amount of $13,000,000 due
to the Plan by December 31, 2024. The
sum of (1) and (2) is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS KC following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims; and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective November 5, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS KC’s
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transfer of Restorative Payments to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCBS KC,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than December 31, 2024;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS KC;
and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity identified in (1)–
(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS KC
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
KC may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBS KC must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
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share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS KC for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS KC for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS KC to non-BCBS
KC-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
KC under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
KC on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
KC in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a
court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
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52129
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBS KC must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice To Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Nicholas Schroth of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8571. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
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Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona,
Inc.
Located in Phoenix, Arizona
[Application No. D–12035]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Arizona, Inc. (the Plan) in the
first quarter of 2020.20
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc. (BCBS AZ),
to make a series of payments to the Plan,
including: (a) past payments totaling
$130,000,000; and (b) future amounts
necessary for (i) the Plan’s assets to be
equal to or greater than 100% of the
Plan’s current liabilities, and (ii) the
Plan to have an adjusted funding target
attainment percentage (AFTAP) of 110%
(the Restorative Payments).
If the Plan receives litigation proceeds
from the Claims, the Plan will transfer
the lesser of the ligation proceeds
amount or the Restorative Payments,
plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS
AZ.
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Summary of Facts and
Representations 21
1. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Arizona, Inc. (BCBS AZ or the
20 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) the Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.; and/or (4)
any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
21 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12035 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
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Applicant) is a not-for-profit company
that provides health insurance products
and services. BCBS AZ is an
independent licensee of the Blue Cross
Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCBS
AZ and employees of affiliated
employers. On June 30, 2012, the Plan
was closed to new entrants. As of
August 31, 2020, the Plan held
$178,703,160 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was $369.3
million, which represented 77.67% of
total Plan assets.22
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
22 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.67%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019, the market value of the Plan and
its Code section 401(h) Account were
$416,127,759 and $59,347,737,
respectively.23 As of March 31, 2020,
the market value of the Plan’s total
assets and the Code section 401(h)
Account decreased to $137,298,008 and
$20,433,430, respectively. The
Applicant represents that the Plan’s
total losses from the Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy were $302,470,379,
which caused the Plan to be
underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS AZ took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 5, 2020, BCBS AZ and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
23 Code Section 401(h) permits a pension or
annuity plan to provide for payment of benefits for
sickness, accident, hospitalization and medical
expenses for retired employees, their spouses and
dependents. In order for the pension or annuity
plan to meet the provisions of Code Section 401(h),
the medical benefits must be subordinate to pension
benefits and must be established and maintained in
a separate account.
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20:23 Aug 23, 2022
Jkt 256001
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, BCBS AZ
agreed to make $274 million in
Restorative Payments to the Plan
pursuant to an installment payment
structure (the Restorative Payments).
BCBS AZ made its first installment
payment of $60 million to the Plan on
September 15, 2020. Thereafter, BCBS
AZ made a Restorative Payment to the
Plan of $35,000,000 on December 28,
2020, and $10,000,000 on July 31, 2021.
Thus, as of July 31, 2021, BCBS AZ had
made Restorative Payments to the Plan
totaling $105 million.
12. On October 13, 2021, BCBS AZ
and the Plan amended the Restorative
Payments provision of the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement (the
Restorative Payment Amendment).
BCBS AZ agreed that before December
31, 2023, it would contribute amounts
necessary for the Plan to have: (a) an
adjusted funding target attainment
percentage of 110% (after taking into
account any waivers of the funding
standard carryover balance by the Plan
Sponsor); and (b) an amount of assets
that is at least 100% of current Plan
liabilities. In addition, any minimum
required contributions made by BCBS
AZ to the Plan on or after October 13,
2021, will not be included as part of the
Restorative Payments required under
the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. The prior restorative
payments noted above in paragraph 11
together with the obligations noted here
in paragraph 12 constitute the Required
Restorative Payments under this
exemption.
13. On December 21, 2021, BCBS AZ
made a fourth Restorative Payment to
the Plan totaling $25,000,000.24 The
Applicant represents that after making
this most recent $25,000,000 Restorative
Payment, BCBS AZ has brought the
Plan’s funding level to 110% of AFTAP
and, thus, has met its obligation under
item (a) of the Restorative Payment
Amendment identified above. This
exemption, if granted, requires BCBS
AZ to make additional Restorative
Contributions to the Plan before
December 31, 2023, to ensure that the
Plan has an amount of assets that is at
least 100% of current Plan liabilities.
14. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBS
AZ its right to retain certain litigation
and/or settlement proceeds recovered
from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).25 Per the assignment, once
24 With the $25,000,000 payment, total
Restorative Payments to the Plan now total
$130,000,000.
25 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
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52131
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS AZ a repayment (the
Repayment) that does not exceed the
total Restorative Payments made by
BCBS AZ, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid by BCBS AZ on behalf of the Plan
in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS AZ to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCBS AZ do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal
expenses paid by BCBS AZ for
representation of its own interests or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS AZ under this
exemption, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS AZ on
behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
AZ in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
15. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS AZ has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBS AZ
will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payments actually made by
BCBS AZ, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS AZ has made
$130,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $160,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS AZ totaling
$130,100,000.
16. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS AZ has made to the
Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS AZ
the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if BCBS AZ has made
$130,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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the Plan and has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $50,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS AZ totaling
$50,100,000.
17. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
18. BCBS AZ retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
19. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
20. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS AZ and any BCBS AZ affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
21. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
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Jkt 256001
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
22. On November 3, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS AZ
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount, plus any reasonable
legal expense paid to non-BCBS AZrelated parties that were incurred by, or
allocated to, BCBS AZ as a result of the
Claims.26 Thus, if the Plan’s ultimate
recovery amount from the Claims is less
than the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS
AZ, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBS AZ in exchange for the
Assignment.
26 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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ERISA Analysis
23. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBS AZ in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS AZ would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. BCBS AZ,
as an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to BCBS
AZ with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS AZ)
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCBS AZ’s promise to make
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS AZ in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
24. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
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Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS AZ fully complies with
the terms of this exemption and is for
no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBS AZ or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS AZ for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS AZ or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS AZ was not
otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan
party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.27
25. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
27 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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26. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS AZ;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)–(c)
of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS AZ
must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
27. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS AZ before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS AZ the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS AZ in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
28. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS AZ for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that BCBS AZ paid to non-BCBS AZrelated parties for representation of the
Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS AZ or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS AZ was not
otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan
party.
29. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
30. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
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52133
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.28 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBS AZ the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount already
received, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims,
ensuring that the Proposed Transactions
will result in an increase in Plan assets
to: (a) an adjusted funding target
attainment percentage of at least 110%;
and (b) and an amount that is at least
equal to or greater than 100% of the
current liabilities of the Plan (less
reasonable legal expenses related to the
Claims paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated
third parties as confirmed and approved
by the Independent Fiduciary). Further,
this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action
the Plan may have against: (a) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) BCBS AZ; and/or (d)
28 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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any person or entity related to a person
or entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
31. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.29
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims, if such fees are
reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third
parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBS AZ do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the
Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
BCBS AZ for representation of BCBC AZ
or the interests of any party other than
the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS AZ’’ means Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Amended Contribution
and Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS AZ
and the Plan, dated November 5, 2020,
and its amendment that became
effective on October 13, 2021,
containing all material terms regarding
BCBS AZ’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to BCBS AZ of an amount
that is no more than lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
(as described in Section I(h)) already
received or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid to unrelated third parties by BCBS
AZ in connection with the Claims.
29 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS AZ and
does not hold an ownership interest in
BCBS AZ or affiliates of BCBS AZ;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 30
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS AZ or its affiliates during
any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBS AZ or from affiliates of BCBS AZ
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
30 29
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Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$302,470,379 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBS AZ
to the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, defined above, consisting of: (1)
a first installment amount of
$60,000,000 that BCBS AZ contributed
to the Plan on September 15, 2020; (2)
a second installment amount of
$35,000,000 that BCBS AZ contributed
to the Plan on December 28, 2020; (3)
a third installment amount of
$10,000,000 that BCBS AZ contributed
to the Plan on July 30, 2021; (4) a fourth
installment amount of $25,000,000 that
BCBS AZ contributed to the Plan on
December 21, 2021; and (5) other
amounts contributed to the Plan by
BCBS AZ before December 31, 2023 that
are necessary for (i) the Plan to have an
adjusted funding target attainment
percentage of 110% after taking into
account any waivers of the funding
standard carryover balance by the Plan
Sponsor, and (ii) the Plan’s assets to be
equal to or greater than 100% of the
current liabilities of the Plan. The sum
of (1)-(5) is the Required Restorative
Payment Amount. The term ‘‘Required
Restorative Payment’’ will not include
any required minimum contributions
that BCBS AZ makes to the Plan on and
after October 13, 2021.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS AZ following the
Plan’s receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made
following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a
manner that is consistent with the terms
of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective September 15, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS
AZ’s transfer of Restorative Payments to
the Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCBS AZ,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment Amount
already received or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan received
from the Claims, plus reasonable
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Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the
Conditions set forth in Section III are
met.
jspears on DSK121TN23PROD with NOTICES2
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than December 31, 2023;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS AZ;
and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3)
of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS AZ
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
AZ may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBS AZ must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS AZ for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
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Jkt 256001
paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS AZ for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS AZ to non-BCBS
AZ-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
AZ under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
AZ in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a
court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
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52135
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBS AZ must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Frank Gonzalez of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8553. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont
Located in Berlin, Vermont
[Application No. D–12055]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
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Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Vermont (the Plan) in the first
quarter of 2020.31
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Vermont (BCBS VT), to
make a series of payments to the Plan
over a four-year period (the Restorative
Payments). The Restorative Payments
will return the Plan to at least the Plan’s
funding level (126.61%) as of January 1,
2019. If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer the lesser of the ligation
proceeds amount or the Restorative
Payments amount, plus reasonable
attorney fees to BCBS VT.
jspears on DSK121TN23PROD with NOTICES2
Summary of Facts and
Representations 32
1. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Vermont (BCBS VT or the Applicant) is
a not-for-profit hospital and medical
services corporation that issues and
administers health care coverage for
individuals and group health plans.
BCBS VT is an independent licensee of
the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association
(BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCBS
VT. As of August 31, 2020, the Plan
held $28,331,698 in total assets.
31 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Vermont, Inc.; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
32 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12055 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
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$53,105,089, which represented 76.48%
of total Plan assets.33
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
33 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 76.48%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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2019, the market value of the Plan’s
total assets was $69,439,545. As of
March 31, 2020, the market value of the
Plan’s total assets decreased to
$25,510,951. The Plan’s total losses
from the Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy were $41,588,205, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS VT took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
December 21, 2020, BCBS VT and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
11. The Restorative Payments. In the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, BCBS VT agreed to make an
initial $13,000,000 lump sum payment
to the Plan which was expected to
restore the Plan to an AFTAP funding
level of approximately 80% as of the
January 1, 2021 valuation of the Plan.
BCBS VT also agreed to make such
additional payments to the Plan as
necessary to maintain the Plan’s funding
level at 80% as of such date, to the
extent the preliminary $13,000,000
installment payment fails to do so.34
Finally, BCBS VT stated that it intended
to make subsequent installment
payments to the Plan on at least an
annual basis and over a four-year period
to restore Plan funding to approximately
the level that was reported prior to the
losses sustained within the Allianz
Structured Alpha strategy.
12. Since the effective date of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, BCBS VT has made two
Restorative Payments to the Plan: a
$13,000,000 payment remitted on
December 23, 2020, and a $3,100,000
34 BCBS VT has made two Restorative Payments
to the Plan: a $13,000,000 payment remitted on
December 23, 2020, and a $3,100,000 payment
remitted on September 14, 2021.
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payment remitted on September 14,
2021.
13. Department’s Note: This
exemption, if granted, requires BCBS VT
to make the Restorative Payments
necessary to bring the Plan’s funding
percentage to at least its January 1, 2019,
pre-loss funded percentage of 126.61%,
by December 31, 2024. The prior
restorative payments noted above in
paragraph 12 together with the funding
obligations noted here in paragraph 13
constitute the Required Restorative
Payments under this exemption.
14. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBS
VT its right to retain certain litigation
and/or settlement proceeds recovered
from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).35 Per the assignment, once
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS VT a repayment (the
Repayment) that does not exceed the
total Restorative Payments made by
BCBS VT, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid by BCBS VT on behalf of the Plan
in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS VT to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCBS VT do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal
expenses paid by BCBS VT for
representation of its own interests or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS VT under this
exemption, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS VT on behalf
of the Plan in connection with the
Claims must be reduced by the amount
of legal fees received by BCBS VT in
connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
15. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS VT has made to the
35 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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52137
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBS VT
will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payments actually made by
BCBS VT, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS VT made $18,000,000
in Restorative Payments to the Plan and
reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives
$30,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS
VT totaling $18,100,000.
16. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS VT has made to the
Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS VT
the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if BCBS VT made
$18,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the
Plan receives $10,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS VT totaling
$10,100,000.
17. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
18. BCBS VT retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
19. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
20. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
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parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS VT and any BCBS VT affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
21. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
22. On December 21, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS VT
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount received, plus any
reasonable legal expense paid to nonBCBS VT-related parties that were
incurred by, or allocated to, BCBS VT as
a result of the Claims.36 Thus, if the
Plan’s ultimate recovery amount from
the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, BCBS VT, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
36 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBS VT in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
23. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBS VT in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS VT would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. BCBS VT,
as an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to BCBS
VT with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS VT)
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCBS VT’s promise to make
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS VT in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
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Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
24. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS VT fully complies with
the terms of this exemption and is for
no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBS VT or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS VT for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS VT or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS VT was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
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410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.37
25. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
26. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS VT;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)–(c)
of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS VT
must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
27. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS VT before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS VT the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS VT in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
28. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS VT for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that BCBS VT paid to non-BCBS VTrelated parties for representation of the
Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS VT or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS VT was not otherwise
reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
29. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
37 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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Jkt 256001
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
30. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.38 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
38 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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52139
BCBS VT the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received,
or the amount the Plan receives in
proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that
the Proposed Transactions will result in
an increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments
(less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by BCBS VT to
unrelated third parties, as confirmed
and approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS VT;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
31. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.39
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
VT on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims, if such fees are
reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third
parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBS VT do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the
Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
BCBS VT for representation of BCBC VT
or the interests of any party other than
the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS VT’’ means Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS VT
39 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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and the Plan, dated December 21, 2020,
containing all material terms regarding
BCBS VT’s agreement to make
Restorative Payments (as described in
Section I(h)) to the Plan in return for the
Plan’s potential Repayment to BCBS VT
of an amount that is no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payments
or the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCBS VT in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS VT and
does not hold an ownership interest in
BCBS VT or affiliates of BCBS VT;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 40
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS VT or its affiliates during
any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
40 29
CFR 2509.75–4.
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BCBS VT or from affiliates of BCBS VT
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Vermont.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$41,588,205 in Plan losses the BCBSA’s
National Employee Benefits Committee
alleges were the result of breaches of
fiduciary responsibilities and breaches
of contract by Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments USA
Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBS VT
to the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, including: (1) the past payment
of $13,000,000 made on December 23,
2020, (2) the past payment of $3,100,000
made on September 14, 2021, and (3)
amounts necessary to restore the Plan to
its funding level of 126.91% before
December 31, 2024. The sum of (1)–(3)
is the Required Restorative Payment
Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS VT following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims; and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective December 21, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS VT’s
transfer of Restorative Payments to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCBS VT,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment Amount or
the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than December 31, 2024;
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(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS VT;
and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity identified in (1)–
(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS VT
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
VT may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBS VT must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS VT for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
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conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS VT for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS VT to non-BCBS
VT-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
VT under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
VT on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
VT in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a
court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBS VT must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
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notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Nicholas Schroth of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8571. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
Hawaii Medical Service Association
Located in Honolulu, Hawaii
[Application No. D–12038]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Hawaii Medical Service
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52141
Association (the Plan) in the first
quarter of 2020.41
This proposed exemption would
permit the past payment of $50,000,000
by Hawaii Medical Service Association
(HMSA), the Plan sponsor, to the Plan
(the Restorative Payment). If the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the
Restorative Payment amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to HMSA.
Summary of Facts and
Representations 42
1. HMSA is a not-for-profit company
that provides health insurance products
and services. HMSA is an independent
licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield
Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of HMSA
and employees of affiliated employers.
On December 31, 2014, the Plan was
closed to new entrants. In August 2020,
the Sponsor elected to freeze Plan
benefits for all participants effective
December 31, 2024. As of December 31,
2020, the Plan covered 1,638
participants and held $167,536,184 in
total assets.
3. Up until 2020, the Plan held a
beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and
Blue Shield National Retirement Trust
(the Trust).43 The Trust is a master trust
that holds the assets of 16 defined
benefit pension plans that participate in
the BCBSA’s National Retirement
41 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Hawaii
Medical Service Association; and/or (4) any person
or entity related to a person or entity described in
(1)–(3).
42 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12038 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
43 The Plan withdrew substantially all of its assets
from the Trust in advance of the Trust’s August 31,
2020 valuation date.
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Program (the Participating Plans).
Northern Trust serves as Trustee and
asset custodian to the Trust and
maintains separate records that reflect
the net asset value of each Participating
Plan. The Trust’s earnings, market
adjustments, and administrative
expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the
respective Participating Plan’s share of
the Trust’s assets. A Participating Plan’s
interest in the Trust’s net assets is based
on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$229,799,688, which represented
86.11% of total Plan assets.44
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019, the market value of the Plan was
$266,849,059. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of the Plan’s total assets
decreased to $90,420,304. The
44 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 86.11%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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Applicant represents that the Plan’s
total losses from the Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy were $187,271,581,
which caused the Plan to be
underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
HMSA took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 3, 2020, HMSA and the Plan
entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement) whereby HMSA agreed to
make a $50,000,000 Restorative
Payment to the Plan. Subsequently, on
December 18, 2020, HMSA made a
$50,000,000 Restorative Payment to the
Plan. This $50,000,000 payment is the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
under this exemption.
11. In exchange for the Restorative
Payment, the Plan assigned to HMSA its
right to retain certain litigation and/or
settlement proceeds recovered from the
Claims (the Assigned Interests).45 Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon
litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer to HMSA
a repayment (the Repayment) that does
not exceed the total Restorative Payment
made by HMSA as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by HMSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed
and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by HMSA to unrelated third
parties (the Attorney Fees).
For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to HMSA do
not include: (a) legal expenses paid by
45 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by
HMSA for representation of its own
interests or the interests of any party
other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to HMSA
under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by HMSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by HMSA
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
12. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payment, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the $50,000,000 Restorative
Payment that HMSA made to the Plan,
the Plan’s Repayment to HMSA will be
limited to $50,000,000 plus Attorney
Fees. For example, if the Plan receives
$80,000,000 in litigation proceeds and
HMSA has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, the Plan will
make a Repayment to HMSA totaling
$50,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the $50,000,000 Restorative
Payment that HMSA made to the Plan,
the Plan will transfer to HMSA the
lesser amount of litigation or settlement
proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if the Plan receives
$30,000,000 in litigation proceeds and
HMSA has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, the Plan will
make a Repayment to HMSA totaling
$30,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
15. HMSA retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payment and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
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further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
HMSA and any HMSA affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
19. On March 18, 2021, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payment, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse HMSA
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount, plus any reasonable
legal expense paid to non-HMSA-related
parties that were incurred by, or
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52143
allocated to, HMSA as a result of the
Claims.46 Thus, if the Plan’s ultimate
recovery amount from the Claims is less
than the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, HMSA,
not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from
HMSA in exchange for the Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
20. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payment from
HMSA in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to HMSA would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. HMSA, as
an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payment to the Plan and the
Plan’s potential repayment to HMSA
with litigation or settlement proceeds
would constitute impermissible
exchanges between the Plan and a partyin-interest (HMSA) in violation of
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
46 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to HMSA in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
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Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to HMSA fully complies with the
terms of this exemption and is for no
more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payment actually made to
the Plan by HMSA or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to HMSA for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by HMSA to unrelated third parties
for representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of HMSA or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where HMSA was
not otherwise reimbursed from a nonPlan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
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(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.47
22. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) HMSA; and/
or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c) of
this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to HMSA must
be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
24. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to HMSA before the date:
the Plan has received from HMSA the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payment agreed to in the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement; and all the
Claims are settled. Furthermore, the
Plan may not pay any interest to HMSA
in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payment.
25. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse HMSA for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that HMSA paid to non-HMSA-related
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of HMSA or the interests
of any party other than the Plan) where
HMSA was not otherwise reimbursed by
a non-Plan party.
47 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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26. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.48 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payment will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
48 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
HMSA the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds
from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an
increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payment
(less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by HMSA to
unrelated third parties, as confirmed
and approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) HMSA;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.49
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by
HMSA on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by HMSA to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes
of this exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to HMSA do not include:
(1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and
(2) legal expenses paid by HMSA for
representation of HMSA or the interests
of any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
49 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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(c) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between HMSA and
the Plan, dated November 3, 2020,
containing all material terms regarding
HMSA’s agreement to make a
$50,000,000 payment to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to HMSA of an amount that
is no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made by
HMSA or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees
paid to unrelated third parties by HMSA
in connection with the Claims.
(d) The term ‘‘HMSA’’ means Hawaii
Medical Service Association.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of HMSA and
does not hold an ownership interest in
HMSA or affiliates of HMSA;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 50
(5) Has not received gross income
from HMSA or its affiliates during any
fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
two percent (2%) of the Independent
Fiduciary’s gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This
provision also applies to a partnership
or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
50 29
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52145
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
HMSA or from affiliates of HMSA while
serving as an Independent Fiduciary.
This prohibition will continue for six
months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the
Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during
the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent
Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Hawaii Medical
Service Association.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$187,271,581 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payment’’
means the payment made by HMSA to
the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, defined above, consisting of a
$50,000,000 payment that HMSA
contributed to the Plan on December 18,
2020. This $50,000,000 payment is the
Required Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to HMSA following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims; and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and the sanctions
resulting from the application of Code
Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), does not
apply, effective November 3, 2020, to
the following transactions: HMSA’s
transfer of Restorative Payment to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to HMSA,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment Amount or
the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
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Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment on December 18,
2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Restorative Payment, the Plan does
not release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action the Plan may have
against the following: (1) any fiduciary
of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the
Trust; (3) HMSA; and/or (4) any person
or entity related to a person or entity
identified in (1)–(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to HMSA is
for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payment received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to HMSA
may only occur after the Independent
Fiduciary has determined that: all the
conditions of the exemption are met; the
Plan has received the Restorative
Payment it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is
due. The Plan’s Repayment to HMSA
must be carried out in a manner
designed to minimize unnecessary costs
and disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payment and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the terms
of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, are prudent and in the
interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to HMSA for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by HMSA to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
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Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse HMSA for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by HAS to non-HMSArelated parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to HMSA
under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by HMSA
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by HMSA
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, HMSA must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
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Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs.
Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8567.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
BCS Financial Corporation
Located in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois
[Application No. D–12036]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
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Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of BCS Financial
Corporation (the Plan) in the first
quarter of 2020.51
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, BCS Financial
Corporation (BCS), to make a series of
payments to the Plan, including: (a) past
payments totaling $19,600,000; and (b)
a payment of $1,800,000 on or before
September 13, 2023 (the Restorative
Payments). If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer the lesser of the ligation
proceeds amount or the Restorative
Payments, plus reasonable attorney fees
to BCS.
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Summary of Facts and
Representations 52
1. BCS is a not-for-profit company
that provides health insurance products
and services. BCS is wholly-owned by
all of the primary licensees of Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA)
that are headquartered in Illinois.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCS.
On December 31, 2019, the Plan was
closed to new entrants. As of December
31, 2020, the Plan covered 242
participants and held $35,258,813 in
total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
51 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCS
Financial Corporation; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)–
(3).
52 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12036 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$36,190,972, which represented 77.66%
of total Plan assets.53
53 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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52147
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019, the market value of the Plan was
$46,599,770. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of the Plan’s total assets
decreased to $15,806,147. The
Applicant represents that the Plan’s
total losses from the Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy were $29,496,983, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
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9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCS took steps to protect Plan benefits
and avoid onerous benefit restrictions
under Code section 436 that could apply
to the Plan as a result of a funding
shortfall. Therefore, on October 9, 2020,
BCS and the Plan entered into a
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, BCS agreed to
make a $16,000,000 Restorative
Payment to the Plan within seven
business days after the Agreement’s
effective date. Subsequently, on October
13, 2020, BCS made a $16,000,000
Restorative Payment to the Plan.
12. On September 27, 2021, BCS and
the Plan amended the Restorative
Payments provision of the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement (the
Restorative Payment Amendment).
Pursuant to the amendment, BCS agreed
to make the following three additional
Restorative Payments to the Plan: (a) a
payment of $1,800,000 on or before
September 13, 2021; (b) a payment of
$1,800,000 on or before September 13,
2022; and (c) a payment of $1,800,000
on or before September 13, 2023. Since
the effective date of the Restorative
Payment Amendment, BCS Financial
has made two additional Restorative
Payments to the Plan: a $1,800,000
payment on September 14, 2021, and a
$1,800,000 payment on January 14,
2022.
13. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCS its
right to retain certain litigation and/or
settlement proceeds recovered from the
Claims (the Assigned Interests).54 Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon
litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
54 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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Claims, the Plan will transfer to BCS a
repayment (the Repayment) that does
not exceed the total Restorative
Payments made by BCS, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCS on behalf of
the Plan in connection with the Claims,
if such fees are reviewed and approved
by a qualified independent fiduciary
who confirms that the fees were
reasonably incurred and paid by BCS to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCS do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal
expenses paid by BCS for representation
of its own interests or the interests of
any party other than the Plan. For
purposes of determining the amount of
Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse
to BCS under this exemption, the
amount of reasonable attorney fees paid
by BCS on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCS in connection with the
Claims from any non-Plan party (for
example, from a third party pursuant to
a court award).
14. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCS has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCS will
be limited to the amount of Restorative
Payments actually made by BCS, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if BCS has
made $19,600,000 in Restorative
Payments to the Plan and reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and
if the Plan receives $30,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make
a Repayment to BCS totaling
$19,700,000.
15. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCS has made to the
Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCS the
lesser amount of litigation or settlement
proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCS has made $19,600,000
in Restorative Payments to the Plan and
has reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives
$10,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCS
totaling $10,100,000.
16. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
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proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
17. BCS retained Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or the
Independent Fiduciary) of New York,
New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
18. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
19. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCS and any BCS affiliates. Gallagher
further represents the total revenues it
has received from the Plan and from
parties in interest to the Plan in
connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
20. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
21. On October 9, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
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Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCS only
up to the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus any reasonable legal
expense paid to non-BCS-related parties
that were incurred by, or allocated to,
BCS as a result of the Claims.55 Thus,
if the Plan’s ultimate recovery amount
from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount,
plus related litigation expenses that
were allocated to the Plan, BCS, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCS in exchange for the Assignment.
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ERISA Analysis
22. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCS in exchange for the Plan’s transfer
of litigation or settlement proceeds to
BCS would violate ERISA. In this
regard, ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A)
prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
the plan to engage in a transaction if the
fiduciary knows or should know that
55 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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such transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect sale or exchange of any
property between a plan and a party in
interest. BCS, as an employer whose
employees are covered by the Plan, is a
party in interest with respect to the Plan
under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan and the Plan’s potential repayment
to BCS with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCS) in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCS’s promise to make
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCS in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
23. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
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52149
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCS fully complies with the
terms of this exemption and is for no
more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCS or the amount the Plan
received from the Claims, plus Attorney
Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCS for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCS to unrelated third parties
for representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCS or the interests of any party other
than the Plan) where BCS was not
otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan
party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.56
24. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
25. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCS; and/or
(d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c) of
this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCS must be
made in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments.
56 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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26. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCS before the date: the
Plan has received from BCS the entire
amount of the Restorative Payments
agreed to in the Amended Contribution
and Assignment Agreement; and all the
Claims are settled. Furthermore, the
Plan may not pay any interest to BCS in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
27. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCS for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that
BCS paid to non-BCS-related parties for
representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCS or the interests of any party other
than the Plan) where BCS was not
otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan
party.
28. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
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29. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.57 In this
57 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
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regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
BCS the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds
from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an
increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments
(less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by BCS to unrelated
third parties, as confirmed and
approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCS; and/
or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
30. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.58
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCS
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed
and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCS to unrelated third
parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCS do not include: (1)
legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (2)
legal expenses paid by BCS for
representation of BCS or the interests of
any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCS’’ means BCS
Financial Corporation.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCS and the
Plan, dated October 9, 2020, and its
amendment that became effective on
September 27, 2021, containing all
material terms regarding BCS’s
agreement to make Required Restorative
Payments (as described in Section I(h))
to the Plan in return for the Plan’s
potential Repayment to BCS of an
amount that is no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCS in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCS and does
not hold an ownership interest in BCS
or affiliates of BCS;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
58 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 59
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCS or its affiliates during any
fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
two percent (2%) of the Independent
Fiduciary’s gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This
provision also applies to a partnership
or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCS or from affiliates of BCS while
serving as an Independent Fiduciary.
This prohibition will continue for six
months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the
Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during
the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent
Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of BCS Financial
Corporation.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$29,496,983 in Plan losses the BCBSA’s
National Employee Benefits Committee
alleges were the result of breaches of
fiduciary responsibilities and breaches
of contract by Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments USA
Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCS in
connection with the Plan Losses,
defined above, consisting of: (1) the past
payment of $16,000,000, made on
October 13, 2020; (2) the past payment
of $1,800,000, made on September 14,
2021; (3) the past payment of $1,800,000
made on January 14, 2022; and (4) a
payment of $1,800,000 to be made on or
before September 13, 2023. The sum of
59 29
CFR 2509.75–4.
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(1)–(4) is the Required Restorative
Payment Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCS following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims; and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective October 9, 2020, to
the following transactions: BCS’s
transfer of Restorative Payments to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCS, which
must be no more than the lesser of the
Restorative Payment Amount or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than September 13, 2023;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCS; and/or
(4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity identified in (1)–(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCS is
for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to BCS
may only occur after the Independent
Fiduciary has determined that: all the
conditions of the exemption are met; the
Plan has received all the Restorative
Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is
due. The Plan’s Repayment to BCS must
be carried out in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
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52151
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCS for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCS to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCS for reasonable legal
expenses paid in connection with the
Claims by BCS to non-BCS-related
parties. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCS under this proposal,
the amount of reasonable attorney fees
paid by BCS on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCS in connection with the
Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e.,
pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
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(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCS must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
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information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Frank Gonzalez of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8553. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Mississippi, A Mutual Insurance
Company
Located in Flowood, Mississippi
[Application No. D–12040]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Mississippi (the Plan) in the
first quarter of 2020.60
This proposed exemption would
permit the past payments of $70,000,000
and $12,000,000 by the Plan sponsor,
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Mississippi, A Mutual Insurance
Company (BCBS MS), to the Plan (the
Restorative Payments). If the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the
Restorative Payments, plus reasonable
attorney fees to BCBS MS.
60 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Mississippi, a Mutual Insurance
Company; and/or (4) any person or entity related to
a person or entity described in (1)–(3).
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Summary of Facts and
Representations 61
1. BCBS MS is a not-for-profit
company that provides health insurance
products and services. BCBS MS is an
independent licensee of the Blue Cross
Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCBS
MS and employees of affiliated
employers. As of December 31, 2006,
the Plan was closed to new entrants. As
of December 31, 2020, the Plan covered
976 participants and held $153,536,775
in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
61 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12040 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$122,962,882, which represented
71.18% of total Plan assets.62
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
62 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 71.18%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019 the market value of Plan assets was
$172,731,750. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of Plan assets decreased to
$67,238,446. The Applicant represents
that the Plan’s total losses from the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$102,446,155, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS MS took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
September 17, 2020, BCBS MS and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, BCBS MS
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52153
agreed to make the following Restorative
Payments to the Plan: (a) a $70,000,000
payment within seven business days of
the effective date of the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement; and (b) a
$12,000,000 payment on or about
November 24, 2020. BCBS MS
subsequently made the following
Restorative Payments to the Plan: (a) a
payment of $70,000,000 on September
21, 2020; and (b) a payment of
$12,000,000 on November 25, 2020.
12. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBS
MS its right to retain certain litigation
and/or settlement proceeds recovered
from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).63 Per the assignment, once
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS MS a repayment (the
Repayment) that does not exceed the
total Restorative Payments made by
BCBS MS as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
MS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims, if such fees are
reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties (the Attorney Fees).
For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS MS
do not include: (a) legal expenses paid
by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid
by BCBS MS for representation of its
own interests or the interests of any
party other than the Plan. For purposes
of determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
MS under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
MS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
MS in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan, however, may
ultimately receive more than the
Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS MS has made to
the Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
MS will be limited to the amount of
63 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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Restorative Payments actually made by
BCBS MS, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS MS reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and
the Plan receives $100,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make
a Repayment to BCBS MS totaling
$82,100,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS MS has made to
the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS
MS the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if BCBS MS has
reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives
$50,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS
MS totaling $50,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
16. BCBS MS retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS MS and any BCBS MS affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
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in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
20. On September 17, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS MS
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount received by the Plan,
plus any reasonable legal expense paid
to non-BCBS MS-related parties that
were incurred by, or allocated to, BCBS
MS as a result of the Claims.64 Thus, if
the Plan’s ultimate recovery amount
from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount,
plus related litigation expenses that
were allocated to the Plan, BCBS MS,
not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
64 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBS MS in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBS MS in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS MS would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. BCBS MS,
as an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to BCBS
MS with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS MS)
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCBS MS’s promise to make
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS MS in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
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Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS MS fully complies with
the terms of this exemption and is for
no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBS MS or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS MS for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS MS or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS MS was not
otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan
party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
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410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.65
23. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS MS;
and/or (d) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (a)-(c)
of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS MS
must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS MS before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS MS the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS MS in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS MS for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that BCBS MS paid to non-BCBS MSrelated parties for representation of the
Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS MS or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS MS was not
otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan
party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
65 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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52155
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.66 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments substantially
improved the Plan’s funding status,
which enhanced the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
66 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBS MS the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received
by the Plan, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims,
ensuring that the Proposed Transactions
will result in an increase in Plan assets
of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payments (less reasonable
legal expenses related to the Claims
paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by
the Independent Fiduciary). Further,
this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action
the Plan may have against: (a) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) BCBS MS; and/or (d)
any person or entity related to a person
or entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
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Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.67
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
MS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims, if such fees are
reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBS MS do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the
Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
BCBS MS for representation of BCBC
MS or the interests of any party other
than the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS MS’’ means Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi, a
Mutual Insurance Company.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
67 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS MS
and the Plan, dated September 17, 2020,
containing all material terms regarding
BCBS MS’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to BCBS MS of an amount
that is no more than lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
(as described in Section I(h)) or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCBS MS in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS MS and
does not hold an ownership interest in
BCBS MS or affiliates of BCBS MS;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 68
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS MS or its affiliates during
any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
68 29
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officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBS MS or from affiliates of BCBS MS
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Mississippi.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$102,446,155 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBS MS
to the Plan in connection with the Plan
Losses, defined above, consisting of: (1)
the past payment of $70,000,000 made
on September 21, 2020; and (2) the past
payment of $12,000,000 made on
November 25, 2020. The sum of (1) and
(2) is the Required Restorative Payment
Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS MS following the
Plan’s receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made
following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a
manner that is consistent with the terms
of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective September 17, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS
MS’s transfer of Restorative Payments to
the Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to BCBS MS,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payments or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan
received from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that
the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III
are met.
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Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than November 25, 2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS MS;
and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity identified in (1)–
(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS MS
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
MS may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBS MS must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments were fully and
timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS MS for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
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(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS MS for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS MS to non-BCBS
MS-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
MS under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
MS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
MS in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a
court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
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52157
Fiduciary, BCBS MS must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs.
Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8567.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Nebraska, Inc.
Located in Omaha, Nebraska
[Application No. D–12041]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
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LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Nebraska, Inc. (the Plan) in the
first quarter of 2020.69
This proposed exemption would
permit the past payments of $7,000,000
and $6,600,000 by the Plan sponsor,
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska,
Inc. (BCBS Nebraska or the Applicant),
to the Plan (the Restorative Payments).
If the Plan receives litigation proceeds
from the Claims, the Plan will transfer
the lesser of the ligation proceeds
amount or the Restorative Payments,
plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS
Nebraska.
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Summary of Facts and
Representations 70
1. BCBS Nebraska is a not-for-profit
company that provides health insurance
products and services. BCBS Nebraska
is an independent licensee of the Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of BCBS
Nebraska. The Plan was amended,
effective January 1, 2006, to close
participation to new entrants as of
December 31, 2005. As of August 31,
2020, the Plan covered 418 participants
and held $36,863,722 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
69 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc.; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
70 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12041 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$42,147,684, which represented 59.39%
of total Plan assets.71
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019 the market value of Plan assets was
$70,967,280. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of Plan assets decreased to
$36,028,581. The Applicant represents
71 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 59.39%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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that the Plan’s total losses from the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$33,649,481, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS Nebraska took steps to protect
Plan benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 5, 2020, BCBS Nebraska and
the Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement). Pursuant to the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, BCBS Nebraska agreed to
make Restorative Payments to the Plan
not in excess of $33,649,481 by
September 15, 2022. Subsequently, on
August 25, 2021, BCBS Nebraska made
a $7,000,000 Restorative Payment to the
Plan.
11. On March 17, 2022, BCBS
Nebraska and the Plan amended the
Restorative Payments provision of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement to require BCBS Nebraska to
make one additional Restorative
Payment of $6,600,000 to the Plan by
September 15, 2022. Subsequently, on
March 29, 2022, BCBS Nebraska made a
$6,600,000 Restorative Payment to the
Plan.
12. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to BCBS
Nebraska its right to retain certain
litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).72 Per the assignment, once
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Nebraska a repayment
(the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payments made by
72 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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BCBS Nebraska as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
Nebraska on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS Nebraska to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees).
For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS
Nebraska do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal
expenses paid by BCBS Nebraska for
representation of its own interests or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS Nebraska under this
exemption, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS Nebraska on
behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
Nebraska in connection with the Claims
from any non-Plan party (for example,
from a third party pursuant to a court
award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS Nebraska has made
to the Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to
BCBS Nebraska will be limited to the
amount of Restorative Payments
actually made by BCBS Nebraska, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS
Nebraska has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $30,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS Nebraska totaling
$13,700,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS Nebraska has made
to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to
BCBS Nebraska the lesser amount of
litigation or settlement proceeds, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS
Nebraska reasonably incurred $100,000
in Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives
$5,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS
Nebraska totaling $5,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
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52159
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
16. BCBS Nebraska retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS Nebraska and any BCBS Nebraska
affiliates. Gallagher further represents
the total revenues it has received from
the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its
engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of
Gallagher’s total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
20. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
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Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS
Nebraska only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received
by the Plan, plus any reasonable legal
expense paid to non-BCBS Nebraskarelated parties that were incurred by, or
allocated to, BCBS Nebraska as a result
of the Claims.73 Thus, if the Plan’s
ultimate recovery amount from the
Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, BCBS Nebraska,
not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
BCBS Nebraska in exchange for the
Assignment.
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ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
BCBS Nebraska in exchange for the
Plan’s transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS Nebraska would
violate ERISA. In this regard, ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan
73 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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fiduciary from causing the plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that such
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect sale or exchange of any
property between a plan and a party in
interest. BCBS Nebraska, as an employer
whose employees are covered by the
Plan, is a party in interest with respect
to the Plan under ERISA Section
3(14)(C). The Required Restorative
Payments to the Plan and the Plan’s
potential repayment to BCBS Nebraska
with litigation or settlement proceeds
would constitute impermissible
exchanges between the Plan and a partyin-interest (BCBS Nebraska) in violation
of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. BCBS Nebraska’s promise to
make Required Restorative Payments to
the Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS Nebraska
in connection with the Repayment
would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-ininterest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
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(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Nebraska fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is
for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by BCBS Nebraska or the
amount the Plan received from the
Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Nebraska for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims
is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCBS
Nebraska to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCBS Nebraska or the interests of any
party other than the Plan) where BCBS
Nebraska was not otherwise reimbursed
from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.74
23. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS
74 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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Nebraska; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)–(c) of this paragraph.
Additionally, any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Nebraska must be made in
a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments.
25. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS Nebraska before the
date: the Plan has received from BCBS
Nebraska the entire amount of the
Restorative Payments agreed to in the
Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS Nebraska in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS Nebraska for
reasonable legal expenses arising from
the Claims that BCBS Nebraska paid to
non-BCBS Nebraska-related parties for
representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCBS Nebraska or the interests of any
party other than the Plan) where BCBS
Nebraska was not otherwise reimbursed
by a non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
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the Proposed Transactions.75 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments substantially
improved the Plan’s funding status,
which enhanced the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBS Nebraska the lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
received by the Plan, or the amount the
Plan receives in proceeds from the
Claims, ensuring that the Proposed
Transactions will result in an increase
in Plan assets of at least the total
amount of Restorative Payments (less
reasonable legal expenses related to the
Claims paid by BCBS Nebraska to
unrelated third parties, as confirmed
and approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS
Nebraska; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)–(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
75 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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52161
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.76
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
Nebraska on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS Nebraska to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes
of this exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to BCBS Nebraska do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the
Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
BCBS Nebraska for representation of
BCBC Nebraska or the interests of any
party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS Nebraska’’ means
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska,
Inc.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS
Nebraska and the Plan, dated November
5, 2020, and its amendment that became
effective on March 17, 2022, containing
all material terms regarding BCBS
Nebraska’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to BCBS Nebraska of an
amount that is no more than lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment
Amount (as described in Section I(h))
received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives
from the Claims, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid to unrelated third
parties by BCBS Nebraska in connection
with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
76 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS
Nebraska and does not hold an
ownership interest in BCBS Nebraska or
affiliates of BCBS Nebraska;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 77
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS Nebraska or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBS Nebraska or from affiliates of
BCBS Nebraska while serving as an
Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the
party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent
Fiduciary negotiates any transaction on
behalf of the Plan during the period that
the organization or individual serves as
an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and
Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$33,649,481 in Plan losses the BCBSA’s
National Employee Benefits Committee
alleges were the result of breaches of
fiduciary responsibilities and breaches
77 29
CFR 2509.75–4.
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of contract by Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments USA
Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the payments made by BCBS
Nebraska to the Plan in connection with
the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of: (1) the past payment of
$7,000,000 on August 25, 2021; and (2)
the past payment of $6,600,000 on
March 29, 2022. The sum of (1) and (2)
is the Required Restorative Payment
Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Nebraska following the
Plan’s receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made
following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims, and in a
manner that is consistent with the terms
of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective November 5, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS
Nebraska’s transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the
Plan’s Repayment of an amount to BCBS
Nebraska, which must be no more than
the lesser of the Restorative Payment
received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan received
from the Claims, plus reasonable
Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the
Conditions set forth in Section III are
met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than March 29, 2022;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS
Nebraska; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
identified in (1)–(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
Nebraska is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments
received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives
from the Claims. The Plan’s Repayment
to BCBS Nebraska may only occur after
the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of
the exemption are met; the Plan has
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received all the Restorative Payments it
is due; and the Plan has received all the
litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to BCBS Nebraska must be
carried out in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Nebraska for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims
is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCBS
Nebraska to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS Nebraska for
reasonable legal expenses paid in
connection with the Claims by BCBS
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Nebraska to non-BCBS Nebraska-related
parties. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS Nebraska under this
proposal, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS Nebraska on
behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by BCBS
Nebraska in connection with the Claims
from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant
to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBS Nebraska must notify
the Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
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exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs.
Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8567.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
52163
Tennessee, Inc. (BCBS Tennessee). If the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from
the Claims, the Plan will transfer the
lesser of the ligation proceeds amount or
the Restorative Payment, plus
reasonable attorney fees to BCBS
Tennessee.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the BlueCross
BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc. Pension
Plan (the Plan) in the first quarter of
2020.78
This proposed exemption would
permit the past payment of
$100,000,000 to the Plan by the Plan
sponsor, BlueCross BlueShield of
Summary of Facts and
Representations 79
1. BCBS Tennessee is a not-for-profit
company incorporated in Tennessee
with its principal office in Chattanooga,
Tennessee. BCBS Tennessee issues and
administers health care coverage for
individuals and group health plans
sponsored by Tennessee-based
employers and is an independent
licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield
Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered,
frozen defined benefit pension plan that
covers eligible employees of BCBS
Tennessee and employees of affiliated
employers. BCBS Tennessee makes all
contributions to the Plan for the
exclusive benefit of participants and
their beneficiaries, and to cover
administrative expenses. As of August
31, 2020, the Plan covered 2,628
participants and held $203,341,148 in
total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
78 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BlueCross
BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc.; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
79 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12045 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc.
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee
[Application No. D–12045]
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board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$138,015,536, which represented
68.57% of total Plan assets.80
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
80 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 68.57%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019, the market value of the Plan’s
assets was $201,265,786. As of March
31, 2020, the market value of the Plan’s
assets decreased to $103,023,619. The
Applicant represents that the Plan’s
total losses from the Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy were $93,576,015, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
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losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
BCBS Tennessee took steps to protect
Plan benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on October
8, 2020, BCBS Tennessee and the Plan
entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement), whereby BCBS Tennessee
agreed to make a $100,000,000 payment
to the Plan within seven business days
of the effective date of the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement (the
Restorative Payment). BCBS Tennessee
remitted $100,000,000 to the Plan on
October 8, 2020.
11. In exchange for the Restorative
Payment, the Plan assigned to BCBS
Tennessee its right to retain certain
litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned
Interests).81 Per the assignment, once
the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved
and if the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Tennessee a repayment
(the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payment made by
BCBS Tennessee, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS Tennessee
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed
and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms
that the fees were reasonably incurred
and paid by BCBS Tennessee to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCBS Tennessee do not include: (a)
legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by BCBS Tennessee
for representation of its own interests or
the interests of any party other than the
Plan. For purposes of determining the
amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS Tennessee under
this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
Tennessee on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCBS Tennessee in
connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
12. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
81 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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Restorative Payment, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan, however, may
ultimately receive more than the
Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of the Restorative
Payment that BCBS Tennessee made to
the Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
Tennessee will be limited to the amount
of Restorative Payment made by BCBS
Tennessee, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS Tennessee has
reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives
$120,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS
Tennessee totaling $100,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of the Restorative
Payment that BCBS Tennessee made to
the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS
Tennessee the lesser amount of
litigation or settlement proceeds, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS
Tennessee has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $50,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS Tennessee totaling
$50,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
15. BCBS Tennessee retained
Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC
(Gallagher or the Independent
Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to
serve as the Plan’s independent
fiduciary with respect to the Required
Restorative Payment and the potential
repayment by the Plan of that Payment
(collectively, the Proposed
Transactions). Gallagher represents that
it has extensive experience in
institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding
traditional and alternative investments.
Gallagher further represents that its
independent fiduciary decision-making
work involves acting as a fiduciary
advisor or decision-maker for plans and
other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range
of asset classes and litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
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actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
BCBS Tennessee and any BCBS
Tennessee affiliates. Gallagher further
represents the total revenues it has
received from the Plan and from parties
in interest to the Plan in connection
with its engagement as Independent
Fiduciary represents approximately
0.78% of Gallagher’s total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
19. On October 8, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payment, which was
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse BCBS
Tennessee only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received,
plus any reasonable legal expense paid
to non-BCBS Tennessee-related parties
that were incurred by, or allocated to,
BCBS Tennessee as a result of the
Claims.82 Thus, if the Plan’s ultimate
recovery amount from the Claims is less
82 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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52165
than the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS
Tennessee, not the Plan, will suffer the
loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from
BCBS Tennessee in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
20. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payment from
BCBS Tennessee in exchange for the
Plan’s transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to BCBS Tennessee would
violate ERISA. In this regard, ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan
fiduciary from causing the plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that such
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect sale or exchange of any
property between a plan and a party in
interest. BCBS Tennessee, as an
employer whose employees are covered
by the Plan, is a party in interest with
respect to the Plan under ERISA Section
3(14)(C). The Required Restorative
Payment to the Plan and the Plan’s
potential repayment to BCBS Tennessee
with litigation or settlement proceeds
would constitute impermissible
exchanges between the Plan and a partyin-interest (BCBS Tennessee) in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to BCBS
Tennessee in connection with the
Repayment would constitute an
impermissible transfer of Plan assets to
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a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
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Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Tennessee fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is
for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payment actually made to
the Plan by BCBS Tennessee or the
amount the Plan received from the
Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Tennessee for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims
is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCBS
Tennessee to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCBS Tennessee or the interests of
any party other than the Plan) where
BCBS Tennessee was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
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20:23 Aug 23, 2022
Jkt 256001
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.83
22. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS
Tennessee; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)–(c) of this paragraph.
Additionally, any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Tennessee must be made
in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments.
24. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to BCBS Tennessee before
the date: the Plan has received from
BCBS Tennessee the entire amount of
the Restorative Payment agreed to in the
Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to BCBS Tennessee in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payment.
25. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse BCBS Tennessee for
reasonable legal expenses arising from
the Claims that BCBS Tennessee paid to
non-BCBS Tennessee-related parties for
representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation
of BCBS Tennessee or the interests of
any party other than the Plan) where
BCBS Tennessee was not otherwise
reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
26. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
83 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.84 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payment substantially
improved the Plan’s funding status,
which enhanced the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
84 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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among other things, the Plan will repay
BCBS Tennessee the lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
received, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims,
ensuring that the Proposed Transactions
will result in an increase in Plan assets
of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payment (less reasonable
legal expenses related to the Claims
paid by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated
third parties, as confirmed and
approved by the Independent
Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS
Tennessee; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)–(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
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Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.85
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by BCBS
Tennessee on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS Tennessee
to unrelated third parties. For the
purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS
Tennessee do not include: (1) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal
expenses paid by BCBS Tennessee for
representation of BCBC Tennessee or
the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘BCBS Tennessee’’
means BlueCross BlueShield of
Tennessee, Inc.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
85 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between BCBS
Tennessee and the Plan, dated October
8, 2020, containing all material terms
regarding Tennessee’s agreement to
make the Required Restorative Payment
to the Plan in return for the Plan’s
potential Repayment to BCBS Tennessee
of an amount that is no more than lesser
of the Required Restorative Payment
Amount (as described in Section I(h))
received or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid to unrelated third parties by BCBS
Tennessee in connection with the
Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS
Tennessee and does not hold an
ownership interest in BCBS Tennessee
or affiliates of BCBS Tennessee;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 86
(5) Has not received gross income
from BCBS Tennessee or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that
exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary’s gross income
from all sources for the prior fiscal year.
This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
86 29
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52167
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
BCBS Tennessee or from affiliates of
BCBS Tennessee while serving as an
Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the
party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent
Fiduciary negotiates any transaction on
behalf of the Plan during the period that
the organization or individual serves as
an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the BlueCross
BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc. Pension
Plan.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$93,576,015 in Plan losses the BCBSA’s
National Employee Benefits Committee
alleges were the result of breaches of
fiduciary responsibilities and breaches
of contract by Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments USA
Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payment’’
means the payment made by BCBS
Tennessee to the Plan in connection
with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of a $100,000,000 payment
that BCBS Tennessee contributed to the
Plan on October 8, 2020. This
$100,000,000 payment is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Tennessee following
the Plan’s receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made
following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a
manner that is consistent with the terms
of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective September 15, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCBS
Tennessee’s transfer of the Restorative
Payment to the Plan; and, in return, the
Plan’s Repayment of an amount to BCBS
Tennessee, which must be no more than
the lesser of the Restorative Payment
Amount received or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan received
from the Claims, plus reasonable
Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the
Conditions set forth in Section III are
met.
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Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than October 8, 2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payment, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS
Tennessee; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity
identified in (1)–(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
Tennessee is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payment
received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives
from the Claims. The Plan’s Repayment
to BCBS Tennessee may only occur after
the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of
the exemption are met; the Plan has
received the entirety of the Restorative
Payment it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is
due. The Plan’s Repayment to BCBS
Tennessee must be carried out in a
manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payment and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the terms
of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, are prudent and in the
interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to BCBS Tennessee for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims
is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCBS
Tennessee to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
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(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse BCBS Tennessee for
reasonable legal expenses paid in
connection with the Claims by BCBS
Tennessee to non-BCBS Tennesseerelated parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
Tennessee under this proposal, the
amount of reasonable attorney fees paid
by BCBS Tennessee on behalf of the
Plan in connection with the Claims
must be reduced by the amount of legal
fees received by BCBS Tennessee in
connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
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soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, BCBS Tennessee must notify
the Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Ms.
Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693–8567.
(This is not a toll-free number.)
Triple-S Management Corporation
Located in San Juan, Puerto Rico
[Application No. D–12042]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
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against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Triple-S
Management Corporation NonContributory Retirement Plan (the Plan)
in the first quarter of 2020.87
This proposed exemption would
permit the past payment of $10,000,000
by Triple-S Management Corporation
(Triple-S), the Plan sponsor, to the Plan
(the Restorative Payment). If the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the
Restorative Payment amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to Triple-S.
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Summary of Facts and
Representation 88
1. Triple-S is an insurance holding
company that provides health insurance
products and services. Triple-S is the
only independent licensee of the Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA)
in Puerto Rico and has a presence in
markets such as the U.S. Virgin Islands
and Costa Rica.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees or
participants of Triple-S. The Plan was
amended effective January 31, 2017, to
freeze benefit accruals as of that date
with respect to all participants. As of
August 31, 2020, the Plan covered 1,144
participants and held $64,771,505 in
total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
87 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Triple-S
Management Corporation and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)–
(3).
88 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12042 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
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52169
$127,024,812, which represented
77.66% of total Plan assets.89
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
89 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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2019 the market value of Plan assets was
$163,558,110. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of Plan assets decreased to
$54,855,395. The Applicant represents
that the Plan’s total losses from the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$103,793,253, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
Triple-S took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on
November 6, 2020, Triple-S and the
Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement whereby TripleS agreed to make a $10,000,000
Restorative Payment to the Plan not
later than December 31, 2021 (the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement). Subsequently, on June 28,
2021, Triple-S made a $10,000,000
Restorative Payment to the Plan.
11. In exchange for the Restorative
Payment, the Plan assigned to Triple-S
its right to retain certain litigation and/
or settlement proceeds recovered from
the Claims (the Assigned Interests).90
Per the assignment, once the Allianz/
Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer to TripleS a repayment (the Repayment) that
does not exceed the total Restorative
Payment made by Triple-S as of that
date, plus reasonable attorney fees paid
by Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by Triple-S to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees).
90 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to Triple-S
do not include: (a) legal expenses paid
by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid
by Triple-S for representation of its own
interests or the interests of any party
other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to TripleS under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by TripleS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by TripleS in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
12. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payment, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payment that Triple-S has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to Triple-S
will be limited to the Restorative
Payment amount, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if Triple-S reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and
the Plan receives $20,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make
a Repayment to Triple-S totaling
$10,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of the Restorative
Payment, the Plan will transfer to
Triple-S the lesser amount of litigation
or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney
Fees. For example, if Triple-S
reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives
$5,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to TripleS totaling $5,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
15. Triple-S retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payment and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
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consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
Triple-S and any Triple-S affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
19. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payment, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse Triple-S
only up to the Required Restorative
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Payment Amount received by the Plan,
plus any reasonable legal expense paid
to non-Triple-S-related parties that were
incurred by, or allocated to, Triple-S as
a result of the Claims.91 Thus, if the
Plan’s ultimate recovery amount from
the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, Triple-S, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from
Triple-S in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
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20. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payment from
Triple-S in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to Triple-S would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. Triple-S, as
an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payment to the Plan and the
Plan’s potential repayment to Triple-S
with litigation or settlement proceeds
would constitute impermissible
exchanges between the Plan and a party91 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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in-interest (Triple-S) in violation of
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. Triple’s promise to make the
Required Restorative Payment to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to Triple-S in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to Triple-S fully complies with the
terms of this exemption and is for no
more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payment or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to Triple-S for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
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52171
paid by Triple-S to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of Triple-S or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where Triple-S was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.92
22. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) Triple-S; and/
or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c) of
this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to Triple-S must
be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
24. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to Triple-S before the date:
the Plan has received from Triple-S the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payment agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to Triple-S in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payment.
92 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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25. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse Triple-S for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that Triple-S paid to non-Triple-Srelated parties for representation of the
Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of Triple-S or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where Triple-S was not otherwise
reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
26. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
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Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.93 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
93 This proposed exemption would require that if
the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payment substantially
improved the Plan’s funding status,
which enhanced the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
Triple-S the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received
by the Plan, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims,
ensuring that the Proposed Transactions
will result in an increase in Plan assets
of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payment (less reasonable
legal expenses related to the Claims
paid by Triple-S to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by
the Independent Fiduciary). Further,
this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action
the Plan may have against: (a) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) Triple-S; and/or (d) any
person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.94
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by
Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
94 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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incurred and paid by Triple-S to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes
of this exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to Triple-S do not include:
(1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and
(2) legal expenses paid by Triple-S for
representation of Triple-S or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘Triple-S’’ means TripleS Management Corporation.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between Triple-S and
the Plan, dated November 6, 2020,
containing all material terms regarding
Triple-S’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payment to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to Triple-S of an amount
that is no more than lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount
(as described in Section I(h)) received
by the Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid to unrelated third parties by TripleS in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of Triple-S and
does not hold an ownership interest in
Triple-S or affiliates of Triple-S;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 95
(5) Has not received gross income
from Triple-S or its affiliates during any
fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
95 29
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two percent (2%) of the Independent
Fiduciary’s gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This
provision also applies to a partnership
or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
Triple-S or from affiliates of Triple-S
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the Triple-S
Management Corporation NonContributory Retirement Plan.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$103,793,253 in Plan losses the
BCBSA’s National Employee Benefits
Committee alleges were the result of
breaches of fiduciary responsibilities
and breaches of contract by Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon
Investments USA Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payment’’
means the payment made by Triple-S of
$10,000,000 to the Plan in connection
with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of a $10,000,000 payment
that Triple-S contributed to the Plan on
June 28, 2021.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to Triple-S following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims, and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B), and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective November 5, 2020,
to the following transactions: Triple-S’s
transfer of Restorative Payment to the
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Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to Triple-S,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment received by
the Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan received from the
Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees,
provided that the Definitions set forth in
Section I and the Conditions set forth in
Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than June 28, 2021;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payment, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Triple-S; and/
or (4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity identified in (1)–(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to Triple-S
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payment received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to TripleS may only occur after the Independent
Fiduciary has determined that: all the
conditions of the exemption are met; the
Plan has received all the Restorative
Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is
due. The Plan’s Repayment to Triple-S
must be carried out in a manner
designed to minimize unnecessary costs
and disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payment and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payment, the Repayment, and the terms
of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, are prudent and in the
interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
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52173
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to Triple-S for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by Triple-S to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse Triple-S for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by Triple-S to non-Triple-Srelated parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to TripleS under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by TripleS on behalf of the Plan in connection
with the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by TripleS in connection with the Claims from
any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a
court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
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that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, Triple-S must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
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Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Ms.
Anna Vaughan of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8565. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
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National Account Service Company
LLC
Located in Atlanta, Georgia
[Application No. D–12049]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the
Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and
Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code). The proposed exemption relates
to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
against Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain
losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
Retirement Program for Certain
Employees of National Account Service
Company (the Plan) in the first quarter
of 2020.96
This proposed exemption would
permit the Plan sponsor, the National
Account Service Company LLC
(NASCO), to make payments totaling
$50 million to the Plan (the Restorative
Payments). If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer the lesser of the ligation
proceeds amount or the Restorative
Payments, plus reasonable attorney fees
to NASCO.
Summary of Facts and
Representations 97
1. NASCO is a healthcare technology
company dedicated to co-creating
digital health solutions for Blue Cross
and Blue Shield companies. NASCO
96 In proposing this exemption, the Department is
not expressing an opinion regarding the merits of
any Claim against Allianz and Aon, or whether the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their fiduciary duties with
respect to Plan assets that are the subject of the
Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the
Department is not limiting any party’s claim,
demand and/or cause of action arising from the
Plan’s 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the
Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) National
Account Service Company LLC; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)–(3).
97 The Department notes that availability of this
exemption is subject to the express condition that
the material facts and representations contained in
application D–12049 are true and complete at all
times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there
is any material change in a transaction covered by
the exemption or in a material fact or representation
described in the application, the exemption will
cease to apply as of the date of such change. The
Summary of Facts and Representations is based on
the Applicant’s representations, as well as factual
representations contained in the Claims’ cause of
action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department,
unless indicated otherwise.
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provides information technology
products and services and offers
payment management, system delivery,
business optimization solutions,
membership enrollment, and other
related services. NASCO is owned by
Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan
Mutual Insurance Company.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered
qualified defined benefit pension plan
that covers eligible employees of
NASCO. The Plan was amended
effective January 1, 2009 to close
participation to new entrants as of
December 31, 2008. As of December 31,
2020, the Plan covered 264 participants
and held $47,306,049 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest
in the Blue Cross and Blue Shield
National Retirement Trust (the Trust).
The Trust is a master trust that holds the
assets of 16 defined benefit pension
plans that participate in the BCBSA’s
National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust
serves as Trustee and asset custodian to
the Trust and maintains separate
records that reflect the net asset value of
each Participating Plan. The Trust’s
earnings, market adjustments, and
administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on
the respective Participating Plan’s share
of the Trust’s assets. A Participating
Plan’s interest in the Trust’s net assets
is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named
fiduciary and administrator for each
Participating Plan. The Committee is a
standing committee of the BCBSA’s
board of directors. In 2011, the
Committee invested a portion of the
Trust’s assets in funds managed by
Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha
Investment Strategy. These funds
included: (a) AllianzGI Structured
Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I; (b)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging
Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC
(collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the
Allianz Structured Alpha strategy
consisted of alpha and beta components.
According to the applicant, the alpha
component was an options trading
strategy that Allianz claimed would
seek targeted positive return potential
while maintaining structural risk
protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market
exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial
products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of
a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz
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represented that the Structured Alpha
Strategy would capitalize on the returngenerating features of option selling
(short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control
attributes associated with option buying
(long volatility). According to the
Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would
include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a
market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total
market value of the Plan’s portion of the
Trust’s investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Funds was
$63,571,918, which represented 77.66%
of total Plan assets.98
7. In 2009, the Committee retained
Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the
investment of Plan assets held in the
Trust. The Applicant represents that
Aon provided regular investment advice
pursuant to a written contract between
it and the Committee. Pursuant to its
engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ‘‘recommendations to [the
Committee] regarding asset allocation’’
within the Trust; ‘‘recommendations to
[the Committee] regarding the specific
asset allocation and other investment
guidelines’’ for the Trust’s investment
managers such as Allianz; and advice
‘‘regarding the diversification of assets’’
held in the Trust.’’ The Applicant
represents that Aon agreed to: conduct
‘‘active, ongoing monitoring’’ of Allianz
to ‘‘identify any forward-looking’’ risks
‘‘that could impact performance;’’ and
‘‘inform itself’’ of any information
necessary to discharge its duty to
monitor, including information about
the actual options positions Allianz had
constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when
equity markets sharply declined in
February and March of 2020, volatility
spiked and the options positions held
within the Structured Alpha Strategy
were exposed to a heightened risk of
loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in
violation of Allianz’s stated investment
strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging
strategy that was the supposed
cornerstone of the Structured Alpha
Strategy, leaving the portfolio almost
entirely unhedged against a spike in
market volatility. As described in the
Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at
98 By proposing this exemption, the Department
does not, in any way, suggest a conclusion that the
Plan’s fiduciaries met their ERISA Section 404
duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan’s total assets in the Allianz Structured
Alpha Funds.
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strike prices ranging from 10% to 25%
below the market, the hedges it actually
held at the end of February 2020 were
as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of
January 31, 2020, the Trust had invested
approximately $2,916,049,486 in the
Structured Alpha Strategy. Six weeks
later, the Trust faced a margin call,
which the Applicant states left it no
choice but to liquidate the investment.
The Trust was ultimately able to redeem
only $646,762,678 of its $2,916,049,486
investment, resulting in a total loss of
$2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan’s
portion of the loss, as of December 31,
2019 the market value of Plan assets was
$81,855,683. As of March 31, 2020, the
market value of Plan assets decreased to
$28,120,905. The Applicant represents
that the Plan’s total losses from the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$51,662,561, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the
Committee filed a cause of action in the
United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York (Case
number 20–CIV–07606) against Allianz
and Aon for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 404, Breach of CoFiduciary Duty under ERISA Section
405, and violation of ERISA Section
406(b) for managing the Plan assets in
its self-interest and breach of contract. It
is possible that resolution of this claim
and other legal actions against Allianz
and Aon in connection with the Plan’s
losses (the Claims) could take an
extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather
than wait for the Claims to be resolved,
NASCO took steps to protect Plan
benefits and avoid onerous benefit
restrictions under Code section 436 that
could apply to the Plan as a result of a
funding shortfall. Therefore, on March
1, 2021, NASCO and the Plan entered
into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement pursuant to which NASCO
agreed to make Restorative Payments to
the Plan not in excess of $50,000,000
over the course of 2021 through 2025
(the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement).
11. NASCO has made Restorative
Payments to the Plan totaling
$22,800,000, including: (a) a $2,000,000
payment on August 3, 2020; (b) a
$2,000,000 payment on September 2,
2020; (c) a $3,625,000 payment on June
21, 2021; (d) a $3,625,000 payment on
July 21, 2021; (e) a $3,625,000 payment
on August 16, 2021; (f) a $3,625,000
payment on September 13, 2021; and (g)
a $4,300,000 payment on June 21, 2021.
12. In exchange for the Restorative
Payments, the Plan assigned to NASCO
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52175
its right to retain certain litigation and/
or settlement proceeds recovered from
the Claims (the Assigned Interests).99
Per the assignment, once the Allianz/
Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the
Claims, the Plan will transfer to NASCO
a repayment (the Repayment) that does
not exceed the total Restorative
Payments made by NASCO as of that
date, plus reasonable attorney fees paid
by NASCO on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by NASCO to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees).
For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to NASCO
do not include: (a) legal expenses paid
by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid
by NASCO for representation of its own
interests or the interests of any party
other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to NASCO
under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by NASCO
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by NASCO
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive
at least the full value of the promised
Restorative Payments, minus the
Attorney Fees. The Plan may ultimately
receive more than the Restorative
Payment amount required under the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that
exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that NASCO has made to the
Plan, the Plan’s Repayment to NASCO
will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payments actually made by
NASCO, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if NASCO has made
$22,800,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $50,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to NASCO totaling
$22,900,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives
less litigation or settlement proceeds
than the amount of Restorative
Payments that NASCO has made to the
99 Under the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, if the Plan receives litigation or
settlement proceeds from the Claims, the proceeds
would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan’s
pro rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited
into the individual trust funding that Plan.
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Plan, the Plan will transfer to NASCO
the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees.
For example, if NASCO has made
$22,800,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan
receives $10,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will not make any
Repayment to NASCO. Under this
scenario, NASCO will remain obligated
to complete the Restorative Payments to
the Plan (totaling $50,000,000) by
December 31, 2025, prior to the Plan
making any 10,100,000 Repayment to
NASCO.
15. The Department notes that if the
Plan receives any restitution that is tied
to the conduct underlying the Claims
but was ordered pursuant to a
proceeding or directive that is external
to Case number 20–CIV–07606, the
disposition of such proceeds must
conform to the requirements of this
exemption.
16. NASCO retained Gallagher
Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New
York, New York, to serve as the Plan’s
independent fiduciary with respect to
the Required Restorative Payments and
the potential repayment by the Plan of
those Payments (collectively, the
Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive
experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decisionmaking regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher
further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work
involves acting as a fiduciary advisor or
decision-maker for plans and other
ERISA-regulated asset pools and that it
has experience with a wide range of
asset classes and litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it
understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting
as a fiduciary on behalf of the Plan.
Gallagher also acknowledges that it is
authorized to take all appropriate
actions to safeguard the Plan’s interests,
and that it will monitor the Proposed
Transactions on the Plan’s behalf on a
continuous basis and throughout the
term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does
not have any prior relationship with any
parties in interest to the Plan, including
NASCO and any NASCO affiliates.
Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan
and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher’s
total revenue.
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19. Gallagher represents that no party
associated with this exemption
application has or will indemnify it, in
whole or in part, for negligence of any
kind and/or any violation of state or
federal law that may be attributable to
Gallagher’s performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with
respect to the Proposed Transactions. In
addition, no contract or instrument
entered into by Gallagher as
Independent Fiduciary may purport to
waive any liability under state or federal
law for any such violation.
20. On March 1, 2021, Gallagher
completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary
Report) finding that the massive losses
caused by the Trust’s investment in the
Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan’s total assets and funding level.
Gallagher represents that the Required
Restorative Payments, which will be
received by the Plan substantially in
advance of a final resolution of the
Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan’s funded percentage to
its pre-loss funded percentage as of
January 1, 2019. The restoration of the
Plan’s funding status will secure
ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement provides
that the Trust must reimburse NASCO
only up to the Required Restorative
Payment Amount received by the Plan,
plus any reasonable legal expense paid
to non-NASCO-related parties that were
incurred by, or allocated to, NASCO as
a result of the Claims.100 Thus, if the
Plan’s ultimate recovery amount from
the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, NASCO, not the
Plan, will suffer the loss.
Gallagher states that the Proposed
Transactions and the terms of the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement were negotiated and
approved by Gallagher in its role as the
Plan’s Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed
Transactions only after conducting an
extensive analysis of the damages
suffered by the Plan as a result of the
failed Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy. Gallagher represents that it
100 Currently, legal fees and expenses associated
with the Claims are being paid by most of the
Participating Plan’s trusts on a pro rata basis
according to each Participating Plan’s total invested
assets held in the Master Trust’s Allianz Structured
Alpha Strategy before the losses were incurred in
the first quarter 2020. The Applicant represents that
the Committee reviews and approves these legal
fees before passing them through to each
Participating Plan.
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conducted numerous discussions with
Trust representatives and counsel, along
with the Plan’s representatives and
counsel to ensure that the interests of
the Plan’s participants and beneficiaries
were protected with respect to all
aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher
approved the Plan’s receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from
NASCO in exchange for the Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan’s
receipt of the Restorative Payments from
NASCO in exchange for the Plan’s
transfer of litigation or settlement
proceeds to NASCO would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a
transaction if the fiduciary knows or
should know that such transaction
constitutes a direct or indirect sale or
exchange of any property between a
plan and a party in interest. NASCO, as
an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under
ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan and
the Plan’s potential repayment to
NASCO with litigation or settlement
proceeds would constitute
impermissible exchanges between the
Plan and a party-in-interest (NASCO) in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits
the lending of money or other extension
of credit between a plan and a party-ininterest. NASCO’s promise to make
Required Restorative Payments to the
Plan, over time, constitutes an
impermissible extension of credit
between the Plan and a party-in-interest
in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a
plan fiduciary from causing a plan to
engage in a transaction if the fiduciary
knows or should know that the
transaction constitutes a direct or
indirect transfer to, or use by or for the
benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the
income or assets of the plan. The
transfer of Plan assets to NASCO in
connection with the Repayment would
constitute an impermissible transfer of
Plan assets to a party-in-interest in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains
a number of conditions that must be
met. For example, the proposed
exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full
accordance with its obligations of
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prudence and loyalty under ERISA
Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the
terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment,
and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, before the Plan enters into
such payments and the agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and
conditions of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest
of the Plan and its participants and
beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required
Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm
that the Plan receives its proper share of
any litigation or settlement proceeds
received by the Trust in connection
with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to NASCO fully complies with the
terms of this exemption and is for no
more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments actually made to
the Plan by NASCO or the amount the
Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to NASCO for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by NASCO to unrelated third
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of NASCO or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where NASCO was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan’s Assigned
Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess
recovery amount from the Claims (i.e.,
any amount that exceeds the Required
Restorative Payment Amount) is
retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will
not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or Department Regulations codified
at 29 CFR 2509.75–4.101
23. This proposed exemption also
requires Gallagher to respond in writing
101 ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that
‘‘except as provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1)
and 405(d), any provision in an agreement or
instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary
from responsibility or liability for any
responsibility, obligation, or duty under this part
[meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be void
as against public policy.’’
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to any information requests from the
Department regarding Gallagher’s
activities as the Plan’s Independent
Fiduciary. Additionally, no later than 90
days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires
that the Plan has not and will not
release any claims, demands and/or
causes of action it may have against: (a)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (c) NASCO; and/
or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)–(c) of
this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to NASCO must
be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and
disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any
Repayment to NASCO before the date:
the Plan has received from NASCO the
entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are
settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not
pay any interest to NASCO in
connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor
pledge Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed
exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
Transactions. However, as noted above,
under certain circumstances the Plan
may reimburse NASCO for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims
that NASCO paid to non-NASCO-related
parties for representation of the Plan
and its interests (as opposed to
representation of NASCO or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan) where NASCO was not otherwise
reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief
provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the
Department’s assumption that the
material facts and representations set
forth above in the Summary of Facts and
Representation section are true and
accurate at all times. In the event that
a material fact or representation detailed
above is untrue or inaccurate, the
exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in
part, that the Department may not grant
an exemption unless the Department
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52177
finds that the exemption is
administratively feasible, in the interest
of affected plans and of their
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of such
participants and beneficiaries. Each of
these criteria is discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Administratively Feasible.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because,
among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of
the Plan for all purposes with respect to
the Proposed Transactions.102 In this
regard, not later than 90 days after the
resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a
written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the
requirements of this exemption have
been met.
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ‘‘In the
Interests of the Plan.’’ The Department
has tentatively determined that the
proposed exemption is in the interest of
the Plan because, among other things,
the Plan’s receipt of the Required
Restorative Payments will substantially
improve the Plan’s funding status,
which will enhance the Plan’s ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit
obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid
the imposition of benefit limitations
imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is
‘‘Protective of the Plan.’’ The
Department has tentatively determined
that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan’s
participants and beneficiaries because,
among other things, the Plan will repay
NASCO the lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received
by the Plan, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims,
ensuring that the Proposed Transactions
will result in an increase in Plan assets
of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payments (less reasonable
legal expenses related to the Claims
paid by NASCO to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by
the Independent Fiduciary). Further,
102 This proposed exemption would require that
if the Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or
for any reason is unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the successor Independent Fiduciary
must, among other things, assume all of the duties
of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as
possible, including before the appointment of a
successor Independent Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor
and the Plan must notify the Department’s Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must
contain all material information including the
qualifications of the successor Independent
Fiduciary.
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this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action
the Plan may have against: (a) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) NASCO; and/or (d) any
person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)–(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described
above, the Department has tentatively
determined that the relief sought by the
Applicant satisfies the statutory
requirements under ERISA Section
408(a) for the Department to make
findings that support its issuance of a
proposed exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering
granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and
Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set
forth in the Department’s exemption
procedure regulation.103
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ‘‘Attorney Fees’’ means
reasonable legal expenses paid by
NASCO on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by NASCO to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes
of this exemption, the Attorney Fees
reimbursable to NASCO do not include:
(1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and
(2) legal expenses paid by NASCO for
representation of NASCO or the
interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ‘‘NASCO’’ means
National Account Service Company
LLC.
(c) The term ‘‘Claims’’ means the legal
claims against Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), to recover certain losses
incurred by the Plan in the first quarter
of 2020.
(d) The term ‘‘Contribution and
Assignment Agreement’’ means the
written agreement between NASCO and
the Plan, dated March 1, 2021,
containing all material terms regarding
NASCO’s agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments to the Plan in
return for the Plan’s potential
Repayment to NASCO of an amount that
is no more than lesser of the Required
Restorative Payment Amount (as
described in Section I(h)) received by
the Plan or the amount of litigation
103 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836,
32847, August 10, 1990).
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proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees
paid to unrelated third parties by
NASCO in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ‘‘Independent Fiduciary’’
means Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors,
LLC (Gallagher) or a successor
Independent Fiduciary to the extent
Gallagher or the successor Independent
Fiduciary continues to serve in such
capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of NASCO and
does not hold an ownership interest in
NASCO or affiliates of NASCO;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect
to the Plan before its appointment to
serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that
it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the
Plan and has agreed not to participate in
any decision regarding any transaction
in which it has an interest that might
affect its best judgment as a fiduciary;
and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training
or experience to perform the services
contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any
agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory
provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department’s regulation relating to
indemnification of fiduciaries; 104
(5) Has not received gross income
from NASCO or its affiliates during any
fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
two percent (2%) of the Independent
Fiduciary’s gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This
provision also applies to a partnership
or corporation of which the
Independent Fiduciary is an officer,
director, or 10 percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as
compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any
prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that
is an Independent Fiduciary, and no
partnership or corporation of which
such organization or individual is an
officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or
more partner or shareholder, may
acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from
NASCO or from affiliates of NASCO
while serving as an Independent
Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party
ceases to be an Independent Fiduciary
and/or the Independent Fiduciary
negotiates any transaction on behalf of
the Plan during the period that the
104 29
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organization or individual serves as an
Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ‘‘Plan’’ means the NonContributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of National Account
Service Company.
(g) The term ‘‘Plan Losses’’ means the
$51,662,561 in Plan losses the BCBSA’s
National Employee Benefits Committee
alleges were the result of breaches of
fiduciary responsibilities and breaches
of contract by Allianz Global Investors
U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments USA
Inc.
(h) The term ‘‘Restorative Payments’’
means the $50 Million in payments
NASCO is required to pay the Plan by
December 21, 2025, as set forth in the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement.
(i) The ‘‘Repayment’’ means the
payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to NASCO following the Plan’s
receipt of proceeds from the Claims,
where the Repayment is made following
the full and complete resolution of the
Claims, and in a manner that is
consistent with the terms of the
exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted,
the restrictions of ERISA Sections
406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the
sanctions resulting from the application
of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code
Sections 4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall
not apply, effective September 2, 2020,
to the following transactions: NASCO’s
transfer of Restorative Payments to the
Plan; and, in return, the Plan’s
Repayment of an amount to NASCO,
which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment received by
the Plan or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan received from the
Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees,
provided that the Definitions set forth in
Section I and the Conditions set forth in
Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire
Restorative Payment Amount no later
than December 31, 2025;
(b) In connection with its receipt of
the Required Restorative Payments, the
Plan does not release any claims,
demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1)
any fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any
fiduciary of the Trust; (3) NASCO; and/
or (4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity identified in (1)–(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan’s Repayment to NASCO
is for no more than the lesser of the total
Restorative Payments received by the
Plan or the amount of litigation
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proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims. The Plan’s Repayment to
NASCO may only occur after the
Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption
are met; the Plan has received all the
Restorative Payments it is due; and the
Plan has received all the litigation
proceeds it is due. The Plan’s
Repayment to NASCO must be carried
out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary
(the Independent Fiduciary, as further
defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on
behalf of the Plan in full accordance
with its obligations of prudence and
loyalty under ERISA Sections
404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the
terms and conditions of the Restorative
Payments and the Repayment and the
Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, all of which must be in
writing, before the Plan enters into those
transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative
Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, are prudent and
in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required
Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to
the Claims and confirm that the Plan
receives, in a timely manner, its proper
share of any litigation or settlement
proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the
Plan to NASCO for legal expenses in
connection with the Claims is limited to
only reasonable legal expenses that were
paid by NASCO to unrelated third
parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions
and definitions of this proposed
exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and
confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met,
within 90 days after the Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or
instrument that violates ERISA Section
410 or the Department’s Regulations
codified at 29 CFR Section 2509.75–4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in
connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan
assets to secure any portion of the
Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction
costs in connection with the Proposed
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Transactions. However, if first approved
by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan
may reimburse NASCO for reasonable
legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by NASCO to non-NASCOrelated parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to NASCO
under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by NASCO
on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the
amount of legal fees received by NASCO
in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not
involve any risk of loss to either the
Plan or the Plan’s participants and
beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this
exemption has or will indemnify the
Independent Fiduciary and the
Independent Fiduciary will not request
indemnification from any party, in
whole or in part, for negligence and/or
any violation of state or federal law that
may be attributable to the Independent
Fiduciary in performing its duties to the
Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or
instrument may purport to waive any
liability under state or federal law for
any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary
resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent
Fiduciary, the Independent Fiduciary
must be replaced by a successor entity
that: (1) meets the definition of
Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets
all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements
set forth in this exemption. Further, any
such successor Independent Fiduciary
must assume all of the duties of the
outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As
soon as possible, including before the
appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, NASCO must notify the
Department’s Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material
information regarding the successor
Independent Fiduciary, including the
successor Independent Fiduciary’s
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and
representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation
are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the
proposed exemption to all interested
persons and all of the parties to the
litigation described above, within fifteen
PO 00000
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52179
calendar days after the publication of
the notice of proposed exemption in the
Federal Register. The notice will
contain a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement,
as required pursuant to the
Department’s regulations codified at 29
CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The supplemental
statement will inform interested persons
of their right to comment on the
pending exemption. Written comments
are due by October 11, 2022.
All comments will be made available
to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment,
EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact
information in the body of your
comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be
confidential, or otherwise protected
(such as a Social Security number or an
unlisted phone number) or confidential
business information that you do not
want publicly disclosed. All comments
may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search
engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr.
Joseph Brennan of the Department,
telephone (202) 693–8456. (This is not
a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is
directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the
subject of an exemption under section
408(a) of the Act and/or section
4975(c)(2) of the Code does not relieve
a fiduciary or other party in interest or
disqualified person from certain other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction
provisions to which the exemption does
not apply and the general fiduciary
responsibility provisions of section 404
of the Act, which, among other things,
require a fiduciary to discharge his
duties respecting the plan solely in the
interest of the participants and
beneficiaries of the plan and in a
prudent fashion in accordance with
section 404(a)(1)(B) of the Act; nor does
it affect the requirement of section
401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the
employees of the employer maintaining
the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be
granted under section 408(a) of the Act
and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code,
the Department must find that the
exemption is administratively feasible,
in the interests of the plan and of its
participants and beneficiaries, and
protective of the rights of participants
and beneficiaries of the plan;
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(3) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be supplemental to, and
not in derogation of, any other
provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including statutory or administrative
exemptions and transitional rules.
Furthermore, the fact that a transaction
is subject to an administrative or
statutory exemption is not dispositive of
whether the transaction is in fact a
prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if
granted, will be subject to the express
condition that the material facts and
representations contained in each
application are true and complete, and
that each application accurately
describes all material terms of the
transaction which is the subject of the
exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 16th day of
August, 2022.
Timothy D. Hauser,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program
Operations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2022–17995 Filed 8–23–22; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 163 (Wednesday, August 24, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 52118-52180]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-17995]
[[Page 52117]]
Vol. 87
Wednesday,
No. 163
August 24, 2022
Part II
Department of Labor
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Employee Benefits Security Administration
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Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction Restrictions;
Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 87 , No. 163 / Wednesday, August 24, 2022 /
Notices
[[Page 52118]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
Proposed Exemptions From Certain Prohibited Transaction
Restrictions
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed exemptions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document contains notices of pendency before the
Department of Labor (the Department) of proposed exemptions from
certain of the prohibited transaction restrictions of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA or the Act) and/or the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (the Code). If granted, these proposed
exemptions allow designated parties to engage in transactions that
would otherwise be prohibited provided the conditions stated there in
are met. This notice includes the following proposed exemptions: Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Association, D-12077; Blue Cross and Blue Shield
of Kansas City, D-12039; Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.,
D-12035; Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont, D-12055; Hawaii Medical
Service Association, D-12038; BCS Financial Corporation, D-12036; Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi, D-12040; Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Nebraska, Inc., D-12041; BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee,
Inc., D-12045; Triple-S Management Corporation, D-12042; National
Account Service Company LLC, D-12049.
DATES: All interested persons are invited to submit written comments or
requests for a hearing on the pending exemptions, unless otherwise
stated in the Notice of Proposed Exemption, within 45 days from the
date of publication of this Federal Register Notice.
ADDRESSES: All written comments and requests for a hearing should be
sent to the Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA), Office of
Exemption Determinations, U.S. Department of Labor, Attention:
Application No. __, stated in each Notice of Proposed Exemption via
email to [email protected] or online through https://www.regulations.gov by
the end of the scheduled comment period. Any such comments or requests
should be sent by the end of the scheduled comment period. The
applications for exemption and the comments received will be available
for public inspection in the Public Disclosure Room of the Employee
Benefits Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, Room N-
1515, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION below for additional information regarding
comments.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments
In light of the current circumstances surrounding the COVID-19
pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus which may result in disruption
to the receipt of comments by U.S. Mail or hand delivery/courier,
persons are encouraged to submit all comments electronically and not to
follow with paper copies. Comments should state the nature of the
person's interest in the proposed exemption and the manner in which the
person would be adversely affected by the exemption, if granted. A
request for a hearing can be requested by any interested person who may
be adversely affected by an exemption. A request for a hearing must
state: (1) The name, address, telephone number, and email address of
the person making the request; (2) the nature of the person's interest
in the exemption and the manner in which the person would be adversely
affected by the exemption; and (3) a statement of the issues to be
addressed and a general description of the evidence to be presented at
the hearing. The Department will grant a request for a hearing made in
accordance with the requirements above where a hearing is necessary to
fully explore material factual issues identified by the person
requesting the hearing. A notice of such hearing shall be published by
the Department in the Federal Register. The Department may decline to
hold a hearing where: (1) The request for the hearing does not meet the
requirements above; (2) the only issues identified for exploration at
the hearing are matters of law; or (3) the factual issues identified
can be fully explored through the submission of evidence in written
(including electronic) form.
Warning: All comments received will be included in the public
record without change and may be made available online at https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided,
unless the comment includes information claimed to be confidential or
other information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. If you
submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include your name and other
contact information in the body of your comment, but DO NOT submit
information that you consider to be confidential, or otherwise
protected (such as Social Security number or an unlisted phone number)
or confidential business information that you do not want publicly
disclosed. However, if EBSA cannot read your comment due to technical
difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EBSA might not
be able to consider your comment. Additionally, the https://www.regulations.gov website is an ``anonymous access'' system, which
means EBSA will not know your identity or contact information unless
you provide it in the body of your comment. If you send an email
directly to EBSA without going through https://www.regulations.gov, your
email address will be automatically captured and included as part of
the comment that is placed in the public record and made available on
the internet.
Notice to Interested Persons
Notice of the proposed exemptions will be provided to all
interested persons in the manner agreed upon by the applicant and the
Department, unless otherwise stated in the Notice of Proposed
Exemption, within 15 days of the date of publication in the Federal
Register. Such notice shall include a copy of the notice of proposed
exemption as published in the Federal Register and shall inform
interested persons of their right to comment and to request a hearing
(where appropriate).
The proposed exemptions were requested in applications filed
pursuant to section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the
Code, and in accordance with procedures set forth in 29 CFR part 2570,
subpart B (76 FR 66637, 66644, October 27, 2011).\1\ Effective December
31, 1978, section 102 of Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C.
App. 1 (1996), transferred the authority of the Secretary of the
Treasury to issue exemptions of the type requested to the Secretary of
Labor. Therefore, these notices of proposed exemption are issued solely
by the Department.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Department has considered exemption applications
received prior to December 27, 2011 under the exemption procedures
set forth in 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The applications contain representations with regard to the
proposed exemptions which are summarized below. Interested persons are
referred to the applications on file with the Department for a complete
statement of the facts and representations.
[[Page 52119]]
Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
Located in Chicago, Illinois
[Application No. D-12077]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
(the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\2\
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\2\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Association; and/or (4) any person or entity
related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Association (BCBSA), to make a series of payments to
the Plan, including: (1) the past payment of $69,000,000, made on March
12, 2021; and (2) the past payment of $13,500,000, made on March 28,
2022 (the Restorative Payments). If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser of the
ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to BCBSA.
Summary of Facts and Representations 3
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\3\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12077 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCBSA is a national association of 35 independent, community-
based and locally operated Blue Cross Blue Shield companies. BCBSA owns
and manages the Blue Cross and Blue Shield trademarks and names in more
than 170 countries around the world and also grants licenses to
independent companies to use the trademarks and names in exclusive
geographic areas.
2. The Plan is a defined benefit pension plan that covers eligible
employees or participants of BCBSA who, as of December 31, 2006, had
completed one year of service, reached the age of 21, and remained
continuously employed. The Plan was amended effective January 1, 2007
to close participation to new entrants as of December 31, 2006. As of
August 31, 2020, the Plan held $104,789.042 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
Applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $224,525,108. At the time, this represented 77.66% of total Plan
assets.\4\
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\4\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in any
way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in
[[Page 52120]]
market volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019, the market value for the Plan's assets totaled
$289,100,229. As of March 31, 2020, the market value of total assets
for the Plan decreased to $97,181,664. The Applicant represents that
the Plan's total losses from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy was
$183,368,144, which caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBSA took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 24,
2020, BCBSA and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCBSA
agreed to make the Restorative Payments to the Plan consisting of: (a)
a payment not to exceed $74,000,000 by September 30, 2021; (b) a
payment not to exceed $20,000,000 by September 30, 2022; and (c) a
payment not to exceed $31,000,000 by September 30, 2023. Thereafter,
BCBSA made Restorative Payments to the Plan of $69,000,000 on March 12,
2021, and $13,500,000 on March 28, 2022.
12. On June 22, 2022, BCBSA and the Plan amended the Restorative
Payments provision of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement to
provide that BCBSA's Restorative Payments under the Agreement will
consist only of the $69,000,000 payment made on March 12, 2021, and the
$13,500,000 payment made on March 28, 2022.
13. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBSA its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\5\ Per the
assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer to
BCBSA a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed the total
Restorative Payments made by BCBSA, plus reasonable attorney fees paid
by BCBSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBSA to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBSA do not include: (a)
legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by BCBSA
for representation of its own interests or the interests of any party
other than the Plan. For purposes of determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBSA under this exemption, the amount
of reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBSA on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCBSA in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party
(for example, from a third party pursuant to a court award).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the Plan
receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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14. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments ($82,500,000), minus the Attorney Fees.
The Plan may ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment
amount required under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount
of Restorative Payments that BCBSA has made to the Plan, the Plan's
Repayment to BCBSA will be limited to the amount of Restorative
Payments actually made by BCBSA, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if
BCBSA reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees and the Plan
receives $120,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBSA totaling $82,600,000.
15. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBSA
has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBSA the lesser amount
of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For example,
if BCBSA has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees and the Plan
receives $50,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBSA totaling $50,100,000.
16. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
17. BCBSA retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
18. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
19. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBSA
and any BCBSA affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents
[[Page 52121]]
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
20. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
21. On November 23, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBSA only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount already received, plus any reasonable legal
expense paid to non-BCBSA-related parties that were incurred by, or
allocated to, BCBSA as a result of the Claims.\6\ Thus, if the Plan's
ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less than the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses that were
allocated to the Plan, BCBSA, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
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\6\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBSA in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
22. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBSA in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to BCBSA would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCBSA, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCBSA with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCBSA) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBSA in connection
with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible transfer of Plan
assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
23. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBSA fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCBSA or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBSA for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBSA to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBSA was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\7\
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\7\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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24. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and
[[Page 52122]]
conditions of the exemption have been met.
25. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBSA; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBSA must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
26. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBSA before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBSA the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCBSA in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
27. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBSA for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBSA paid to non-BCBSA-related
parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBSA was not otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
28. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
29. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\8\ In this regard, not later
than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the Independent
Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department demonstrating
that all of the requirements of this exemption have been met.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments substantially improved the
Plan's funding status, which enhanced the Plan's ability to meet its
obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCBSA the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed
Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal expenses
related to the Claims paid by BCBSA to unrelated third parties, as
confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this
exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the
Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) BCBSA; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
30. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBSA to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBSA do not include: (1) legal expenses
paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCBSA for
representation of BCBSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBSA'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield
Association.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement dated November 24, 2020, and its amendment that
became effective on June 22, 2022, containing all material terms
regarding BCBSA's agreement to make Required Restorative Payments to
the Plan in return for the Plan's potential Repayment to BCBSA of an
amount that is no more than lesser of the Required Restorative Payment
Amount (as described in Section I(h)) or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney
fees paid to unrelated third parties by BCBSA in connection with the
Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent
[[Page 52123]]
Fiduciary continues to serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBSA and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCBSA or affiliates of BCBSA;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\10\
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\10\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Has not received gross income from BCBSA or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBSA or from affiliates of BCBSA
while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any transaction
on behalf of the Plan during the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $183,368,144 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBSA to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of: (1) the past payment of $69,000,000 on March 12, 2021;
and (2) the past payment of $13,500,000 on March 28, 2022. The sum of
(1)-(2) is the Required Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBSA following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective November 24,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBSA's transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to BCBSA, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payment Amount or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan received
from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the Conditions set forth in
Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than March 28, 2022;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBSA; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBSA is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBSA may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCBSA must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize unnecessary
costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBSA for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBSA to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBSA for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBSA to non-BCBSA-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney
[[Page 52124]]
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBSA under this proposal, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBSA on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCBSA in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party
(i.e., pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBSA must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Frank Gonzalez of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8553. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City
Located in Kansas City, Missouri
[Application No. D-12039]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas
City (the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\11\
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\11\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Kansas City (BCBS KC), to make a series of payments
to the Plan, including the past payment of $87,000,000 made to the Plan
on September 9, 2021, and additional payments to the Plan totaling
$13,000,000 by December 31, 2024. If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser of the
ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments amount already
received by the Plan, plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS KC.
Summary of Facts and Representations 12
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\12\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12039 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCBS KC is a not-for-profit company that provides health
insurance products and services. BCBS KC is an independent licensee of
the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS KC and employees of
affiliated employers. On June 30, 2013, the Plan was closed to new
entrants. As of August 31, 2020, the Plan covered 1,212 participants
and held $80,441,432 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC
[[Page 52125]]
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $170,800,689, which represented 77.66% of total Plan assets.\13\
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\13\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019 the market value of Plan assets was $219,924,260. As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of Plan assets decreased to
$73,641,344. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses from
the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $139,613,178, which caused
the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS KC took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 5,
2020, BCBS KC and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCBS KC
agreed to make $100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan by
September 30, 2021. On September 9, 2021, BCBS KC made an $87,000,000
Restorative Payment to the Plan. Subsequently, on September 23, 2021,
BCBS KC and the Plan amended the Restorative Payments provision of the
Contribution and Assignment Agreement to state that BCBS KC will make
$100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan by December 31, 2024.
The prior payment of $87,000,000 together with the required future
payment of $13,000,000 constitutes the Required Restorative Payments
under this exemption.
12. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBS KC its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\14\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS KC a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payments made by BCBS KC as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS KC on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were
reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third parties (the
Attorney Fees).
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\14\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
BCBS KC do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by BCBS KC for representation of its own interests
or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
KC under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS KC on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS
[[Page 52126]]
KC in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example,
from a third party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS KC has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to
BCBS KC will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments actually
made by BCBS KC, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS KC has made
$100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan and has reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives
$120,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to
BCBS KC totaling $100,100,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBS
KC has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS KC the lesser
amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS KC has made $100,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
the Plan and has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if
the Plan receives $50,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will
make a Repayment to BCBS KC totaling $50,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
16. BCBS KC retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher
or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS
KC and any BCBS KC affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
20. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS KC only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount by the Plan, plus any reasonable legal
expense paid to non-BCBS KC-related parties that were incurred by, or
allocated to, BCBS KC as a result of the Claims.\15\ Thus, if the
Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS KC, not the Plan, will suffer the
loss.
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\15\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBS KC in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBS KC in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to BCBS KC would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCBS KC, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCBS KC with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCBS KC) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCBS KC's
promise to make
[[Page 52127]]
additional Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS KC in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS KC fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCBS KC or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS KC for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS KC or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS KC was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\16\
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\16\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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23. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS KC; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS KC must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS KC before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS KC the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCBS KC in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS KC for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS KC paid to non-BCBS KC-
related parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS KC or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where BCBS KC was not otherwise reimbursed by a
non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\17\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\17\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required
[[Page 52128]]
Restorative Payments will substantially improve the Plan's funding
status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to meet its obligations
to fund benefit obligations to participants and beneficiaries and help
the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit limitations imposed under Code
section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS KC the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount, or the amount the Plan
receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed
Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal expenses
related to the Claims paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third parties, as
confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this
exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the
Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) BCBS KC; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\18\
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\18\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS KC on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS KC to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS KC do not include: (1) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCBS KC for
representation of BCBC KC or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS KC'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas
City.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCBS KC and the Plan, dated November 5, 2020,
and its amendment that became effective on September 23, 2021,
containing all material terms regarding BCBS KC's agreement to make
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to BCBS KC of an amount that is no more than lesser
of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in Section
I(h)) or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid to unrelated third parties
by BCBS KC in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS KC and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCBS KC or affiliates of BCBS KC;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\19\
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\19\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS KC or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS KC or from affiliates of
BCBS KC while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $139,613,178 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBS KC to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of: (1) the past payment of $87,000,000 on September 9,
2021; and (2) a second installment amount of $13,000,000 due to the
Plan by December 31, 2024. The sum of (1) and (2) is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS KC following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective November 5,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS KC's
[[Page 52129]]
transfer of Restorative Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the
Plan's Repayment of an amount to BCBS KC, which must be no more than
the lesser of the Restorative Payment or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney
Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth in Section I and the
Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than December 31, 2024;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS KC; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS KC is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBS KC may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCBS KC must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS KC for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS KC to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS KC for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS KC to non-BCBS KC-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
KC under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS KC on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS KC in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS KC must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice To Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Nicholas Schroth of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8571. (This is not a toll-free number.)
[[Page 52130]]
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.
Located in Phoenix, Arizona
[Application No. D-12035]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona,
Inc. (the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\20\
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\20\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) the Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc. (BCBS AZ), to make a series of
payments to the Plan, including: (a) past payments totaling
$130,000,000; and (b) future amounts necessary for (i) the Plan's
assets to be equal to or greater than 100% of the Plan's current
liabilities, and (ii) the Plan to have an adjusted funding target
attainment percentage (AFTAP) of 110% (the Restorative Payments).
If the Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan
will transfer the lesser of the ligation proceeds amount or the
Restorative Payments, plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS AZ.
Summary of Facts and Representations 21
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\21\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12035 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc. (BCBS AZ or the
Applicant) is a not-for-profit company that provides health insurance
products and services. BCBS AZ is an independent licensee of the Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS AZ and employees of
affiliated employers. On June 30, 2012, the Plan was closed to new
entrants. As of August 31, 2020, the Plan held $178,703,160 in total
assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $369.3 million, which represented 77.67% of total Plan assets.\22\
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\22\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.67%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the
[[Page 52131]]
Claims, although Allianz had represented that it would buy hedges at
strike prices ranging from 10% to 25% below the market, the hedges it
actually held at the end of February 2020 were as much as 60% below the
market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019, the market value of the Plan and its Code section
401(h) Account were $416,127,759 and $59,347,737, respectively.\23\ As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of the Plan's total assets and the
Code section 401(h) Account decreased to $137,298,008 and $20,433,430,
respectively. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses
from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $302,470,379, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
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\23\ Code Section 401(h) permits a pension or annuity plan to
provide for payment of benefits for sickness, accident,
hospitalization and medical expenses for retired employees, their
spouses and dependents. In order for the pension or annuity plan to
meet the provisions of Code Section 401(h), the medical benefits
must be subordinate to pension benefits and must be established and
maintained in a separate account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS AZ took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 5,
2020, BCBS AZ and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCBS AZ
agreed to make $274 million in Restorative Payments to the Plan
pursuant to an installment payment structure (the Restorative
Payments). BCBS AZ made its first installment payment of $60 million to
the Plan on September 15, 2020. Thereafter, BCBS AZ made a Restorative
Payment to the Plan of $35,000,000 on December 28, 2020, and
$10,000,000 on July 31, 2021. Thus, as of July 31, 2021, BCBS AZ had
made Restorative Payments to the Plan totaling $105 million.
12. On October 13, 2021, BCBS AZ and the Plan amended the
Restorative Payments provision of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Restorative Payment Amendment). BCBS AZ agreed that
before December 31, 2023, it would contribute amounts necessary for the
Plan to have: (a) an adjusted funding target attainment percentage of
110% (after taking into account any waivers of the funding standard
carryover balance by the Plan Sponsor); and (b) an amount of assets
that is at least 100% of current Plan liabilities. In addition, any
minimum required contributions made by BCBS AZ to the Plan on or after
October 13, 2021, will not be included as part of the Restorative
Payments required under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. The
prior restorative payments noted above in paragraph 11 together with
the obligations noted here in paragraph 12 constitute the Required
Restorative Payments under this exemption.
13. On December 21, 2021, BCBS AZ made a fourth Restorative Payment
to the Plan totaling $25,000,000.\24\ The Applicant represents that
after making this most recent $25,000,000 Restorative Payment, BCBS AZ
has brought the Plan's funding level to 110% of AFTAP and, thus, has
met its obligation under item (a) of the Restorative Payment Amendment
identified above. This exemption, if granted, requires BCBS AZ to make
additional Restorative Contributions to the Plan before December 31,
2023, to ensure that the Plan has an amount of assets that is at least
100% of current Plan liabilities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ With the $25,000,000 payment, total Restorative Payments to
the Plan now total $130,000,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBS AZ its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\25\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS AZ a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payments made by BCBS AZ, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCBS AZ do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by BCBS AZ for representation of its own interests
or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
AZ under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS AZ in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a third
party pursuant to a court award).
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\25\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
15. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS AZ has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to
BCBS AZ will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments actually
made by BCBS AZ, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS AZ has made
$130,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan and reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $160,000,000
in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS AZ
totaling $130,100,000.
16. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBS
AZ has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS AZ the lesser
amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS AZ has made $130,000,000 in Restorative Payments to
[[Page 52132]]
the Plan and has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the
Plan receives $50,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS AZ totaling $50,100,000.
17. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
18. BCBS AZ retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher
or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
19. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
20. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS
AZ and any BCBS AZ affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
21. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
22. On November 3, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS AZ only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus any reasonable legal expense paid to
non-BCBS AZ-related parties that were incurred by, or allocated to,
BCBS AZ as a result of the Claims.\26\ Thus, if the Plan's ultimate
recovery amount from the Claims is less than the Required Restorative
Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses that were allocated to
the Plan, BCBS AZ, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBS AZ in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
23. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBS AZ in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to BCBS AZ would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCBS AZ, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCBS AZ with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCBS AZ) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCBS AZ's
promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS AZ in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
24. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
[[Page 52133]]
Contribution and Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of
the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the
rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS AZ fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCBS AZ or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS AZ for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS AZ or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS AZ was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\27\
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\27\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
25. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
26. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS AZ; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS AZ must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
27. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS AZ before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS AZ the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCBS AZ in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
28. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS AZ for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS AZ paid to non-BCBS AZ-
related parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS AZ or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where BCBS AZ was not otherwise reimbursed by a
non-Plan party.
29. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
30. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\28\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\28\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments will substantially improve
the Plan's funding status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS AZ the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount already received, or the amount
the Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets to: (a)
an adjusted funding target attainment percentage of at least 110%; and
(b) and an amount that is at least equal to or greater than 100% of the
current liabilities of the Plan (less reasonable legal expenses related
to the Claims paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third parties as confirmed
and approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the
Trust; (c) BCBS AZ; and/or (d)
[[Page 52134]]
any person or entity related to a person or entity described in (a)-
(c).
Summary
31. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\29\
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\29\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS AZ to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS AZ do not include: (1) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCBS AZ for
representation of BCBC AZ or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS AZ'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Arizona, Inc.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Amended Contribution and Assignment Agreement''
means the written agreement between BCBS AZ and the Plan, dated
November 5, 2020, and its amendment that became effective on October
13, 2021, containing all material terms regarding BCBS AZ's agreement
to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan in return for the
Plan's potential Repayment to BCBS AZ of an amount that is no more than
lesser of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in
Section I(h)) already received or the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid to
unrelated third parties by BCBS AZ in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS AZ and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCBS AZ or affiliates of BCBS AZ;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\30\
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\30\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS AZ or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS AZ or from affiliates of
BCBS AZ while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Arizona, Inc.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $302,470,379 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBS AZ to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of: (1) a first installment amount of $60,000,000 that BCBS
AZ contributed to the Plan on September 15, 2020; (2) a second
installment amount of $35,000,000 that BCBS AZ contributed to the Plan
on December 28, 2020; (3) a third installment amount of $10,000,000
that BCBS AZ contributed to the Plan on July 30, 2021; (4) a fourth
installment amount of $25,000,000 that BCBS AZ contributed to the Plan
on December 21, 2021; and (5) other amounts contributed to the Plan by
BCBS AZ before December 31, 2023 that are necessary for (i) the Plan to
have an adjusted funding target attainment percentage of 110% after
taking into account any waivers of the funding standard carryover
balance by the Plan Sponsor, and (ii) the Plan's assets to be equal to
or greater than 100% of the current liabilities of the Plan. The sum of
(1)-(5) is the Required Restorative Payment Amount. The term ``Required
Restorative Payment'' will not include any required minimum
contributions that BCBS AZ makes to the Plan on and after October 13,
2021.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS AZ following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective September 15,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS AZ's transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to BCBS AZ, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payment Amount already received or the amount of litigation proceeds
the Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable
[[Page 52135]]
Attorney Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than December 31, 2023;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS AZ; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS AZ is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBS AZ may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCBS AZ must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS AZ for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS AZ to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS AZ for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS AZ to non-BCBS AZ-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
AZ under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS AZ on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS AZ in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS AZ must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Frank Gonzalez of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8553. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont
Located in Berlin, Vermont
[Application No. D-12055]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
[[Page 52136]]
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont
(the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\31\
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\31\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont, Inc.; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross
and Blue Shield of Vermont (BCBS VT), to make a series of payments to
the Plan over a four-year period (the Restorative Payments). The
Restorative Payments will return the Plan to at least the Plan's
funding level (126.61%) as of January 1, 2019. If the Plan receives
litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments amount,
plus reasonable attorney fees to BCBS VT.
Summary of Facts and Representations 32
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\32\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12055 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont (BCBS VT or the Applicant)
is a not-for-profit hospital and medical services corporation that
issues and administers health care coverage for individuals and group
health plans. BCBS VT is an independent licensee of the Blue Cross Blue
Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS VT. As of August 31, 2020,
the Plan held $28,331,698 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $53,105,089, which represented 76.48% of total Plan assets.\33\
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\33\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 76.48%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31,
[[Page 52137]]
2019, the market value of the Plan's total assets was $69,439,545. As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of the Plan's total assets
decreased to $25,510,951. The Plan's total losses from the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy were $41,588,205, which caused the Plan to be
underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS VT took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on December 21,
2020, BCBS VT and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. The Restorative Payments. In the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, BCBS VT agreed to make an initial $13,000,000 lump sum
payment to the Plan which was expected to restore the Plan to an AFTAP
funding level of approximately 80% as of the January 1, 2021 valuation
of the Plan. BCBS VT also agreed to make such additional payments to
the Plan as necessary to maintain the Plan's funding level at 80% as of
such date, to the extent the preliminary $13,000,000 installment
payment fails to do so.\34\ Finally, BCBS VT stated that it intended to
make subsequent installment payments to the Plan on at least an annual
basis and over a four-year period to restore Plan funding to
approximately the level that was reported prior to the losses sustained
within the Allianz Structured Alpha strategy.
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\34\ BCBS VT has made two Restorative Payments to the Plan: a
$13,000,000 payment remitted on December 23, 2020, and a $3,100,000
payment remitted on September 14, 2021.
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12. Since the effective date of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement, BCBS VT has made two Restorative Payments to the Plan: a
$13,000,000 payment remitted on December 23, 2020, and a $3,100,000
payment remitted on September 14, 2021.
13. Department's Note: This exemption, if granted, requires BCBS VT
to make the Restorative Payments necessary to bring the Plan's funding
percentage to at least its January 1, 2019, pre-loss funded percentage
of 126.61%, by December 31, 2024. The prior restorative payments noted
above in paragraph 12 together with the funding obligations noted here
in paragraph 13 constitute the Required Restorative Payments under this
exemption.
14. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBS VT its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\35\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS VT a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payments made by BCBS VT, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by BCBS VT on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees). For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable
to BCBS VT do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by BCBS VT for representation of its own interests
or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
VT under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS VT on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS VT in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a third
party pursuant to a court award).
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\35\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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15. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS VT has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to
BCBS VT will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments actually
made by BCBS VT, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS VT made
$18,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan and reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives $30,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS VT totaling
$18,100,000.
16. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBS
VT has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS VT the lesser
amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS VT made $18,000,000 in Restorative Payments to the
Plan and has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the
Plan receives $10,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a
Repayment to BCBS VT totaling $10,100,000.
17. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
18. BCBS VT retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher
or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
19. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
20. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any
[[Page 52138]]
parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS VT and any BCBS VT
affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total revenues it has
received from the Plan and from parties in interest to the Plan in
connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
21. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
22. On December 21, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS VT only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received, plus any reasonable legal expense
paid to non-BCBS VT-related parties that were incurred by, or allocated
to, BCBS VT as a result of the Claims.\36\ Thus, if the Plan's ultimate
recovery amount from the Claims is less than the Required Restorative
Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses that were allocated to
the Plan, BCBS VT, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
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\36\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBS VT in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
23. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBS VT in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to BCBS VT would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCBS VT, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCBS VT with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCBS VT) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCBS VT's
promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS VT in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
24. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS VT fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCBS VT or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS VT for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS VT or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS VT was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section
[[Page 52139]]
410 or Department Regulations codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\37\
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\37\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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25. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
26. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS VT; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS VT must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
27. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS VT before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS VT the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCBS VT in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
28. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS VT for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS VT paid to non-BCBS VT-
related parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS VT or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where BCBS VT was not otherwise reimbursed by a
non-Plan party.
29. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
30. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\38\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\38\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments will substantially improve
the Plan's funding status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS VT the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount received, or the amount the
Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed
Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal expenses
related to the Claims paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third parties, as
confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this
exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the
Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary
of the Trust; (c) BCBS VT; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
31. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\39\
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\39\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS VT on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS VT to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS VT do not include: (1) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCBS VT for
representation of BCBC VT or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS VT'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Vermont.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCBS VT
[[Page 52140]]
and the Plan, dated December 21, 2020, containing all material terms
regarding BCBS VT's agreement to make Restorative Payments (as
described in Section I(h)) to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to BCBS VT of an amount that is no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payments or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney
Fees paid to unrelated third parties by BCBS VT in connection with the
Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS VT and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCBS VT or affiliates of BCBS VT;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\40\
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\40\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS VT or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS VT or from affiliates of
BCBS VT while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Vermont.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $41,588,205 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBS VT to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, including: (1)
the past payment of $13,000,000 made on December 23, 2020, (2) the past
payment of $3,100,000 made on September 14, 2021, and (3) amounts
necessary to restore the Plan to its funding level of 126.91% before
December 31, 2024. The sum of (1)-(3) is the Required Restorative
Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS VT following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective December 21,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS VT's transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to BCBS VT, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payment Amount or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan received
from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the Conditions set forth in
Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than December 31, 2024;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS VT; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS VT is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBS VT may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCBS VT must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS VT for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS VT to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
[[Page 52141]]
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS VT for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS VT to non-BCBS VT-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
VT under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS VT on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS VT in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS VT must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Nicholas Schroth of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8571. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Hawaii Medical Service Association
Located in Honolulu, Hawaii
[Application No. D-12038]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Hawaii Medical Service Association
(the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\41\
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\41\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Hawaii
Medical Service Association; and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the past payment of
$50,000,000 by Hawaii Medical Service Association (HMSA), the Plan
sponsor, to the Plan (the Restorative Payment). If the Plan receives
litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payment amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to HMSA.
Summary of Facts and Representations 42
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\42\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12038 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. HMSA is a not-for-profit company that provides health insurance
products and services. HMSA is an independent licensee of the Blue
Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of HMSA and employees of affiliated
employers. On December 31, 2014, the Plan was closed to new entrants.
In August 2020, the Sponsor elected to freeze Plan benefits for all
participants effective December 31, 2024. As of December 31, 2020, the
Plan covered 1,638 participants and held $167,536,184 in total assets.
3. Up until 2020, the Plan held a beneficial interest in the Blue
Cross and Blue Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust).\43\ The
Trust is a master trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit
pension plans that participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement
[[Page 52142]]
Program (the Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and
asset custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that
reflect the net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's
earnings, market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated
among the Participating Plans based on the respective Participating
Plan's share of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in
the Trust's net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
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\43\ The Plan withdrew substantially all of its assets from the
Trust in advance of the Trust's August 31, 2020 valuation date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $229,799,688, which represented 86.11% of total Plan assets.\44\
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\44\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 86.11%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019, the market value of the Plan was $266,849,059. As of
March 31, 2020, the market value of the Plan's total assets decreased
to $90,420,304. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses
from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $187,271,581, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, HMSA took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 3,
2020, HMSA and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement) whereby HMSA
agreed to make a $50,000,000 Restorative Payment to the Plan.
Subsequently, on December 18, 2020, HMSA made a $50,000,000 Restorative
Payment to the Plan. This $50,000,000 payment is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount under this exemption.
11. In exchange for the Restorative Payment, the Plan assigned to
HMSA its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\45\ Per the
assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer to
HMSA a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed the total
Restorative Payment made by HMSA as of that date, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by HMSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the
Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by HMSA to unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees).
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\45\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
HMSA do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by
[[Page 52143]]
the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by HMSA for representation of its
own interests or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For
purposes of determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to HMSA under this exemption, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by HMSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the
Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees received by HMSA in
connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
12. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payment, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the $50,000,000
Restorative Payment that HMSA made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to
HMSA will be limited to $50,000,000 plus Attorney Fees. For example, if
the Plan receives $80,000,000 in litigation proceeds and HMSA has
reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, the Plan will make a
Repayment to HMSA totaling $50,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the $50,000,000 Restorative Payment that HMSA
made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to HMSA the lesser amount of
litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if
the Plan receives $30,000,000 in litigation proceeds and HMSA has
reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, the Plan will make a
Repayment to HMSA totaling $30,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
15. HMSA retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payment and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including HMSA
and any HMSA affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
19. On March 18, 2021, Gallagher completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the massive
losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the Plan's total assets
and funding level. Gallagher represents that the Required Restorative
Payment, which will be received by the Plan substantially in advance of
a final resolution of the Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan's funded percentage to its pre-loss funded percentage
as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of the Plan's funding status
will secure ongoing benefit payments to participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse HMSA only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus any reasonable legal expense paid to
non-HMSA-related parties that were incurred by, or allocated to, HMSA
as a result of the Claims.\46\ Thus, if the Plan's ultimate recovery
amount from the Claims is less than the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus related litigation expenses that were allocated to the
Plan, HMSA, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
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\46\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from HMSA in exchange for the Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
20. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payment from HMSA in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation or
settlement proceeds to HMSA would violate ERISA. In this regard, ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the plan
to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know that
such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange of
any property between a plan and a party in interest. HMSA, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payment to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to HMSA with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (HMSA) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the
[[Page 52144]]
transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or use by or
for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or assets of the
plan. The transfer of Plan assets to HMSA in connection with the
Repayment would constitute an impermissible transfer of Plan assets to
a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the Plan's
participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to HMSA fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payment actually made to the Plan by HMSA or the
amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to HMSA for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by HMSA to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of HMSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where HMSA was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\47\
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\47\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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22. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) HMSA; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any Repayment by
the Plan to HMSA must be made in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments.
24. The Plan may not make any Repayment to HMSA before the date:
the Plan has received from HMSA the entire amount of the Restorative
Payment agreed to in the Contribution and Assignment Agreement; and all
the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may not pay any interest
to HMSA in connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payment, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any portion of the Required
Restorative Payment.
25. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse HMSA for reasonable legal expenses
arising from the Claims that HMSA paid to non-HMSA-related parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of HMSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where HMSA was not otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
26. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\48\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\48\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payment will substantially improve
the Plan's funding status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
[[Page 52145]]
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay HMSA the lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, or the amount the Plan receives in
proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed Transactions will
result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payment (less reasonable legal expenses related to the
Claims paid by HMSA to unrelated third parties, as confirmed and
approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the
Trust; (c) HMSA; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\49\
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\49\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by HMSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by HMSA to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to HMSA do not include: (1) legal expenses
paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by HMSA for
representation of HMSA or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(c) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between HMSA and the Plan, dated November 3, 2020,
containing all material terms regarding HMSA's agreement to make a
$50,000,000 payment to the Plan in return for the Plan's potential
Repayment to HMSA of an amount that is no more than the lesser of the
total Restorative Payments actually made by HMSA or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable
Attorney Fees paid to unrelated third parties by HMSA in connection
with the Claims.
(d) The term ``HMSA'' means Hawaii Medical Service Association.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of HMSA and does not hold an ownership
interest in HMSA or affiliates of HMSA;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\50\
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\50\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from HMSA or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from HMSA or from affiliates of HMSA
while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any transaction
on behalf of the Plan during the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Hawaii Medical Service Association.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $187,271,581 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payment'' means the payment made by HMSA
to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of a $50,000,000 payment that HMSA contributed to the Plan
on December 18, 2020. This $50,000,000 payment is the Required
Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to HMSA following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A) and (D), does not apply, effective November 3, 2020, to
the following transactions: HMSA's transfer of Restorative Payment to
the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount to HMSA,
which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative Payment Amount
or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan received from the Claims,
plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth
in Section I and the Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
[[Page 52146]]
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment on December
18, 2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Restorative Payment, the
Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action the
Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of the Plan; (2)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) HMSA; and/or (4) any person or entity
related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to HMSA is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payment received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to HMSA may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received the Restorative Payment it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
HMSA must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize unnecessary
costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payment and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to HMSA for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by HMSA to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse HMSA for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by HAS to non-HMSA-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to HMSA
under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
HMSA on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by HMSA in connection with
the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
HMSA must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of
the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must contain
all material information regarding the successor Independent Fiduciary,
including the successor Independent Fiduciary's qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs. Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of
the Department, telephone (202) 693-8567. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
BCS Financial Corporation
Located in Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois
[Application No. D-12036]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory
[[Page 52147]]
Retirement Program for Certain Employees of BCS Financial Corporation
(the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\51\
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\51\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCS
Financial Corporation; and/or (4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, BCS
Financial Corporation (BCS), to make a series of payments to the Plan,
including: (a) past payments totaling $19,600,000; and (b) a payment of
$1,800,000 on or before September 13, 2023 (the Restorative Payments).
If the Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer the lesser of the ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative
Payments, plus reasonable attorney fees to BCS.
Summary of Facts and Representations 52
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\52\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12036 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCS is a not-for-profit company that provides health insurance
products and services. BCS is wholly-owned by all of the primary
licensees of Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) that are
headquartered in Illinois.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCS. On December 31, 2019, the
Plan was closed to new entrants. As of December 31, 2020, the Plan
covered 242 participants and held $35,258,813 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $36,190,972, which represented 77.66% of total Plan assets.\53\
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\53\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019, the market value of the Plan was $46,599,770. As of
March 31, 2020, the market value of the Plan's total assets decreased
to $15,806,147. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses
from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $29,496,983, which
caused the Plan to be underfunded.
[[Page 52148]]
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCS took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on October 9, 2020,
BCS and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment Agreement
(the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCS
agreed to make a $16,000,000 Restorative Payment to the Plan within
seven business days after the Agreement's effective date. Subsequently,
on October 13, 2020, BCS made a $16,000,000 Restorative Payment to the
Plan.
12. On September 27, 2021, BCS and the Plan amended the Restorative
Payments provision of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement (the
Restorative Payment Amendment). Pursuant to the amendment, BCS agreed
to make the following three additional Restorative Payments to the
Plan: (a) a payment of $1,800,000 on or before September 13, 2021; (b)
a payment of $1,800,000 on or before September 13, 2022; and (c) a
payment of $1,800,000 on or before September 13, 2023. Since the
effective date of the Restorative Payment Amendment, BCS Financial has
made two additional Restorative Payments to the Plan: a $1,800,000
payment on September 14, 2021, and a $1,800,000 payment on January 14,
2022.
13. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCS its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\54\ Per the
assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer to
BCS a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed the total
Restorative Payments made by BCS, plus reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCS on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such fees
are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCS to
unrelated third parties (the Attorney Fees). For the purposes of this
exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCS do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by BCS for
representation of its own interests or the interests of any party other
than the Plan. For purposes of determining the amount of Attorney Fees
the Plan may reimburse to BCS under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCS on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCS in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party
(for example, from a third party pursuant to a court award).
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\54\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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14. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCS has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to BCS
will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments actually made by
BCS, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if BCS has made $19,600,000 in
Restorative Payments to the Plan and reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives $30,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to BCS totaling $19,700,000.
15. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCS
has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCS the lesser amount
of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For example,
if BCS has made $19,600,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan and has
reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and if the Plan receives
$10,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to
BCS totaling $10,100,000.
16. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
17. BCS retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
18. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
19. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCS
and any BCS affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total revenues
it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to the Plan
in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary represents
approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
20. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
21. On October 9, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
[[Page 52149]]
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCS only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount, plus any reasonable legal expense paid to
non-BCS-related parties that were incurred by, or allocated to, BCS as
a result of the Claims.\55\ Thus, if the Plan's ultimate recovery
amount from the Claims is less than the Required Restorative Payment
Amount, plus related litigation expenses that were allocated to the
Plan, BCS, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
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\55\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCS in exchange for the Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
22. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCS in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation or
settlement proceeds to BCS would violate ERISA. In this regard, ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the plan
to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know that
such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange of
any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCS, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCS with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCS) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCS's
promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCS in connection
with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible transfer of Plan
assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
23. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCS fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCS or the
amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCS for legal expenses
in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCS to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCS or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCS was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\56\
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\56\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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24. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
25. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCS; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any Repayment by
the Plan to BCS must be made in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments.
[[Page 52150]]
26. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCS before the date: the
Plan has received from BCS the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCS in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
27. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCS for reasonable legal expenses
arising from the Claims that BCS paid to non-BCS-related parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCS or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCS was not otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
28. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
29. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\57\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\57\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments will substantially improve
the Plan's funding status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCS the lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, or the amount the Plan receives in
proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed Transactions will
result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the total amount of
Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal expenses related to the
Claims paid by BCS to unrelated third parties, as confirmed and
approved by the Independent Fiduciary). Further, this exemption
preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may
have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the
Trust; (c) BCS; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
30. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\58\
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\58\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCS on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCS to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCS do not include: (1) legal expenses
paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCS for representation
of BCS or the interests of any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ``BCS'' means BCS Financial Corporation.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCS and the Plan, dated October 9, 2020, and
its amendment that became effective on September 27, 2021, containing
all material terms regarding BCS's agreement to make Required
Restorative Payments (as described in Section I(h)) to the Plan in
return for the Plan's potential Repayment to BCS of an amount that is
no more than the lesser of the total Restorative Payments or the amount
of litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims, plus
reasonable Attorney Fees paid to unrelated third parties by BCS in
connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCS and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCS or affiliates of BCS;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
[[Page 52151]]
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\59\
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\59\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCS or its affiliates during
any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of the
Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCS or from affiliates of BCS
while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any transaction
on behalf of the Plan during the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of BCS Financial Corporation.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $29,496,983 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCS in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above, consisting of:
(1) the past payment of $16,000,000, made on October 13, 2020; (2) the
past payment of $1,800,000, made on September 14, 2021; (3) the past
payment of $1,800,000 made on January 14, 2022; and (4) a payment of
$1,800,000 to be made on or before September 13, 2023. The sum of (1)-
(4) is the Required Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCS following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective October 9, 2020,
to the following transactions: BCS's transfer of Restorative Payments
to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount to BCS,
which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative Payment Amount
or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan received from the Claims,
plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth
in Section I and the Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than September 13, 2023;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCS; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCS is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCS may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCS must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize unnecessary
costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCS for legal expenses
in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable legal
expenses that were paid by BCS to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCS for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with the
Claims by BCS to non-BCS-related parties. For purposes of determining
the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCS under this
proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by BCS on behalf
of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount
of legal fees received by BCS in connection with the Claims from any
non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
[[Page 52152]]
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCS must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of
the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must contain
all material information regarding the successor Independent Fiduciary,
including the successor Independent Fiduciary's qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Frank Gonzalez of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8553. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi, A Mutual Insurance Company
Located in Flowood, Mississippi
[Application No. D-12040]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Mississippi (the Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\60\
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\60\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi, a Mutual Insurance Company;
and/or (4) any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the past payments of
$70,000,000 and $12,000,000 by the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Mississippi, A Mutual Insurance Company (BCBS MS), to the
Plan (the Restorative Payments). If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser of the
ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments, plus reasonable
attorney fees to BCBS MS.
Summary of Facts and Representations 61
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\61\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12040 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCBS MS is a not-for-profit company that provides health
insurance products and services. BCBS MS is an independent licensee of
the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS MS and employees of
affiliated employers. As of December 31, 2006, the Plan was closed to
new entrants. As of December 31, 2020, the Plan covered 976
participants and held $153,536,775 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy
[[Page 52153]]
consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the applicant, the
alpha component was an options trading strategy that Allianz claimed
would seek targeted positive return potential while maintaining
structural risk protections. The beta component was intended to provide
broad market exposure to a particular asset class through investments
in financial products similar to an exchange-traded fund that
replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P 500.
According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the Structured
Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating features of
option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously benefitting from
the risk-control attributes associated with option buying (long
volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz represented further
that the alpha component would include position hedging consisting of
long-volatility positions designed to protect the portfolio in the
event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $122,962,882, which represented 71.18% of total Plan assets.\62\
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\62\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 71.18%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019 the market value of Plan assets was $172,731,750. As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of Plan assets decreased to
$67,238,446. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses from
the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $102,446,155, which caused
the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS MS took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on September 17,
2020, BCBS MS and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCBS MS
agreed to make the following Restorative Payments to the Plan: (a) a
$70,000,000 payment within seven business days of the effective date of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement; and (b) a $12,000,000
payment on or about November 24, 2020. BCBS MS subsequently made the
following Restorative Payments to the Plan: (a) a payment of
$70,000,000 on September 21, 2020; and (b) a payment of $12,000,000 on
November 25, 2020.
12. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBS MS its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\63\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS MS a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payments made by BCBS MS as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS MS on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were
reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third parties (the
Attorney Fees).
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\63\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
BCBS MS do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by BCBS MS for representation of its own interests
or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
MS under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS MS on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS MS in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a third
party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan,
however, may ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment
amount required under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount
of Restorative Payments that BCBS MS has made to the Plan, the Plan's
Repayment to BCBS MS will be limited to the amount of
[[Page 52154]]
Restorative Payments actually made by BCBS MS, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS MS reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and
the Plan receives $100,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will
make a Repayment to BCBS MS totaling $82,100,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBS
MS has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS MS the lesser
amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS MS has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees,
and the Plan receives $50,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will
make a Repayment to BCBS MS totaling $50,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
16. BCBS MS retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher
or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS
MS and any BCBS MS affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
20. On September 17, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payments, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS MS only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, plus any reasonable
legal expense paid to non-BCBS MS-related parties that were incurred
by, or allocated to, BCBS MS as a result of the Claims.\64\ Thus, if
the Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS MS, not the Plan, will suffer the
loss.
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\64\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBS MS in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBS MS in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to BCBS MS would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. BCBS MS, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to BCBS MS with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (BCBS MS) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCBS MS's
promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS MS in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
[[Page 52155]]
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS MS fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by BCBS MS or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS MS for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of BCBS MS or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where BCBS MS was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\65\
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\65\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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23. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS MS; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS MS must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS MS before the date:
the Plan has received from BCBS MS the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to BCBS MS in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS MS for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS MS paid to non-BCBS MS-
related parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS MS or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where BCBS MS was not otherwise reimbursed by a
non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\66\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\66\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments substantially improved the
Plan's funding status, which enhanced the Plan's ability to meet its
obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because,
[[Page 52156]]
among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS MS the lesser of the
Required Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, or the amount
the Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at
least the total amount of Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal
expenses related to the Claims paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary).
Further, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause
of action the Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS MS; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\67\
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\67\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS MS on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS MS to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS MS do not include: (1) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by BCBS MS for
representation of BCBC MS or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS MS'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Mississippi, a Mutual Insurance Company.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCBS MS and the Plan, dated September 17,
2020, containing all material terms regarding BCBS MS's agreement to
make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to BCBS MS of an amount that is no more than lesser
of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in Section
I(h)) or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the
Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid to unrelated third parties
by BCBS MS in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS MS and does not hold an ownership
interest in BCBS MS or affiliates of BCBS MS;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\68\
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\68\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS MS or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS MS or from affiliates of
BCBS MS while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Mississippi.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $102,446,155 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBS MS to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined above,
consisting of: (1) the past payment of $70,000,000 made on September
21, 2020; and (2) the past payment of $12,000,000 made on November 25,
2020. The sum of (1) and (2) is the Required Restorative Payment
Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS MS following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective September 17,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS MS's transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to BCBS MS, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payments or the amount of litigation proceeds the Plan received from
the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided that the
Definitions set forth in Section I and the Conditions set forth in
Section III are met.
[[Page 52157]]
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than November 25, 2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS MS; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS MS is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBS MS may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has
determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan
has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
BCBS MS must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payments were fully and
timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS MS for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by BCBS MS to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS MS for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by BCBS MS to non-BCBS MS-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
MS under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
BCBS MS on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS MS in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS MS must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs. Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of
the Department, telephone (202) 693-8567. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc.
Located in Omaha, Nebraska
[Application No. D-12041]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S.
[[Page 52158]]
LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from
certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc. (the
Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\69\
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\69\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Blue
Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc.; and/or (4) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the past payments of
$7,000,000 and $6,600,000 by the Plan sponsor, Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Nebraska, Inc. (BCBS Nebraska or the Applicant), to the Plan
(the Restorative Payments). If the Plan receives litigation proceeds
from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser of the ligation
proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments, plus reasonable attorney
fees to BCBS Nebraska.
Summary of Facts and Representations 70
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\70\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12041 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCBS Nebraska is a not-for-profit company that provides health
insurance products and services. BCBS Nebraska is an independent
licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS Nebraska. The Plan was
amended, effective January 1, 2006, to close participation to new
entrants as of December 31, 2005. As of August 31, 2020, the Plan
covered 418 participants and held $36,863,722 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $42,147,684, which represented 59.39% of total Plan assets.\71\
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\71\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 59.39%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019 the market value of Plan assets was $70,967,280. As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of Plan assets decreased to
$36,028,581. The Applicant represents
[[Page 52159]]
that the Plan's total losses from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy
were $33,649,481, which caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS Nebraska took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid
onerous benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to
the Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 5,
2020, BCBS Nebraska and the Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
Pursuant to the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, BCBS Nebraska
agreed to make Restorative Payments to the Plan not in excess of
$33,649,481 by September 15, 2022. Subsequently, on August 25, 2021,
BCBS Nebraska made a $7,000,000 Restorative Payment to the Plan.
11. On March 17, 2022, BCBS Nebraska and the Plan amended the
Restorative Payments provision of the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement to require BCBS Nebraska to make one additional Restorative
Payment of $6,600,000 to the Plan by September 15, 2022. Subsequently,
on March 29, 2022, BCBS Nebraska made a $6,600,000 Restorative Payment
to the Plan.
12. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
BCBS Nebraska its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\72\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Nebraska a repayment (the Repayment) that does not
exceed the total Restorative Payments made by BCBS Nebraska as of that
date, plus reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS Nebraska on behalf of
the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and
approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who confirms that the
fees were reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS Nebraska to unrelated
third parties (the Attorney Fees).
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\72\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
BCBS Nebraska do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and
(b) legal expenses paid by BCBS Nebraska for representation of its own
interests or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For
purposes of determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to BCBS Nebraska under this exemption, the amount of
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS Nebraska on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees
received by BCBS Nebraska in connection with the Claims from any non-
Plan party (for example, from a third party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that BCBS Nebraska has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment
to BCBS Nebraska will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments
actually made by BCBS Nebraska, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if
BCBS Nebraska has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and
the Plan receives $30,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will
make a Repayment to BCBS Nebraska totaling $13,700,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that BCBS
Nebraska has made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS Nebraska
the lesser amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney
Fees. For example, if BCBS Nebraska reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $5,000,000 in litigation proceeds,
the Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS Nebraska totaling $5,100,000.
15. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
16. BCBS Nebraska retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC
(Gallagher or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to
serve as the Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required
Restorative Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those
Payments (collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher
represents that it has extensive experience in institutional investment
consulting and fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and
alternative investments. Gallagher further represents that its
independent fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a
fiduciary advisor or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated
asset pools and that it has experience with a wide range of asset
classes and litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS
Nebraska and any BCBS Nebraska affiliates. Gallagher further represents
the total revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in
interest to the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent
Fiduciary represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
20. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level.
[[Page 52160]]
Gallagher represents that the Required Restorative Payments, which will
be received by the Plan substantially in advance of a final resolution
of the Claims against Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded
percentage to its pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The
restoration of the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit
payments to participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS Nebraska only up to the
Required Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, plus any
reasonable legal expense paid to non-BCBS Nebraska-related parties that
were incurred by, or allocated to, BCBS Nebraska as a result of the
Claims.\73\ Thus, if the Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the
Claims is less than the Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus
related litigation expenses that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS
Nebraska, not the Plan, will suffer the loss.
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\73\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from BCBS Nebraska in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from BCBS Nebraska in exchange for the Plan's transfer of
litigation or settlement proceeds to BCBS Nebraska would violate ERISA.
In this regard, ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary
from causing the plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows
or should know that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect
sale or exchange of any property between a plan and a party in
interest. BCBS Nebraska, as an employer whose employees are covered by
the Plan, is a party in interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA
Section 3(14)(C). The Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the
Plan's potential repayment to BCBS Nebraska with litigation or
settlement proceeds would constitute impermissible exchanges between
the Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS Nebraska) in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. BCBS
Nebraska's promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan,
over time, constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the
Plan and a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS Nebraska in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Nebraska fully
complies with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by
BCBS Nebraska or the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Nebraska for
legal expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only
reasonable legal expenses that were paid by BCBS Nebraska to unrelated
third parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS Nebraska or the interests of any
party other than the Plan) where BCBS Nebraska was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\74\
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\74\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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23. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS
[[Page 52161]]
Nebraska; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any Repayment by
the Plan to BCBS Nebraska must be made in a manner designed to minimize
unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments.
25. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS Nebraska before the
date: the Plan has received from BCBS Nebraska the entire amount of the
Restorative Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the
Plan may not pay any interest to BCBS Nebraska in connection with its
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to
secure any portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS Nebraska for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS Nebraska paid to non-BCBS
Nebraska-related parties for representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation of BCBS Nebraska or the
interests of any party other than the Plan) where BCBS Nebraska was not
otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\75\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\75\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments substantially improved the
Plan's funding status, which enhanced the Plan's ability to meet its
obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and helped the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS Nebraska the
lesser of the Required Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan,
or the amount the Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring
that the Proposed Transactions will result in an increase in Plan
assets of at least the total amount of Restorative Payments (less
reasonable legal expenses related to the Claims paid by BCBS Nebraska
to unrelated third parties, as confirmed and approved by the
Independent Fiduciary). Further, this exemption preserves any right,
claim, demand and/or cause of action the Plan may have against: (a) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS
Nebraska; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or entity
described in (a)-(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\76\
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\76\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS Nebraska on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims,
if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent
fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid
by BCBS Nebraska to unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS Nebraska do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses
paid by BCBS Nebraska for representation of BCBC Nebraska or the
interests of any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS Nebraska'' means Blue Cross and Blue Shield of
Nebraska, Inc.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCBS Nebraska and the Plan, dated November 5,
2020, and its amendment that became effective on March 17, 2022,
containing all material terms regarding BCBS Nebraska's agreement to
make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to BCBS Nebraska of an amount that is no more than
lesser of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in
Section I(h)) received by the Plan or the amount of litigation proceeds
the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid
to unrelated third parties by BCBS Nebraska in connection with the
Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
[[Page 52162]]
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS Nebraska and does not hold an
ownership interest in BCBS Nebraska or affiliates of BCBS Nebraska;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\77\
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\77\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS Nebraska or its
affiliates during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent
(2%) of the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for
the prior fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS Nebraska or from affiliates
of BCBS Nebraska while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This
prohibition will continue for six months after the party ceases to be
an Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates
any transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Nebraska, Inc.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $33,649,481 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the payments made by
BCBS Nebraska to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined
above, consisting of: (1) the past payment of $7,000,000 on August 25,
2021; and (2) the past payment of $6,600,000 on March 29, 2022. The sum
of (1) and (2) is the Required Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Nebraska following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from
the Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims, and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective November 5,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS Nebraska's transfer of
Restorative Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment
of an amount to BCBS Nebraska, which must be no more than the lesser of
the Restorative Payment received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable
Attorney Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth in Section I and
the Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than March 29, 2022;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS Nebraska; and/or (4)
any person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-
(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS Nebraska is for no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The
Plan's Repayment to BCBS Nebraska may only occur after the Independent
Fiduciary has determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are
met; the Plan has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and
the Plan has received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's
Repayment to BCBS Nebraska must be carried out in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Nebraska for
legal expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only
reasonable legal expenses that were paid by BCBS Nebraska to unrelated
third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS Nebraska for reasonable legal expenses paid in
connection with the Claims by BCBS
[[Page 52163]]
Nebraska to non-BCBS Nebraska-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS
Nebraska under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees
paid by BCBS Nebraska on behalf of the Plan in connection with the
Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS
Nebraska in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e.,
pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS Nebraska must notify the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material information regarding the
successor Independent Fiduciary, including the successor Independent
Fiduciary's qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mrs. Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of
the Department, telephone (202) 693-8567. (This is not a toll-free
number.)
BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc.
Located in Chattanooga, Tennessee
[Application No. D-12045]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the BlueCross BlueShield of
Tennessee, Inc. Pension Plan (the Plan) in the first quarter of
2020.\78\
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\78\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BlueCross
BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc.; and/or (4) any person or entity
related to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the past payment of
$100,000,000 to the Plan by the Plan sponsor, BlueCross BlueShield of
Tennessee, Inc. (BCBS Tennessee). If the Plan receives litigation
proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser of the
ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payment, plus reasonable
attorney fees to BCBS Tennessee.
Summary of Facts and Representations 79
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\79\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12045 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. BCBS Tennessee is a not-for-profit company incorporated in
Tennessee with its principal office in Chattanooga, Tennessee. BCBS
Tennessee issues and administers health care coverage for individuals
and group health plans sponsored by Tennessee-based employers and is an
independent licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA).
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered, frozen defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of BCBS Tennessee and employees of
affiliated employers. BCBS Tennessee makes all contributions to the
Plan for the exclusive benefit of participants and their beneficiaries,
and to cover administrative expenses. As of August 31, 2020, the Plan
covered 2,628 participants and held $203,341,148 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's
[[Page 52164]]
board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion of the
Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC
(Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $138,015,536, which represented 68.57% of total Plan assets.\80\
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\80\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 68.57%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019, the market value of the Plan's assets was
$201,265,786. As of March 31, 2020, the market value of the Plan's
assets decreased to $103,023,619. The Applicant represents that the
Plan's total losses from the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were
$93,576,015, which caused the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, BCBS Tennessee took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid
onerous benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to
the Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on October 8,
2020, BCBS Tennessee and the Plan entered into a Contribution and
Assignment Agreement (the Contribution and Assignment Agreement),
whereby BCBS Tennessee agreed to make a $100,000,000 payment to the
Plan within seven business days of the effective date of the
Contribution and Assignment Agreement (the Restorative Payment). BCBS
Tennessee remitted $100,000,000 to the Plan on October 8, 2020.
11. In exchange for the Restorative Payment, the Plan assigned to
BCBS Tennessee its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\81\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Tennessee a repayment (the Repayment) that does not
exceed the total Restorative Payment made by BCBS Tennessee, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS Tennessee on behalf of the Plan
in connection with the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved
by a qualified independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were
reasonably incurred and paid by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated third
parties (the Attorney Fees). For the purposes of this exemption,
Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS Tennessee do not include: (a) legal
expenses paid by the Plan; and (b) legal expenses paid by BCBS
Tennessee for representation of its own interests or the interests of
any party other than the Plan. For purposes of determining the amount
of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS Tennessee under this
exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS
Tennessee on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by BCBS Tennessee in
connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
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\81\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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12. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised
[[Page 52165]]
Restorative Payment, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan, however, may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of the
Restorative Payment that BCBS Tennessee made to the Plan, the Plan's
Repayment to BCBS Tennessee will be limited to the amount of
Restorative Payment made by BCBS Tennessee, plus Attorney Fees. For
example, if BCBS Tennessee has reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney
Fees, and the Plan receives $120,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the
Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS Tennessee totaling $100,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of the Restorative Payment that
BCBS Tennessee made to the Plan, the Plan will transfer to BCBS
Tennessee the lesser amount of litigation or settlement proceeds, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if BCBS Tennessee has reasonably incurred
$100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $50,000,000 in
litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to BCBS Tennessee
totaling $50,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
15. BCBS Tennessee retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC
(Gallagher or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to
serve as the Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required
Restorative Payment and the potential repayment by the Plan of that
Payment (collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents
that it has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting
and fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including BCBS
Tennessee and any BCBS Tennessee affiliates. Gallagher further
represents the total revenues it has received from the Plan and from
parties in interest to the Plan in connection with its engagement as
Independent Fiduciary represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's
total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
19. On October 8, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payment, which was received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse BCBS Tennessee only up to the
Required Restorative Payment Amount received, plus any reasonable legal
expense paid to non-BCBS Tennessee-related parties that were incurred
by, or allocated to, BCBS Tennessee as a result of the Claims.\82\
Thus, if the Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less
than the Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation
expenses that were allocated to the Plan, BCBS Tennessee, not the Plan,
will suffer the loss.
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\82\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from BCBS Tennessee in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
20. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payment from BCBS Tennessee in exchange for the Plan's transfer of
litigation or settlement proceeds to BCBS Tennessee would violate
ERISA. In this regard, ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan
fiduciary from causing the plan to engage in a transaction if the
fiduciary knows or should know that such transaction constitutes a
direct or indirect sale or exchange of any property between a plan and
a party in interest. BCBS Tennessee, as an employer whose employees are
covered by the Plan, is a party in interest with respect to the Plan
under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The Required Restorative Payment to the
Plan and the Plan's potential repayment to BCBS Tennessee with
litigation or settlement proceeds would constitute impermissible
exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-interest (BCBS Tennessee) in
violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to BCBS Tennessee in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to
[[Page 52166]]
a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the Plan's
participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Tennessee fully
complies with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payment actually made to the Plan by
BCBS Tennessee or the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus
Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Tennessee for
legal expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only
reasonable legal expenses that were paid by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated
third parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of BCBS Tennessee or the interests of any
party other than the Plan) where BCBS Tennessee was not otherwise
reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\83\
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\83\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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22. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) BCBS Tennessee; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person
or entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Tennessee must be made in a manner
designed to minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and
its investments.
24. The Plan may not make any Repayment to BCBS Tennessee before
the date: the Plan has received from BCBS Tennessee the entire amount
of the Restorative Payment agreed to in the Amended Contribution and
Assignment Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the
Plan may not pay any interest to BCBS Tennessee in connection with its
receipt of the Required Restorative Payment, nor pledge Plan assets to
secure any portion of the Required Restorative Payment.
25. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse BCBS Tennessee for reasonable
legal expenses arising from the Claims that BCBS Tennessee paid to non-
BCBS Tennessee-related parties for representation of the Plan and its
interests (as opposed to representation of BCBS Tennessee or the
interests of any party other than the Plan) where BCBS Tennessee was
not otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
26. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\84\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\84\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payment substantially improved the
Plan's funding status, which enhanced the Plan's ability to meet its
obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because,
[[Page 52167]]
among other things, the Plan will repay BCBS Tennessee the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount received, or the amount the
Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the Proposed
Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at least the
total amount of Restorative Payment (less reasonable legal expenses
related to the Claims paid by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary).
Further, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause
of action the Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) BCBS Tennessee; and/or (d) any person
or entity related to a person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\85\
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\85\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by BCBS Tennessee on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims,
if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent
fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid
by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees reimbursable to BCBS Tennessee do not
include: (1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses
paid by BCBS Tennessee for representation of BCBC Tennessee or the
interests of any party other than the Plan.
(b) The term ``BCBS Tennessee'' means BlueCross BlueShield of
Tennessee, Inc.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between BCBS Tennessee and the Plan, dated October 8,
2020, containing all material terms regarding Tennessee's agreement to
make the Required Restorative Payment to the Plan in return for the
Plan's potential Repayment to BCBS Tennessee of an amount that is no
more than lesser of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as
described in Section I(h)) received or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney
fees paid to unrelated third parties by BCBS Tennessee in connection
with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of BCBS Tennessee and does not hold an
ownership interest in BCBS Tennessee or affiliates of BCBS Tennessee;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\86\
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\86\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from BCBS Tennessee or its
affiliates during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent
(2%) of the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for
the prior fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from BCBS Tennessee or from affiliates
of BCBS Tennessee while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This
prohibition will continue for six months after the party ceases to be
an Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates
any transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee, Inc.
Pension Plan.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $93,576,015 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payment'' means the payment made by BCBS
Tennessee to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses, defined
above, consisting of a $100,000,000 payment that BCBS Tennessee
contributed to the Plan on October 8, 2020. This $100,000,000 payment
is the Required Restorative Payment Amount.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to BCBS Tennessee following the Plan's receipt of proceeds
from the Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and
complete resolution of the Claims; and in a manner that is consistent
with the terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective September 15,
2020, to the following transactions: BCBS Tennessee's transfer of the
Restorative Payment to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment
of an amount to BCBS Tennessee, which must be no more than the lesser
of the Restorative Payment Amount received or the amount of litigation
proceeds the Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney
Fees, provided that the Definitions set forth in Section I and the
Conditions set forth in Section III are met.
[[Page 52168]]
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than October 8, 2020;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payment, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes of
action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) BCBS Tennessee; and/or
(4) any person or entity related to a person or entity identified in
(1)-(3) of this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to BCBS Tennessee is for no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payment received by the Plan or the
amount of litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The
Plan's Repayment to BCBS Tennessee may only occur after the Independent
Fiduciary has determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are
met; the Plan has received the entirety of the Restorative Payment it
is due; and the Plan has received all the litigation proceeds it is
due. The Plan's Repayment to BCBS Tennessee must be carried out in a
manner designed to minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the
Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payment and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to BCBS Tennessee for
legal expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only
reasonable legal expenses that were paid by BCBS Tennessee to unrelated
third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse BCBS Tennessee for reasonable legal expenses paid in
connection with the Claims by BCBS Tennessee to non-BCBS Tennessee-
related parties. For purposes of determining the amount of Attorney
Fees the Plan may reimburse to BCBS Tennessee under this proposal, the
amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by BCBS Tennessee on behalf of
the Plan in connection with the Claims must be reduced by the amount of
legal fees received by BCBS Tennessee in connection with the Claims
from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
BCBS Tennessee must notify the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such
notification must contain all material information regarding the
successor Independent Fiduciary, including the successor Independent
Fiduciary's qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Ms. Blessed Chuksorji-Keefe of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8567. (This is not a toll-free number.)
Triple-S Management Corporation
Located in San Juan, Puerto Rico
[Application No. D-12042]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims)
[[Page 52169]]
against Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments
USA Inc. (Aon), that arose from certain losses incurred by the Triple-S
Management Corporation Non-Contributory Retirement Plan (the Plan) in
the first quarter of 2020.\87\
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\87\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Triple-S
Management Corporation and/or (4) any person or entity related to a
person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the past payment of
$10,000,000 by Triple-S Management Corporation (Triple-S), the Plan
sponsor, to the Plan (the Restorative Payment). If the Plan receives
litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payment amount, plus
reasonable attorney fees to Triple-S.
Summary of Facts and Representation 88
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\88\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12042 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. Triple-S is an insurance holding company that provides health
insurance products and services. Triple-S is the only independent
licensee of the Blue Cross Blue Shield Association (BCBSA) in Puerto
Rico and has a presence in markets such as the U.S. Virgin Islands and
Costa Rica.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees or participants of Triple-S. The
Plan was amended effective January 31, 2017, to freeze benefit accruals
as of that date with respect to all participants. As of August 31,
2020, the Plan covered 1,144 participants and held $64,771,505 in total
assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz represented that the
Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the return-generating
features of option selling (short volatility) while simultaneously
benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated with option
buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant, Allianz
represented further that the alpha component would include position
hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to protect the
portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $127,024,812, which represented 77.66% of total Plan assets.\89\
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\89\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31,
[[Page 52170]]
2019 the market value of Plan assets was $163,558,110. As of March 31,
2020, the market value of Plan assets decreased to $54,855,395. The
Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses from the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy were $103,793,253, which caused the Plan to
be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, Triple-S took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid
onerous benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to
the Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on November 6,
2020, Triple-S and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment
Agreement whereby Triple-S agreed to make a $10,000,000 Restorative
Payment to the Plan not later than December 31, 2021 (the Contribution
and Assignment Agreement). Subsequently, on June 28, 2021, Triple-S
made a $10,000,000 Restorative Payment to the Plan.
11. In exchange for the Restorative Payment, the Plan assigned to
Triple-S its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement
proceeds recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\90\ Per
the assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the
Plan receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will
transfer to Triple-S a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed
the total Restorative Payment made by Triple-S as of that date, plus
reasonable attorney fees paid by Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in
connection with the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a
qualified independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were
reasonably incurred and paid by Triple-S to unrelated third parties
(the Attorney Fees).
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\90\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
Triple-S do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by Triple-S for representation of its own interests
or the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to
Triple-S under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees
paid by Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims
must be reduced by the amount of legal fees received by Triple-S in
connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a
third party pursuant to a court award).
12. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payment, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payment that Triple-S has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to
Triple-S will be limited to the Restorative Payment amount, plus
Attorney Fees. For example, if Triple-S reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $20,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to Triple-S totaling
$10,100,000.
13. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of the Restorative Payment, the
Plan will transfer to Triple-S the lesser amount of litigation or
settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if Triple-S
reasonably incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives
$5,000,000 in litigation proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to
Triple-S totaling $5,100,000.
14. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
15. Triple-S retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher
or the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payment and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
16. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
17. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including
Triple-S and any Triple-S affiliates. Gallagher further represents the
total revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in
interest to the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent
Fiduciary represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
18. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
19. On November 5, 2020, Gallagher completed an Independent
Fiduciary Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the
massive losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz
Structured Alpha Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the
Plan's total assets and funding level. Gallagher represents that the
Required Restorative Payment, which will be received by the Plan
substantially in advance of a final resolution of the Claims against
Allianz and Aon, should restore the Plan's funded percentage to its
pre-loss funded percentage as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of
the Plan's funding status will secure ongoing benefit payments to
participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse Triple-S only up to the Required
Restorative
[[Page 52171]]
Payment Amount received by the Plan, plus any reasonable legal expense
paid to non-Triple-S-related parties that were incurred by, or
allocated to, Triple-S as a result of the Claims.\91\ Thus, if the
Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, Triple-S, not the Plan, will suffer
the loss.
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\91\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payment from Triple-S in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
20. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payment from Triple-S in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to Triple-S would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. Triple-S, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payment to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to Triple-S with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (Triple-S) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. Triple's
promise to make the Required Restorative Payment to the Plan, over
time, constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan
and a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to Triple-S in
connection with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible
transfer of Plan assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA
Section 406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
21. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the Contribution and Assignment
Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its participants
and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the Plan's
participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payment was fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to Triple-S fully
complies with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the
lesser of the total Restorative Payment or the amount the Plan received
from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to Triple-S for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by Triple-S to unrelated third parties
for representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of Triple-S or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where Triple-S was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan
party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\92\
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\92\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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22. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
23. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) Triple-S; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to Triple-S must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
24. The Plan may not make any Repayment to Triple-S before the
date: the Plan has received from Triple-S the entire amount of the
Restorative Payment agreed to in the Amended Contribution and
Assignment Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the
Plan may not pay any interest to Triple-S in connection with its
receipt of the Required Restorative Payment, nor pledge Plan assets to
secure any portion of the Required Restorative Payment.
[[Page 52172]]
25. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse Triple-S for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that Triple-S paid to non-Triple-S-
related parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as
opposed to representation of Triple-S or the interests of any party
other than the Plan) where Triple-S was not otherwise reimbursed by a
non-Plan party.
26. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
27. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\93\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\93\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payment substantially improved the
Plan's funding status, which enhanced the Plan's ability to meet its
obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay Triple-S the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at
least the total amount of Restorative Payment (less reasonable legal
expenses related to the Claims paid by Triple-S to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary).
Further, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause
of action the Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) Triple-S; and/or (d) any person or
entity related to a person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
28. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\94\
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\94\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August 10,
1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if
such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent
fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid
by Triple-S to unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this
exemption, the Attorney Fees reimbursable to Triple-S do not include:
(1) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by
Triple-S for representation of Triple-S or the interests of any party
other than the Plan.
(b) The term ``Triple-S'' means Triple-S Management Corporation.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between Triple-S and the Plan, dated November 6,
2020, containing all material terms regarding Triple-S's agreement to
make Required Restorative Payment to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to Triple-S of an amount that is no more than
lesser of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in
Section I(h)) received by the Plan or the amount of litigation proceeds
the Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid
to unrelated third parties by Triple-S in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of Triple-S and does not hold an ownership
interest in Triple-S or affiliates of Triple-S;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\95\
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\95\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from Triple-S or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds
[[Page 52173]]
two percent (2%) of the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all
sources for the prior fiscal year. This provision also applies to a
partnership or corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an
officer, director, or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder,
and includes as gross income amounts received as compensation for
services provided as an independent fiduciary under any prohibited
transaction exemption granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from Triple-S or from affiliates of
Triple-S while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition
will continue for six months after the party ceases to be an
Independent Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any
transaction on behalf of the Plan during the period that the
organization or individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Triple-S Management Corporation Non-
Contributory Retirement Plan.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $103,793,253 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payment'' means the payment made by
Triple-S of $10,000,000 to the Plan in connection with the Plan Losses,
defined above, consisting of a $10,000,000 payment that Triple-S
contributed to the Plan on June 28, 2021.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to Triple-S following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims, and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B), and (D) and the sanctions resulting from
the application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective November 5,
2020, to the following transactions: Triple-S's transfer of Restorative
Payment to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to Triple-S, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payment received by the Plan or the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided
that the Definitions set forth in Section I and the Conditions set
forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan received the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than June 28, 2021;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payment, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes of
action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) Triple-S; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to Triple-S is for no more than the lesser
of the total Restorative Payment received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's
Repayment to Triple-S may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary
has determined that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the
Plan has received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan
has received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's
Repayment to Triple-S must be carried out in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payment and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payment, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to Triple-S for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by Triple-S to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payment;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payment;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse Triple-S for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection
with the Claims by Triple-S to non-Triple-S-related parties. For
purposes of determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may
reimburse to Triple-S under this proposal, the amount of reasonable
attorney fees paid by Triple-S on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims must be reduced by the amount of legal fees received by
Triple-S in connection with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e.,
pursuant to a court award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity
[[Page 52174]]
that: (1) meets the definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above
in Section II(e); and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification,
independence, prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this
exemption. Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must
assume all of the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon
as possible, including before the appointment of a successor
Independent Fiduciary, Triple-S must notify the Department's Office of
Exemption Determinations of the change in Independent Fiduciary and
such notification must contain all material information regarding the
successor Independent Fiduciary, including the successor Independent
Fiduciary's qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Ms. Anna Vaughan of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8565. (This is not a toll-free number.)
National Account Service Company LLC
Located in Atlanta, Georgia
[Application No. D-12049]
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of Section 408(a) of the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974, as amended (ERISA), and Section 4975(c)(2) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code). The proposed exemption
relates to legal actions and claims (the Claims) against Allianz Global
Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon), that
arose from certain losses incurred by the Non-Contributory Retirement
Program for Certain Employees of National Account Service Company (the
Plan) in the first quarter of 2020.\96\
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\96\ In proposing this exemption, the Department is not
expressing an opinion regarding the merits of any Claim against
Allianz and Aon, or whether the Plan's fiduciaries met their
fiduciary duties with respect to Plan assets that are the subject of
the Claims. Further, in proposing this exemption, the Department is
not limiting any party's claim, demand and/or cause of action
arising from the Plan's 2020 first quarter losses in any way. Among
other things, this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/
or cause of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any
fiduciary of the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) National
Account Service Company LLC; and/or (4) any person or entity related
to a person or entity described in (1)-(3).
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This proposed exemption would permit the Plan sponsor, the National
Account Service Company LLC (NASCO), to make payments totaling $50
million to the Plan (the Restorative Payments). If the Plan receives
litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer the lesser
of the ligation proceeds amount or the Restorative Payments, plus
reasonable attorney fees to NASCO.
Summary of Facts and Representations 97
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\97\ The Department notes that availability of this exemption is
subject to the express condition that the material facts and
representations contained in application D-12049 are true and
complete at all times and accurately describe all material terms of
the transactions covered by the exemption. If there is any material
change in a transaction covered by the exemption or in a material
fact or representation described in the application, the exemption
will cease to apply as of the date of such change. The Summary of
Facts and Representations is based on the Applicant's
representations, as well as factual representations contained in the
Claims' cause of action (as described below) and does not reflect
factual findings or opinions of the Department, unless indicated
otherwise.
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1. NASCO is a healthcare technology company dedicated to co-
creating digital health solutions for Blue Cross and Blue Shield
companies. NASCO provides information technology products and services
and offers payment management, system delivery, business optimization
solutions, membership enrollment, and other related services. NASCO is
owned by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Mutual Insurance Company.
2. The Plan is an ERISA-covered qualified defined benefit pension
plan that covers eligible employees of NASCO. The Plan was amended
effective January 1, 2009 to close participation to new entrants as of
December 31, 2008. As of December 31, 2020, the Plan covered 264
participants and held $47,306,049 in total assets.
3. The Plan holds a beneficial interest in the Blue Cross and Blue
Shield National Retirement Trust (the Trust). The Trust is a master
trust that holds the assets of 16 defined benefit pension plans that
participate in the BCBSA's National Retirement Program (the
Participating Plans). Northern Trust serves as Trustee and asset
custodian to the Trust and maintains separate records that reflect the
net asset value of each Participating Plan. The Trust's earnings,
market adjustments, and administrative expenses are allocated among the
Participating Plans based on the respective Participating Plan's share
of the Trust's assets. A Participating Plan's interest in the Trust's
net assets is based on its share of the Trust.
4. The Committee serves as named fiduciary and administrator for
each Participating Plan. The Committee is a standing committee of the
BCBSA's board of directors. In 2011, the Committee invested a portion
of the Trust's assets in funds managed by Allianz Global Investors U.S.
LLC (Allianz), as part of a Structured Alpha Investment Strategy. These
funds included: (a) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Multi-Beta Series LLC I;
(b) AllianzGI Structured Alpha Emerging Markets Equity 350 LLC; and (c)
AllianzGI Structured Alpha 1000 LLC (collectively, the Structured Alpha
Funds).
5. The Applicant represents that the Allianz Structured Alpha
strategy consisted of alpha and beta components. According to the
applicant, the alpha component was an options trading strategy that
Allianz claimed would seek targeted positive return potential while
maintaining structural risk protections. The beta component was
intended to provide broad market exposure to a particular asset class
through investments in financial products similar to an exchange-traded
fund that replicates the performance of a market index, such as the S&P
500. According to the Applicant, Allianz
[[Page 52175]]
represented that the Structured Alpha Strategy would capitalize on the
return-generating features of option selling (short volatility) while
simultaneously benefitting from the risk-control attributes associated
with option buying (long volatility). According to the Applicant,
Allianz represented further that the alpha component would include
position hedging consisting of long-volatility positions designed to
protect the portfolio in the event of a market crash.
6. As of December 31, 2019, the total market value of the Plan's
portion of the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds
was $63,571,918, which represented 77.66% of total Plan assets.\98\
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\98\ By proposing this exemption, the Department does not, in
any way, suggest a conclusion that the Plan's fiduciaries met their
ERISA Section 404 duties when they caused the Trust to invest 77.66%
of the Plan's total assets in the Allianz Structured Alpha Funds.
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7. In 2009, the Committee retained Aon (then called Ennis Knupp) to
provide investment advice regarding the investment of Plan assets held
in the Trust. The Applicant represents that Aon provided regular
investment advice pursuant to a written contract between it and the
Committee. Pursuant to its engagement, Aon agreed to provide the
following: ``recommendations to [the Committee] regarding asset
allocation'' within the Trust; ``recommendations to [the Committee]
regarding the specific asset allocation and other investment
guidelines'' for the Trust's investment managers such as Allianz; and
advice ``regarding the diversification of assets'' held in the Trust.''
The Applicant represents that Aon agreed to: conduct ``active, ongoing
monitoring'' of Allianz to ``identify any forward-looking'' risks
``that could impact performance;'' and ``inform itself'' of any
information necessary to discharge its duty to monitor, including
information about the actual options positions Allianz had constructed.
8. The Applicant represents that when equity markets sharply
declined in February and March of 2020, volatility spiked and the
options positions held within the Structured Alpha Strategy were
exposed to a heightened risk of loss. The Applicant represents that,
unbeknownst to the Committee, and in violation of Allianz's stated
investment strategy, Allianz abandoned the hedging strategy that was
the supposed cornerstone of the Structured Alpha Strategy, leaving the
portfolio almost entirely unhedged against a spike in market
volatility. As described in the Claims, although Allianz had
represented that it would buy hedges at strike prices ranging from 10%
to 25% below the market, the hedges it actually held at the end of
February 2020 were as much as 60% below the market.
The Applicant represents that, as of January 31, 2020, the Trust
had invested approximately $2,916,049,486 in the Structured Alpha
Strategy. Six weeks later, the Trust faced a margin call, which the
Applicant states left it no choice but to liquidate the investment. The
Trust was ultimately able to redeem only $646,762,678 of its
$2,916,049,486 investment, resulting in a total loss of $2,269,286,808.
Specifically, regarding the Plan's portion of the loss, as of
December 31, 2019 the market value of Plan assets was $81,855,683. As
of March 31, 2020, the market value of Plan assets decreased to
$28,120,905. The Applicant represents that the Plan's total losses from
the Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy were $51,662,561, which caused
the Plan to be underfunded.
9. On September 16, 2020, the Committee filed a cause of action in
the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York
(Case number 20-CIV-07606) against Allianz and Aon for Breach of
Fiduciary Duty under ERISA Section 404, Breach of Co-Fiduciary Duty
under ERISA Section 405, and violation of ERISA Section 406(b) for
managing the Plan assets in its self-interest and breach of contract.
It is possible that resolution of this claim and other legal actions
against Allianz and Aon in connection with the Plan's losses (the
Claims) could take an extended period of time.
10. The Applicant states that rather than wait for the Claims to be
resolved, NASCO took steps to protect Plan benefits and avoid onerous
benefit restrictions under Code section 436 that could apply to the
Plan as a result of a funding shortfall. Therefore, on March 1, 2021,
NASCO and the Plan entered into a Contribution and Assignment Agreement
pursuant to which NASCO agreed to make Restorative Payments to the Plan
not in excess of $50,000,000 over the course of 2021 through 2025 (the
Contribution and Assignment Agreement).
11. NASCO has made Restorative Payments to the Plan totaling
$22,800,000, including: (a) a $2,000,000 payment on August 3, 2020; (b)
a $2,000,000 payment on September 2, 2020; (c) a $3,625,000 payment on
June 21, 2021; (d) a $3,625,000 payment on July 21, 2021; (e) a
$3,625,000 payment on August 16, 2021; (f) a $3,625,000 payment on
September 13, 2021; and (g) a $4,300,000 payment on June 21, 2021.
12. In exchange for the Restorative Payments, the Plan assigned to
NASCO its right to retain certain litigation and/or settlement proceeds
recovered from the Claims (the Assigned Interests).\99\ Per the
assignment, once the Allianz/Aon litigation is resolved and if the Plan
receives litigation proceeds from the Claims, the Plan will transfer to
NASCO a repayment (the Repayment) that does not exceed the total
Restorative Payments made by NASCO as of that date, plus reasonable
attorney fees paid by NASCO on behalf of the Plan in connection with
the Claims, if such fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified
independent fiduciary who confirms that the fees were reasonably
incurred and paid by NASCO to unrelated third parties (the Attorney
Fees).
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\99\ Under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, if the
Plan receives litigation or settlement proceeds from the Claims, the
proceeds would first flow to the Trust, and then each Plan's pro
rata portion of the proceeds would be deposited into the individual
trust funding that Plan.
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For the purposes of this exemption, Attorney Fees reimbursable to
NASCO do not include: (a) legal expenses paid by the Plan; and (b)
legal expenses paid by NASCO for representation of its own interests or
the interests of any party other than the Plan. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to NASCO
under this exemption, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
NASCO on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by NASCO in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (for example, from a third
party pursuant to a court award).
13. The Plan must ultimately receive at least the full value of the
promised Restorative Payments, minus the Attorney Fees. The Plan may
ultimately receive more than the Restorative Payment amount required
under the Contribution and Assignment Agreement. If the Plan receives
litigation or settlement proceeds that exceed the amount of Restorative
Payments that NASCO has made to the Plan, the Plan's Repayment to NASCO
will be limited to the amount of Restorative Payments actually made by
NASCO, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if NASCO has made $22,800,000
in Restorative Payments to the Plan and reasonably incurred $100,000 in
Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $50,000,000 in litigation
proceeds, the Plan will make a Repayment to NASCO totaling $22,900,000.
14. Alternatively, if the Plan receives less litigation or
settlement proceeds than the amount of Restorative Payments that NASCO
has made to the
[[Page 52176]]
Plan, the Plan will transfer to NASCO the lesser amount of litigation
or settlement proceeds, plus Attorney Fees. For example, if NASCO has
made $22,800,000 in Restorative Payments to the Plan and has reasonably
incurred $100,000 in Attorney Fees, and the Plan receives $10,000,000
in litigation proceeds, the Plan will not make any Repayment to NASCO.
Under this scenario, NASCO will remain obligated to complete the
Restorative Payments to the Plan (totaling $50,000,000) by December 31,
2025, prior to the Plan making any 10,100,000 Repayment to NASCO.
15. The Department notes that if the Plan receives any restitution
that is tied to the conduct underlying the Claims but was ordered
pursuant to a proceeding or directive that is external to Case number
20-CIV-07606, the disposition of such proceeds must conform to the
requirements of this exemption.
16. NASCO retained Gallagher Fiduciary Advisors, LLC (Gallagher or
the Independent Fiduciary) of New York, New York, to serve as the
Plan's independent fiduciary with respect to the Required Restorative
Payments and the potential repayment by the Plan of those Payments
(collectively, the Proposed Transactions). Gallagher represents that it
has extensive experience in institutional investment consulting and
fiduciary decision-making regarding traditional and alternative
investments. Gallagher further represents that its independent
fiduciary decision-making work involves acting as a fiduciary advisor
or decision-maker for plans and other ERISA-regulated asset pools and
that it has experience with a wide range of asset classes and
litigation claims.
17. Gallagher represents that it understands its duties and
responsibilities under ERISA in acting as a fiduciary on behalf of the
Plan. Gallagher also acknowledges that it is authorized to take all
appropriate actions to safeguard the Plan's interests, and that it will
monitor the Proposed Transactions on the Plan's behalf on a continuous
basis and throughout the term required by this exemption.
18. Gallagher represents that it does not have any prior
relationship with any parties in interest to the Plan, including NASCO
and any NASCO affiliates. Gallagher further represents the total
revenues it has received from the Plan and from parties in interest to
the Plan in connection with its engagement as Independent Fiduciary
represents approximately 0.78% of Gallagher's total revenue.
19. Gallagher represents that no party associated with this
exemption application has or will indemnify it, in whole or in part,
for negligence of any kind and/or any violation of state or federal law
that may be attributable to Gallagher's performance of its duties as
Independent Fiduciary to the Plan with respect to the Proposed
Transactions. In addition, no contract or instrument entered into by
Gallagher as Independent Fiduciary may purport to waive any liability
under state or federal law for any such violation.
20. On March 1, 2021, Gallagher completed an Independent Fiduciary
Report (the Independent Fiduciary Report) finding that the massive
losses caused by the Trust's investment in the Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy resulted in a significant reduction to the Plan's total assets
and funding level. Gallagher represents that the Required Restorative
Payments, which will be received by the Plan substantially in advance
of a final resolution of the Claims against Allianz and Aon, should
restore the Plan's funded percentage to its pre-loss funded percentage
as of January 1, 2019. The restoration of the Plan's funding status
will secure ongoing benefit payments to participants and beneficiaries.
Gallagher notes that the Contribution and Assignment Agreement
provides that the Trust must reimburse NASCO only up to the Required
Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, plus any reasonable
legal expense paid to non-NASCO-related parties that were incurred by,
or allocated to, NASCO as a result of the Claims.\100\ Thus, if the
Plan's ultimate recovery amount from the Claims is less than the
Required Restorative Payment Amount, plus related litigation expenses
that were allocated to the Plan, NASCO, not the Plan, will suffer the
loss.
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\100\ Currently, legal fees and expenses associated with the
Claims are being paid by most of the Participating Plan's trusts on
a pro rata basis according to each Participating Plan's total
invested assets held in the Master Trust's Allianz Structured Alpha
Strategy before the losses were incurred in the first quarter 2020.
The Applicant represents that the Committee reviews and approves
these legal fees before passing them through to each Participating
Plan.
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Gallagher states that the Proposed Transactions and the terms of
the Contribution and Assignment Agreement were negotiated and approved
by Gallagher in its role as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary. Gallagher
states that it approved the Proposed Transactions only after conducting
an extensive analysis of the damages suffered by the Plan as a result
of the failed Allianz Structured Alpha Strategy. Gallagher represents
that it conducted numerous discussions with Trust representatives and
counsel, along with the Plan's representatives and counsel to ensure
that the interests of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries were
protected with respect to all aspects of the Proposed Transactions.
Based upon its assessment, Gallagher approved the Plan's receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments from NASCO in exchange for the
Assignment.
ERISA Analysis
21. Absent an exemption, the Plan's receipt of the Restorative
Payments from NASCO in exchange for the Plan's transfer of litigation
or settlement proceeds to NASCO would violate ERISA. In this regard,
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing the
plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange
of any property between a plan and a party in interest. NASCO, as an
employer whose employees are covered by the Plan, is a party in
interest with respect to the Plan under ERISA Section 3(14)(C). The
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan and the Plan's potential
repayment to NASCO with litigation or settlement proceeds would
constitute impermissible exchanges between the Plan and a party-in-
interest (NASCO) in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(A).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B) prohibits the lending of money or other
extension of credit between a plan and a party-in-interest. NASCO's
promise to make Required Restorative Payments to the Plan, over time,
constitutes an impermissible extension of credit between the Plan and a
party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(B).
ERISA Section 406(a)(1)(D) prohibits a plan fiduciary from causing
a plan to engage in a transaction if the fiduciary knows or should know
that the transaction constitutes a direct or indirect transfer to, or
use by or for the benefit of, a party-in-interest, of the income or
assets of the plan. The transfer of Plan assets to NASCO in connection
with the Repayment would constitute an impermissible transfer of Plan
assets to a party-in-interest in violation of ERISA Section
406(a)(1)(D).
Conditions
22. This proposed exemption contains a number of conditions that
must be met. For example, the proposed exemption mandates that the
Independent Fiduciary, in full accordance with its obligations of
[[Page 52177]]
prudence and loyalty under ERISA Section 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(a) review, negotiate, and approve the terms and conditions of the
Required Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, before the Plan enters into such payments and the
agreement;
(b) determine that the terms and conditions of the Required
Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement are prudent, in the interest of the Plan and its
participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of the
Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(c) confirm that the Required Restorative Payments are fully and
timely made;
(d) monitor the Claims and confirm that the Plan receives its
proper share of any litigation or settlement proceeds received by the
Trust in connection with the Claims;
(e) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to NASCO fully complies
with the terms of this exemption and is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments actually made to the Plan by NASCO or
the amount the Plan received from the Claims, plus Attorney Fees;
(f) ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to NASCO for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by NASCO to unrelated third parties for
representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of NASCO or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where NASCO was not otherwise reimbursed from a non-Plan party;
(g) monitor the Plan's Assigned Interests on an ongoing basis to
determine and confirm that any excess recovery amount from the Claims
(i.e., any amount that exceeds the Required Restorative Payment Amount)
is retained by the Plan;
(h) ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met; and
(i) represent that it has not and will not enter into any agreement
or instrument that violates ERISA Section 410 or Department Regulations
codified at 29 CFR 2509.75-4.\101\
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\101\ ERISA Section 410 provides, in part, that ``except as
provided in ERISA Sections 405(b)(1) and 405(d), any provision in an
agreement or instrument which purports to relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability for any responsibility, obligation, or
duty under this part [meaning Part 4 of Title I of ERISA] shall be
void as against public policy.''
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23. This proposed exemption also requires Gallagher to respond in
writing to any information requests from the Department regarding
Gallagher's activities as the Plan's Independent Fiduciary.
Additionally, no later than 90 days after the resolution of the
litigation, Gallagher must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all terms and conditions of the exemption have been
met.
24. This proposed exemption requires that the Plan has not and will
not release any claims, demands and/or causes of action it may have
against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b) any fiduciary of the Trust;
(c) NASCO; and/or (d) any person or entity related to a person or
entity described in (a)-(c) of this paragraph. Additionally, any
Repayment by the Plan to NASCO must be made in a manner designed to
minimize unnecessary costs and disruption to the Plan and its
investments.
25. The Plan may not make any Repayment to NASCO before the date:
the Plan has received from NASCO the entire amount of the Restorative
Payments agreed to in the Amended Contribution and Assignment
Agreement; and all the Claims are settled. Furthermore, the Plan may
not pay any interest to NASCO in connection with its receipt of the
Required Restorative Payments, nor pledge Plan assets to secure any
portion of the Required Restorative Payments.
26. Pursuant to this proposed exemption, the Plan may not incur any
expenses, commissions, or transaction costs in connection with the
Proposed Transactions. However, as noted above, under certain
circumstances the Plan may reimburse NASCO for reasonable legal
expenses arising from the Claims that NASCO paid to non-NASCO-related
parties for representation of the Plan and its interests (as opposed to
representation of NASCO or the interests of any party other than the
Plan) where NASCO was not otherwise reimbursed by a non-Plan party.
27. Finally, the exemptive relief provided under this proposed
exemption is conditioned upon the Department's assumption that the
material facts and representations set forth above in the Summary of
Facts and Representation section are true and accurate at all times. In
the event that a material fact or representation detailed above is
untrue or inaccurate, the exemptive relief provided under this
exemption will cease immediately.
Statutory Findings
28. ERISA Section 408(a) provides, in part, that the Department may
not grant an exemption unless the Department finds that the exemption
is administratively feasible, in the interest of affected plans and of
their participants and beneficiaries, and protective of the rights of
such participants and beneficiaries. Each of these criteria is
discussed below.
a. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Administratively Feasible.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
administratively feasible because, among other things, the Independent
Fiduciary will represent the interests of the Plan for all purposes
with respect to the Proposed Transactions.\102\ In this regard, not
later than 90 days after the resolution of the litigation, the
Independent Fiduciary must submit a written report to the Department
demonstrating that all of the requirements of this exemption have been
met.
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\102\ This proposed exemption would require that if the
Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any reason is
unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the successor
Independent Fiduciary must, among other things, assume all of the
duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent
Fiduciary, the Plan Sponsor and the Plan must notify the
Department's Office of Exemption Determinations of the change in
Independent Fiduciaries. The notification must contain all material
information including the qualifications of the successor
Independent Fiduciary.
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b. The Proposed Exemption Is ``In the Interests of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is in
the interest of the Plan because, among other things, the Plan's
receipt of the Required Restorative Payments will substantially improve
the Plan's funding status, which will enhance the Plan's ability to
meet its obligations to fund benefit obligations to participants and
beneficiaries and help the Plan avoid the imposition of benefit
limitations imposed under Code section 436.
c. The Proposed Exemption Is ``Protective of the Plan.'' The
Department has tentatively determined that the proposed exemption is
protective of the rights of the Plan's participants and beneficiaries
because, among other things, the Plan will repay NASCO the lesser of
the Required Restorative Payment Amount received by the Plan, or the
amount the Plan receives in proceeds from the Claims, ensuring that the
Proposed Transactions will result in an increase in Plan assets of at
least the total amount of Restorative Payments (less reasonable legal
expenses related to the Claims paid by NASCO to unrelated third
parties, as confirmed and approved by the Independent Fiduciary).
Further,
[[Page 52178]]
this exemption preserves any right, claim, demand and/or cause of
action the Plan may have against: (a) any fiduciary of the Plan; (b)
any fiduciary of the Trust; (c) NASCO; and/or (d) any person or entity
related to a person or entity described in (a)-(c).
Summary
29. Based on the conditions described above, the Department has
tentatively determined that the relief sought by the Applicant
satisfies the statutory requirements under ERISA Section 408(a) for the
Department to make findings that support its issuance of a proposed
exemption.
Proposed Exemption
The Department is considering granting an exemption under the
authority of ERISA Section 408(a) and Code Section 4975(c)(2) and in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Department's exemption
procedure regulation.\103\
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\103\ 29 CFR part 2570, subpart B (55 FR 32836, 32847, August
10, 1990).
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Section I. Definitions
(a) The term ``Attorney Fees'' means reasonable legal expenses paid
by NASCO on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims, if such
fees are reviewed and approved by a qualified independent fiduciary who
confirms that the fees were reasonably incurred and paid by NASCO to
unrelated third parties. For the purposes of this exemption, the
Attorney Fees reimbursable to NASCO do not include: (1) legal expenses
paid by the Plan; and (2) legal expenses paid by NASCO for
representation of NASCO or the interests of any party other than the
Plan.
(b) The term ``NASCO'' means National Account Service Company LLC.
(c) The term ``Claims'' means the legal claims against Allianz
Global Investors U.S. LLC (Allianz) and Aon Investments USA Inc. (Aon),
to recover certain losses incurred by the Plan in the first quarter of
2020.
(d) The term ``Contribution and Assignment Agreement'' means the
written agreement between NASCO and the Plan, dated March 1, 2021,
containing all material terms regarding NASCO's agreement to make
Required Restorative Payments to the Plan in return for the Plan's
potential Repayment to NASCO of an amount that is no more than lesser
of the Required Restorative Payment Amount (as described in Section
I(h)) received by the Plan or the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan receives from the Claims, plus reasonable attorney fees paid to
unrelated third parties by NASCO in connection with the Claims.
(e) The term ``Independent Fiduciary'' means Gallagher Fiduciary
Advisors, LLC (Gallagher) or a successor Independent Fiduciary to the
extent Gallagher or the successor Independent Fiduciary continues to
serve in such capacity who:
(1) Is not an affiliate of NASCO and does not hold an ownership
interest in NASCO or affiliates of NASCO;
(2) Was not a fiduciary with respect to the Plan before its
appointment to serve as the Independent Fiduciary;
(3) Has acknowledged in writing that it:
(i) is a fiduciary with respect to the Plan and has agreed not to
participate in any decision regarding any transaction in which it has
an interest that might affect its best judgment as a fiduciary; and
(ii) Has appropriate technical training or experience to perform
the services contemplated by the exemption;
(4) Has not entered into any agreement or instrument that violates
the prohibitions on exculpatory provisions in ERISA Section 410 or the
Department's regulation relating to indemnification of fiduciaries;
\104\
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\104\ 29 CFR 2509.75-4.
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(5) Has not received gross income from NASCO or its affiliates
during any fiscal year in an amount that exceeds two percent (2%) of
the Independent Fiduciary's gross income from all sources for the prior
fiscal year. This provision also applies to a partnership or
corporation of which the Independent Fiduciary is an officer, director,
or 10 percent (10%) or more partner or shareholder, and includes as
gross income amounts received as compensation for services provided as
an independent fiduciary under any prohibited transaction exemption
granted by the Department; and
(6) No organization or individual that is an Independent Fiduciary,
and no partnership or corporation of which such organization or
individual is an officer, director, or ten percent (10%) or more
partner or shareholder, may acquire any property from, sell any
property to, or borrow any funds from NASCO or from affiliates of NASCO
while serving as an Independent Fiduciary. This prohibition will
continue for six months after the party ceases to be an Independent
Fiduciary and/or the Independent Fiduciary negotiates any transaction
on behalf of the Plan during the period that the organization or
individual serves as an Independent Fiduciary.
(f) The ``Plan'' means the Non-Contributory Retirement Program for
Certain Employees of National Account Service Company.
(g) The term ``Plan Losses'' means the $51,662,561 in Plan losses
the BCBSA's National Employee Benefits Committee alleges were the
result of breaches of fiduciary responsibilities and breaches of
contract by Allianz Global Investors U.S. LLC and/or Aon Investments
USA Inc.
(h) The term ``Restorative Payments'' means the $50 Million in
payments NASCO is required to pay the Plan by December 21, 2025, as set
forth in the Contribution and Assignment Agreement.
(i) The ``Repayment'' means the payment, if any, that the Plan will
transfer to NASCO following the Plan's receipt of proceeds from the
Claims, where the Repayment is made following the full and complete
resolution of the Claims, and in a manner that is consistent with the
terms of the exemption.
Section II. Proposed Transactions
If the proposed exemption is granted, the restrictions of ERISA
Sections 406(a)(1)(A), (B) and (D) and the sanctions resulting from the
application of Code Section 4975, by reason of Code Sections
4975(c)(1)(A), (B) and (D), shall not apply, effective September 2,
2020, to the following transactions: NASCO's transfer of Restorative
Payments to the Plan; and, in return, the Plan's Repayment of an amount
to NASCO, which must be no more than the lesser of the Restorative
Payment received by the Plan or the amount of litigation proceeds the
Plan received from the Claims, plus reasonable Attorney Fees, provided
that the Definitions set forth in Section I and the Conditions set
forth in Section III are met.
Section III. Conditions
(a) The Plan receives the entire Restorative Payment Amount no
later than December 31, 2025;
(b) In connection with its receipt of the Required Restorative
Payments, the Plan does not release any claims, demands and/or causes
of action the Plan may have against the following: (1) any fiduciary of
the Plan; (2) any fiduciary of the Trust; (3) NASCO; and/or (4) any
person or entity related to a person or entity identified in (1)-(3) of
this paragraph;
(c) The Plan's Repayment to NASCO is for no more than the lesser of
the total Restorative Payments received by the Plan or the amount of
litigation
[[Page 52179]]
proceeds the Plan receives from the Claims. The Plan's Repayment to
NASCO may only occur after the Independent Fiduciary has determined
that: all the conditions of the exemption are met; the Plan has
received all the Restorative Payments it is due; and the Plan has
received all the litigation proceeds it is due. The Plan's Repayment to
NASCO must be carried out in a manner designed to minimize unnecessary
costs and disruption to the Plan and its investments;
(d) A qualified independent fiduciary (the Independent Fiduciary,
as further defined in Section II(e)), acting solely on behalf of the
Plan in full accordance with its obligations of prudence and loyalty
under ERISA Sections 404(a)(1)(A) and (B) must:
(1) Review, negotiate and approve the terms and conditions of the
Restorative Payments and the Repayment and the Contribution and
Assignment Agreement, all of which must be in writing, before the Plan
enters into those transactions/agreement;
(2) Determine that the Restorative Payments, the Repayment, and the
terms of the Contribution and Assignment Agreement, are prudent and in
the interest of the Plan and its participants and beneficiaries;
(3) Confirm that the Required Restorative Payment Amount was fully
and timely made;
(4) Monitor the litigation related to the Claims and confirm that
the Plan receives, in a timely manner, its proper share of any
litigation or settlement proceeds received by the Trust;
(5) Ensure that any Repayment by the Plan to NASCO for legal
expenses in connection with the Claims is limited to only reasonable
legal expenses that were paid by NASCO to unrelated third parties;
(6) Ensure that all of the conditions and definitions of this
proposed exemption are met;
(7) Submit a written report to the Department's Office of Exemption
Determinations demonstrating and confirming that the terms and
conditions of the exemption were met, within 90 days after the
Repayment; and
(8) Not enter into any agreement or instrument that violates ERISA
Section 410 or the Department's Regulations codified at 29 CFR Section
2509.75-4.
(f) The Plan pays no interest in connection with the Restorative
Payments;
(g) The Plan does not pledge any Plan assets to secure any portion
of the Restorative Payments;
(h) The Plan does not incur any expenses, commissions, or
transaction costs in connection with the Proposed Transactions.
However, if first approved by the Independent Fiduciary, the Plan may
reimburse NASCO for reasonable legal expenses paid in connection with
the Claims by NASCO to non-NASCO-related parties. For purposes of
determining the amount of Attorney Fees the Plan may reimburse to NASCO
under this proposal, the amount of reasonable attorney fees paid by
NASCO on behalf of the Plan in connection with the Claims must be
reduced by the amount of legal fees received by NASCO in connection
with the Claims from any non-Plan party (i.e., pursuant to a court
award);
(i) The proposed transactions do not involve any risk of loss to
either the Plan or the Plan's participants and beneficiaries;
(j) No party associated with this exemption has or will indemnify
the Independent Fiduciary and the Independent Fiduciary will not
request indemnification from any party, in whole or in part, for
negligence and/or any violation of state or federal law that may be
attributable to the Independent Fiduciary in performing its duties to
the Plan with respect to the Proposed Transactions. In addition, no
contract or instrument may purport to waive any liability under state
or federal law for any such violation.
(k) If an Independent Fiduciary resigns, is removed, or for any
reason is unable to serve as an Independent Fiduciary, the Independent
Fiduciary must be replaced by a successor entity that: (1) meets the
definition of Independent Fiduciary detailed above in Section II(e);
and (2) otherwise meets all of the qualification, independence,
prudence and diligence requirements set forth in this exemption.
Further, any such successor Independent Fiduciary must assume all of
the duties of the outgoing Independent Fiduciary. As soon as possible,
including before the appointment of a successor Independent Fiduciary,
NASCO must notify the Department's Office of Exemption Determinations
of the change in Independent Fiduciary and such notification must
contain all material information regarding the successor Independent
Fiduciary, including the successor Independent Fiduciary's
qualifications; and
(l) All of the material facts and representations set forth in the
Summary of Facts and Representation are true and accurate at all times.
Notice to Interested Persons
The Applicant will give notice of the proposed exemption to all
interested persons and all of the parties to the litigation described
above, within fifteen calendar days after the publication of the notice
of proposed exemption in the Federal Register. The notice will contain
a copy of the notice of proposed exemption, as published in the Federal
Register, and a supplemental statement, as required pursuant to the
Department's regulations codified at 29 CFR 2570.43(a)(2). The
supplemental statement will inform interested persons of their right to
comment on the pending exemption. Written comments are due by October
11, 2022.
All comments will be made available to the public.
Warning: If you submit a comment, EBSA recommends that you include
your name and other contact information in the body of your comment,
but DO NOT submit information that you consider to be confidential, or
otherwise protected (such as a Social Security number or an unlisted
phone number) or confidential business information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. All comments may be posted on the internet and can
be retrieved by most internet search engines.
For Further Information Contact: Mr. Joseph Brennan of the
Department, telephone (202) 693-8456. (This is not a toll-free number.)
General Information
The attention of interested persons is directed to the following:
(1) The fact that a transaction is the subject of an exemption
under section 408(a) of the Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code
does not relieve a fiduciary or other party in interest or disqualified
person from certain other provisions of the Act and/or the Code,
including any prohibited transaction provisions to which the exemption
does not apply and the general fiduciary responsibility provisions of
section 404 of the Act, which, among other things, require a fiduciary
to discharge his duties respecting the plan solely in the interest of
the participants and beneficiaries of the plan and in a prudent fashion
in accordance with section 404(a)(1)(B) of the Act; nor does it affect
the requirement of section 401(a) of the Code that the plan must
operate for the exclusive benefit of the employees of the employer
maintaining the plan and their beneficiaries;
(2) Before an exemption may be granted under section 408(a) of the
Act and/or section 4975(c)(2) of the Code, the Department must find
that the exemption is administratively feasible, in the interests of
the plan and of its participants and beneficiaries, and protective of
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of the plan;
[[Page 52180]]
(3) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be supplemental to,
and not in derogation of, any other provisions of the Act and/or the
Code, including statutory or administrative exemptions and transitional
rules. Furthermore, the fact that a transaction is subject to an
administrative or statutory exemption is not dispositive of whether the
transaction is in fact a prohibited transaction; and
(4) The proposed exemptions, if granted, will be subject to the
express condition that the material facts and representations contained
in each application are true and complete, and that each application
accurately describes all material terms of the transaction which is the
subject of the exemption.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 16th day of August, 2022.
Timothy D. Hauser,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program Operations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, U.S. Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2022-17995 Filed 8-23-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P