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Why Employ a Corporate Trustee?: The Costs and
Benefits of Using an Institution to Trustee
Your Qualified Retirement Plan
Schultz Collins Lawson Young & Chambers
Independent Investment Counsel
Overview
When the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) was passed,
Congress intended to ensure that a qualified
retirement plan's assets would be used only
to pay benefits to participants and beneficiaries
and reasonable plan operating expenses.
Therefore, ERISA required
that all qualified retirement plan assets be
held in a trust, and managed by "trustees".
Trustees have complete control over plan assets
held in the trust, although the trust investment
decisions may be made by the plan's administrative
committee or by designated investment managers.
To the extent that investments are directed,
trustees are not liable for investment decisions;
however, if trustees choose investments, they
will be held to the same standards as any other
investment manager.
General Fiduciary Responsibilities
Plan Fiduciaries
ERISA also lists the duties
of the individuals responsible for setting investment
policy and for controlling and managing plan
assets: the fiduciaries. A "fiduciary"
must be named in the plan document. Any person
with discretion to manage and invest the plan's
assets is also a fiduciary. A plan may have
more than one fiduciary.
A plan fiduciary must act solely
in the interest of plan participants and beneficiaries,
for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits
while defraying reasonable plan expenses. Fiduciaries
also must:
- Act prudently, using the care and skill
that an expert would under similar circumstances;
- Diversify plan investments to minimize
large losses, unless it is clearly prudent
not to do so; and
- Act according to the plan document, as
long as it is consistent with ERISA.
Who Is a Fiduciary?
Each plan must have at least one "named
fiduciary" who serves as plan administrator,
and at least one trustee. ERISA provides that
the written plan document must include one or
more "named fiduciaries" who control
and manage the plan's operation and administration.
In addition to the "named
fiduciary," a person who performs certain
plan management functions is treated as a plan
fiduciary. These functions include:
-
Exercising any discretionary
authority or control in managing the plan
or in acquiring or selling plan assets;
-
Rendering investment
advice for a fee or other compensation,
direct or indirect, with respect to any
money or other plan property; or
-
Acting with discretionary
authority or responsibility in plan administration.
Identifying plan fiduciaries
is very important: a fiduciary is personally
liable for any losses sustained by a plan due
to a breach of the fiduciary's or co-fiduciary's
duty. A fiduciary also must restore to the plan
any profits earned by using plan assets for
personal gain.
Job titles generally are
irrelevant in determining whether an individual
is a fiduciary by function. Only individuals
with discretionary authority over plan assets
or plan management are fiduciaries. Individuals
who have no power to make any decisions on plan
policy, interpretations, practices or procedures,
but who perform administrative functions for
the plan are not fiduciaries.
Plan Provisions for Named Fiduciaries
While a plan must identify the named fiduciary,
the plan may provide that:
-
Any person may serve
in more than one fiduciary capacity;
-
A named fiduciary, or
a fiduciary designated by the named fiduciary,
may employ advisers; and
-
A named fiduciary may
appoint an investment manager to manage,
acquire, and sell any plan assets.
Trustee Investment Responsibilities
Assets of ERISA plans are generally
held in trust and managed by trustees either
named in the trust instrument or appointed by
the plan's named fiduciary. Trustees have exclusive
authority to manage and control plan assets,
except when a plan expressly provides that:
-
The trustees are subject
to the direction of the named fiduciary,
or
-
The authority is delegated
to investment managers.
Trustees subject to the direction
of the named fiduciary are called "directed
trustees." Directed trustees will not be
liable for following the instructions of the
named fiduciaries. Where plan assets are held
in more than one trust, trustees are liable
only for the assets in their own trusts. However,
where two or more trustees govern one trust,
trustees share co- trustee responsibility and
each trustee must use reasonable care to prevent
the other trustees from breaching their duties.
Delegation of Investment Responsibility
The responsibility for plan
investments cannot be delegated by plan trustees,
except where the trustees retain an "investment
manager," which acknowledges its ERISA
fiduciary status and responsibility in writing.
An "investment manager" is defined
under ERISA as any fiduciary (other than a trustee
or named fiduciary) who:
-
Has the power to manage,
buy, or sell any plan asset;
-
Is registered as an investment
advisor under the Investment Advisors Act
of 1940, is a bank, or an insurance company
licensed to do business in more than one
state; and
-
Has acknowledged in writing
that it is a fiduciary with respect to the
plan.
When such an investment manager
is hired by the plan, the plan trustees and
fiduciaries are relieved of their fiduciary
responsibilities for the assets allocated to
that investment manager as long as the fiduciaries:
-
Are prudent in their
selection of manager by investigating the
investment manager's background, experience
with investment for similarly sized plans,
reputation, credentials (such as registration
with the Securities and Exchange Commission),
past performance with similar investments,
fee structure compared with other investment
managers, and the type and frequency of
reports to trustees;
-
Establish prudent guidelines
on investments, with limits on risk, allocation,
types of investments, and expected rates
of return; and
-
Monitor the investment
manager on a regular basis to ensure the
guidelines are being followed.
Investment Advisors
Investment Advisors to plans are fidicuaries
if they
-
Advise on the value
of securities or other property;
-
Recommend the advisability
of investing in, purchasing, or selling
securities or other property; or
-
Have discretionary authority
or control to purchase or sell securities
and other property, or agree to offer advice
on a regular basis relating to a plan's
investment strategy, portfolio, or diversification.
Mutual Funds are not
"Investment Advisors"
When a trustee invests funds with an investment
company registered under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 (i.e., a mutual fund), the mutual
fund company is not a fiduciary merely because
it holds plan assets for investment.
Benefits from a Corporate
or Institutional Trustee Overview
Frequently, qualified retirement plan sponsors
question whether having a corporate trustee
makes sense from a cost/benefit perspective.
Most corporate trustees act as "directed
trustees", so other fiduciaries bear responsibility
for the investment decisions. In a casual review,
it may appear that the trustee's primary responsibility
is merely to act as a glorified cashier, receiving
and disbursing funds according to the plan administrative
committee's direction. In most qualified plans,
assets are custodied through a mutual fund company,
insurance company or stock broker, further limiting
the trustee's role. Consequently, many plan
sponsors believe that it makes sense to self-trustee
the plan, and save the trustee fee.
Issues for Self Trusteed Plans
Having a corporate trustee adds value to the
plan in several ways that are not immediately
obvious to the casual observer, including:
-
fiduciary responsibility
is distributed more broadly, reducing the
possibilities for potential conflicts of
interest;
-
time consuming administrative
functions, including preparing consolidated
asset and income statements, processing
receipts and disbursements, and preparing
and filing tax forms, are delegated to an
institution specializing in providing these
services;
-
the trustee role is delegated
to an institution specializing in providing
trust services, minimizing the possibility
that a trust responsibility could be overlooked,
thereby exposing the plan sponsor to penalties,
or even jeopardizing the plan's tax-qualified
status;
-
plans with over one hundred
participants subject to the plan audit requirement
may pay a lower audit fee for an institutionally
trusteed plan, because the plan may be eligible
to file a "limited scope" audit
report, and because the institution generally
prepares standardized auditor's reports
designed to simplify the audit process;
-
since assets are controlled
by a corporate trustee, plan participants
receive an extra degree of protection that
plan assets will be used solely to pay benefits
to participants and beneficiaries, and reasonable
plan expenses.
Potential Conflicts
of Interest
For the smaller company, where a company owner
or senior executive is often willing to act
as a trustee, a self-trusteed arrangement has
significant appeal. However, the corporate trustee
provides an invaluable buffer between the plan
sponsor and the plan assets, while performing
a variety of complex and time consuming administrative
functions. Consider the following hypothetical
situations:
Processing Benefit
Payments and Disbursing Plan Funds
An employee in a small company, where the owner
also acts as trustee for the profit sharing
plan, is terminated for cause after four years
with the company. The profit sharing plan administrator
advises the trustee that no plan benefits are
due to the terminated employee, because the
plan has a "cliff" vesting schedule,
where no benefits are payable to participants
with less than five years of service. However,
the terminated employee believes that the owner
was responsible for their termination, and is
now acting in a discriminatory manner, by withholding
retirement benefits that would normally be paid.
Handling Assets and
Safeguarding Funds
A company is having difficulty paying its bills,
and employees are whispering that the company
is facing bankruptcy. The company offers a 401(k)
program, and the owner acts as the plan trustee.
Employees stop contributing to the program because
they fear that their salary deferrals may be
used for corporate purposes by the plan.
Acting in the Best
Interests of Participants and Beneficiaries
The owner of a small public company is also
the trustee of the company's Employee Stock
Ownership Plan (ESOP). The ESOP controls 20%
of the company's stock. A larger company recently
initiated a hostile takeover bid for the company,
at a significant premium to the current stock
price and has announced that if the bid is successful,
they intend to lay off employees and relocate
the company. Should the owner/trustee agree
to sell shares held by the ESOP to the other
company?
Distribution of Fiduciary
Roles
In smaller companies, by virtue of the corporate
structure, the same individual may be required
to act in several capacities at the same time.
With respect to a qualified retirement plan,
an individual might be:
-
the plan sponsor, due
to their ownership interest in the company;
-
the plan administrator,
due to their role as the organization's
senior executive, responsible for making
decisions regarding the plan structure,
funding, employee eligibility, and other
management functions; and
-
the participant with
the largest account balance in the plan.
In these circumstances, it
will be extremely difficult for the individual
to fulfill both a plan sponsor and a fiduciary
role, acting only in the best interests of participants
and beneficiaries when acting as plan administrator,
but acting in the best interests of the company
when acting as plan sponsor. To expect this
individual to also function effectively as the
plan trustee is probably unreasonable. Even
if the individual were able to distinguish between
each separate role, it is unlikely that other
plan participants would perceive these separate
roles.
Trustee Administrative Responsibilities
Asset and Income Statements
The trustee must issue, at least annually, a
consolidated statement of trust assets, and
a consolidated statement of trust income and
expenses, including all:
- employee and employer contributions;
- benefit distributions;
- earnings from investments;
- realized and unrealized gains and losses;
and
- plan expenses paid from the trust.
Generally, in a self-trusteed
arrangement this responsibility is delegated
to a brokerage firm, insurance company or mutual
fund. However, final responsibility for the
completeness and accuracy of the trust statement
remains with the trustee, even though the statement
was prepared by another organization.
Processing Receipts and Disbursements
The trustee is responsible for appropriate handling
of all plan receipts and disbursements. These
may include:
-
receiving, validating
and depositing rollover contributions from
other employer's plans;
-
approving, signing and
distributing participant benefit checks;
-
processing regular company
and employee contributions;
-
processing participant
loans and loan payments; and
-
approving and processing
payment of plan expenses.
Although none of these functions
is particularly difficult, handling a high volume
of transaction activity can be time consuming
for the self-trustee. Further, many of these
transactions can be quite time sensitive. Depending
on the trustee's schedule (business trips, vacations,
etc.), transactions may be delayed pending the
trustee's availability. Although plans can be
structured such that most transaction processing
responsibility is delegated to a brokerage firm,
insurance company or mutual fund, the trustee
retains final responsibility for the accurate
processing of trust transactions, even though
the transactions were processed by another organization.
Federal and State Tax
Withholding and Reporting
One of the primary benefits of a corporate trustee
is that as the payor of plan distributions,
they are responsible for withholding federal
and state taxes, filing appropriate tax reports
with IRS and state tax agencies, and reporting
tax information to plan participants receiving
payments. Generally, the employer or plan administrator
would be responsible for preparation of tax
reports for designated distributions (taxable
plan benefits subject to tax withholding) made
by the plan, however this responsibility may
be assumed by a corporate trustee when they
are responsible for paying plan benefits. Additionally,
the corporate trustee can be required to maintain
appropriate records regarding the tax filings.
Form 1099-R
The primary reporting for plan distributions
is made on Form 1099-R. This form must be filed
with the IRS and a copy must be sent to plan
participants and beneficiaries.
Copies of Form 1099-R must be sent to payees
by January 31 of the year following the calendar
year in which the designated distributions were
made.
Copy A of Form 1099-R must be filed with the
IRS by February 28 along with transmittal Form
1096 (for Form 1099-R).
Maintaining Records
and Information
Form 1099-R filers are required to maintain
certain information relevant to designated distributions.
These recordkeeping requirements will be met
if the information contained in Form 1099-R
is kept, along with certain other information,
including the payee's birth date, plan name
and commencement date, plan administrator's
name, and amount and frequency of payments.
The IRS may assess penalties for failure to
maintain the required information.
Tax Withholding Reports
(Form 945)
Payors of plan payments from which tax was withheld
and deposited must file annually Form 945 (Annual
Return of Withheld Federal Income Tax). The
form is due by January 31 each year.
All income tax withholding reported on Form
1099-R must be reported on Form 945.
Federal Tax Deposit
Form (Form 8109-B)
Generally, income tax withheld from plan payments
must be deposited with an authorized financial
institution or a Federal Reserve bank or branch.
A Federal tax deposit form must be included
with each deposit. FTD revised Form 8109 (in
coupon book form) is to be used for this purpose
by Form 945 filers reporting income tax withheld.
State Withholding and
Reporting Requirements
Many states, including California and Oregon,
have similar tax withholding and reporting requirements.
State tax law generally applies based on applicable
law of the state where the benefit payment was
received, not on the law of the state where
the payment was made; consequently a company
with operations in a single state could have
plan withholding and reporting responsibilities
in many states, if terminating employees relocate
on separation from service. A full discussion
of state withholding and reporting requirements
is beyond the scope of this paper.
Inadvertent Rules Violations
Qualified retirement plans operate under significant
legal and administrative constraints. A plan
trustee should be familiar with rules of conduct
for retirement plan trusts found under:
- the Internal Revenue Code;
- IRS regulations;
- the Employee Retirement Income Security
Act of 1974 (ERISA);
- Department of Labor regulations; and
- general trust law.
Given the myriad variety of
rules and regulations, it is virtually impossible
for an individual to be aware of all applicable
requirements. However, even inadvertent violation
of a rule could result in significant penalties
for the plan sponsor, or disqualification of
the trust. Generally, corporate trustees are
less likely to inadvertently violate a trust
rule, because they regularly work with qualified
retirement plans.
Simplified Plan Audit
Procedures
Plans covering 100 or more participants must
engage an accountant to examine and prepare
a report on the financial statements and schedules
required to be included in the annual plan tax
return (Form 5500)..
The accountant's examination must be conducted
in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards, and must designate any auditing procedures
deemed necessary which have been omitted and
the reasons for their omission.
The accountant's report must express an opinion
as to:
1. The financial statements
and schedules covered by the report;
2. The accounting principles and practices
reflected therein, and
3. The consistency of application of the accounting
principles with that of the preceding year,
and any changes in principles which have a
material effect on the financial statements
If plan assets are held through
a corporate trustee which is independently audited,
the accountant may issue a "limited scope"
audit opinion. This means that the accountant
has partially relied on the report of corporate
trustee's independent auditors in considering
the trust's internal controls and procedures.
Generally, a limited scope audit is less costly
and easier to prepare than a full scope audit.
Further, corporate trustees generally issue
professionally formatted asset summaries, income
statements and transaction records designed
to facilitate the annual audit. Consequently,
accountants often charge lower fees for plans
with corporate trustees, even when the limited
scope opinion is not desired or is not permitted.
Pricing: Assessing
the Fee Structure of a Corporate Trustee Overview
Determining the reasonableness of a corporate
trustee's fee schedule can be a complicated
task, since there are numerous methods for pricing
trust services. Some of the major obstacles
to reasonable comparisons include:
-
different fee schedules
for proprietary investments (i.e., investment
products offered by the trust company or
an affiliate) and for non- proprietary investments;
-
additional investment
transaction processing fees (i.e., fees
for processing purchases or sales of plan
investments). These fees may be especially
significant for daily valued participant
directed investment plans, which may have
investment purchases and sales every day;
-
variations in levels
of service between corporate trustees; and
-
differing levels of flexibility
for services that may be provided, and investments
that may be offered.
Nonetheless, by making some
simplifying assumptions, and by expressing aggregate
trust fees in terms of "basis points"
(hundredths of a percent of trust assets), we
can develop some "rules of thumb"
for assessing the reasonableness of a corporate
trustee's fees.
Our simplifying assumptions are as follows:
trustees are classified into three categories:
-
captive
(trustees solely permitting plans to invest
in a narrow range of investment products
offered by the trust company or one of its
affiliates),
-
subsidized
(trustees permitting plans to invest in
both investment products offered by the
trust company, its affiliates, and unaffiliated
organizations subsidizing the trust company
and unaffiliated and unsubsidized investment
products); and
-
unsubsidized
(trustees permitting plans to invest in
totally unaffiliated and unsubsidized investment
products).
service level and investment
flexibility is equivalent for all corporate
trustees of the same
category;
annual fees for processing
purchases or sales of plan investments have
been estimated, aggregated
and expressed as basis points, in addition
to the basic trustee
fee; and
other administrative services
(i.e. participant transaction fees such as
processing benefit
payments, loan checks and payments, etc.,
and tax reporting and filing) are
priced equivalently for all corporate trustees
of the same category, and have been
disregarded for these purposes;
Captive Trust Companies
Generally, captive trust companies are an adjunct
service for bundled recordkeeping and investment
service providers, and offer little additional
service relative to the bundled arrangement
without trust services (e.g., if the bundled
provider offers tax reporting and filing services,
these services are offered whether or not the
captive trust company acts as trustee). Consequently,
the primary incremental value of the captive
trust company stems from the distribution of
fiduciary liability afforded by a corporate
trustee, and the potential for limited scope
audit opinions.
Captive trust companies generally charge a flat
annual fee for being named as plan trustee,
and issuing certain trust reports. The flat
fee is typically $500 to $2,000 per year.
Subsidized Trust Companies
Generally, subsidized trust companies are operated
by financial services companies that offer investment
management or brokerage services. Usually, the
financial services company will also offer its
investment management or brokerage services
to plan sponsors without involving its trust
company; however, when the trust company is
not involved with a plan, most of the administrative
services typically associated with corporate
trustees will not be available to the plan ("investment
only" arrangements).
Trust service fees are generally subsidized
by investment management fees, and/or revenue
sharing arrangements with unaffiliated mutual
fund companies or other entities, and consequently
are generally lower than. unsubsidized trustee
fees. For example, the Charles Schwab Trust
Company (an affiliate of the Charles Schwab
Corporation) offers discounted trustee fees
for plans investing in certain funds, such as
the Schwab 1000 mutual fund (Schwab receives
investment management fees from this fund) or
the Janus Fund (Schwab maintains a revenue sharing
arrangement with this fund).
Subsidized trust companies also permit investments
in funds that do not subsidize trustee fees.
Generally, fees for these types of investments
are at or above market rates, to encourage use
of the subsidized funds.
Most subsidized trust companies have a minimum
annual fee of between $1,500 and $3,000.
A typical subsidized trust company fee schedule
is as follows:
| Trust Assets |
Trustee Fee |
| $0 to $1 million |
0.15% |
| $1 million to $5 million |
0.10% |
| $5 million to $10 million |
0.08% |
| $10 million to $20 million |
0.06% |
| Over $20 million |
Negotiable |
Unsubsidized Trust
Companies
Generally, unsubsidized trust companies are
operated by large banks and trust companies
that do not have a significant investment management
business, although investment management services
may be offered. The trust company's revenues
are generally derived almost totally from trust
service fees.
Most unsubsidized trust companies have a minimum
annual fee of between $1,500 and $3,000.
A typical unsubsidized trust company fee schedule
is as follows:
| Trust Assets |
Trustee Fee |
| $0 to $1 million |
0.50% |
| $1 million to $5 million |
0.25% |
| $5 million to $10 million |
0.15% |
| $20 million to $50 million |
0.10% |
| Over $50 million |
Negotiable |
Conclusion
Only the plan sponsor can determine whether
the "value added" by a corporate trustee
justifies the trustee's fee. However, in considering
the "value added" by the corporate
trustee, the plan sponsor should consider both
the tangible and intangible benefits furnished
by an external trustee. Further, the plan sponsor
should also consider the mitigation of potential
fiduciary liability afforded by having an independent
third party act as trustee. The key benefits
of a corporate trustee are summarized below:
Tangible Benefits
-
time consuming administrative
functions, including preparing consolidated
asset and income statements, processing
receipts and disbursements, and preparing
and filing tax forms, are delegated to an
institution specializing in providing these
services;
-
plans with over one hundred
participants subject to the plan audit requirement
may pay a lower audit fee for an institutionally
trusteed plan, because the plan may be eligible
to file a "limited scope" audit
report, and because the institution generally
prepares standardized auditor's reports
designed to simplify the audit process;
Intangible Benefits
-
since assets are controlled
by a corporate trustee, plan participants
receive an extra degree of protection that
plan assets will be used solely to pay benefits
to participants and beneficiaries, and reasonable
plan expenses.
-
the trustee role is delegated
to an institution specializing in providing
trust services, minimizing the possibility
that a trust responsibility could be overlooked,
thereby exposing the plan sponsor to penalties,
or even jeopardizing the plan's tax-qualified
status;
Mitigated Fiduciary Liability
-
fiduciary responsibility
is distributed more broadly, reducing the
possibilities for potential conflicts of
interest;
-
the possibility that
the Labor Department or a plan participant
might file a lawsuit under ERISA for violations
of fiduciary responsibility is significantly
reduced; and
-
in the event of any ERISA
litigation, a corporate trustee is likely
to share defendant responsibilities with
the plan sponsor and other plan fiduciaries.
Since a corporate trustee will have significant
resources for mounting a legal defense,
having a corporate trustee increases the
likelihood that the plan sponsor will be
successful in defending against potential
ERISA lawsuits.
Engaging a corporate trustee may entail significant
costs, and consequently, represents an important
decision for any company. However, in considering
whether a corporate trustee is required for
a plan, the plan sponsor should weigh both
the tangible and intangible benefits against
the costs of engaging the trustee.
The articles and opinions
in this publication are for general information
only and are not intended to provide specific
advice or recommendations for any individual.
Copyright 1998, Schultz Collins Lawson Young
& Chambers
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