Investment Market Updates from LPL Financial 


 

What can you tell 401(k) participants during a pandemic?

During a time of uncertainty, retirement plan participants might be asking you, “should I move to more conservative investments until the crisis is over?”

We all want to answer participant questions in a way that will reduce anxiety and help employees achieve their financial goals. Handling investment questions from frightened employees is particularly tricky in times of crisis. For good reasons, most employers do not give investment advice to plan participants. Instead, most employers suggest that a participant contact a financial advisor or the plan service providers (the recordkeeper, the plan advisor, or possibly a managed account provider). Referring plan participants to your service providers can be a good choice.  

Another good choice is for you to share pertinent investment education materials with concerned employees. Timely articles sensitive to our current crisis can help employees put the market decline in perspective. One investment manager recently created a piece showing the post-market performance after the SARS sell-off in 2013 and after the Zika sell-off in 2016. I’ve uploaded that article, as well as a few others that illustrate market downturns and market recovery over the long term, so please feel free to download them and to share them with your plan participants.


How is Investment Education different from Investment Advice

For HR departments that want to have a conversation with an employee about market volatility, it is important to provide education only and not to cross over into the area of investment advice. There is a distinct legal difference between education and advice.  The DOL does provide guidance on what is considered education and advice (Interpretive Bulletin 96-1), and others have attempted to summarize the regulations in articles and white papers.

 

 

CARES Act

On March 27, 2020, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (“CARES Act”) that was passed in the U.S. Senate on March 25, 2020.  The President signed the bill into law on March 27, 2020.  Below are several brief summaries of provisions contained in the CARES Act that impact retirement plans and IRAs. 


Newsletters

 

Quarterly Plan Sponsor Newsletter

 

Resources from LPL Financial

  • Checklist for 404(c) and 404A-5 Compliance #1-669908

  • Guide for fee disclosure requirements 408(b)(2) and 404(a)(5) #1-655377

  • Promoting plan success checklist #1-692405

  • Participant resources guide 1-751827

  • Promoting plan success white paper #1-712521

  • Comparison of retirement plan types #1-798265

  • Taking charge of your fiduciary responsibilities #1-669893


Financial Wellness


Controlled Groups


Plan Audits


Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plans


401(k) Plan Design

  • Cross-tested Profit Sharing Allocation Formula

  • Guide to Safe-Harbor Plans

  • Plan Design Optimization Guide


Retirement Plan Surveys

  • Fidelity Building Futures Trends and Insights 2020Q4

  • Fidelity Trends in Investment Menu Design

  • Vanguard How America Saves 2018, Large Market Edition

  • Vanguard How America Saves 2018, Small Market Edition

  • Callan 2018 Defined Contribution Trends Survey


Retirement Plan Committees


Reports from the Department of Labor

Why choose Black Box Pension Advocates, LLC as your retirement plan advisor?

  • Our focus and commitment to the employer-sponsored retirement plan space.

  • The combination of our fiduciary guidance and strategic plan investment consulting.

  • Our robust participant services, employee education and investment advice.

Plan sponsors retain Black Box Pension Advocates because we provide quality services and value. We are retirement plan specialists, we value simplicity and we are always easy to work with.