As a retirement plan sponsor, understanding your role as a plan fiduciary and meeting your obligations for plan disclosures and events have never been more important. Find out what you need to know about your responsibilities by clicking on the headers below.
It’s your fiduciary responsibility to provide a variety of disclosures and notices to plan participants and their beneficiaries. There are also a number of steps you may need to take to ensure that your plan is in compliance with its written provisions and to reset it for the upcoming plan year.
Download the Plan disclosure checklists for sponsors (PDF).
Under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), the federal law governing the operation of qualified retirement plans, a plan sponsor is considered to be a fiduciary. But a plan sponsor may not be the only fiduciary. A fiduciary can also be:
A plan fiduciary has a variety of roles and duties with respect to the plan and must perform those duties prudently and solely in the best interest of plan participants and beneficiaries. Below are some of the ERISA principles that plan fiduciaries are expected to follow.
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Plan sponsors can potentially reduce their fiduciary liability by choosing to comply with section 404(c) of ERISA. Although complying with section 404(c) is not mandatory, it provides plan fiduciaries with certain protections from liability with respect to investment decisions made by plan participants. Among other things, under 404(c) participants must be able to:
By using a Qualified Default Investment Alternative (QDIA) and meeting other regulatory conditions (e.g., initial and annual notice requirements), plan sponsors can reduce their fiduciary liability of participant losses in default investments. Only certain types of investments qualify as a QDIA such as target-date funds, managed accounts and balanced funds. Please consult with your financial professional prior to selecting an investment option to utilize as the plan’s QDIA.
Important: Consult with your legal advisers to determine how 404(c) regulations may apply to your plan.
A written investment policy statement isn’t required by ERISA, but the Department of Labor has stated that adopting and maintaining an investment policy statement is “consistent with the fiduciary obligations set forth in ERISA.” In other words, it’s a good idea.
A sound investment policy statement should include descriptions of the plan’s:
Important: Make sure your legal advisers approve your investment policy statement. Once the policy is in place, be sure to follow it. The document also should be reviewed and updated regularly to reflect any changes.
Regulations under ERISA section 404(a)(5) require fiduciaries to provide participants with the sufficient information they need to make informed investment decisions with regard to the management of their individual accounts. The required information falls into the following categories:
Disclosure timing
Disclosures must be provided before a newly eligible employee can direct their investments and at least annually thereafter.
Important: Any plan-related changes should be disclosed to participants 30 to 90 days before they become effective.
Help with participant disclosure
Capital Group helps you meet your disclosure requirements with our Participant Fee Disclosure that includes details about the plan’s features and expenses, as well as investment descriptions, results, fees and expenses and benchmark comparisons. The statement is updated quarterly and is customized for your plan.
You can have us automatically deliver the participant fee disclosure and other disclosure documents using notice delivery services available in PlanPremier. Learn ways to simplify your retirement plan notice process or contact your Retirement Plan Coordinator for more information.
View your participant fee disclosure document
To see the fee disclosure for your plan:
Your company's retirement plan committee should conduct periodic investment reviews. Questions to consider asking include:
For assistance in your evaluation, you can review your Investment Review report (updated quarterly):
Plan expenses should also be looked at from time to time. Plan sponsors should evaluate whether the plan is getting good value for its money in view of the expenses it incurs. The different sources of revenue used to pay plan expenses should also be noted, along with who receives those payments and from which particular source the payments are derived.
Important: It is essential to document the review process. Make sure you consult with your legal advisers to confirm that your documentation is adequate.
Conduct a periodic review of plan operations. Key questions to consider asking include:
Also, consider whether any changes to the plan terms are required or desired. Be sure to review any processes that are outsourced as well.
Important: All issues and resolutions should be documented in the meeting minutes. Make sure you consult with your legal advisers to confirm you’re covering all the bases.
For additional information, take a look at the U.S. Department of Labor’s Retirement plans page.