Westminster Consulting Brochure Defined Contribution & Defined Benefit | Page 17

The Biggest Myth for Investment Consultants By Gabriel Potter AIFA ® Senior Investment Research Associate at Westminster Consulting The Bad News Many of our readers are fiduciary trustees for large pools of money: pension funds, charitable foundations, employee welfare & retirement plans, and so on. You, the fiduciaries, should be applauded for adopting this burden, for it is often an under appreciated duty. As fiduciaries, you are responsible for a great deal and the scope of your responsibilities is ever increasing. At Westminster Consulting, we sometimes are bearers of bad news. It would be easier to tell investment committees all the ways that their attention wasn’t required and how much more leisure time everyone gets. In reality, we are obligated to explain where your fiduciary duties lie. Here’s where the bad news come in. We have spoken with trustees working for a retirement plan or charity that have, in an effort to offload fiduciary responsibility, hired a fiduciary consultant to help manage their plan. Herein lays the Myth: The Myth: “Our trustees hired an investment consultant with fiduciary status. Our consultant has no conflict of interest because he is a fiduciary! So, our plan is totally covered and we, the trustees, we are no longer responsible for the plan.” The Facts: This is wrong in two important ways. Once you hire a consultant, even one that adopts a fiduciary standard, plan fiduciaries cannot completely offload their fiduciary responsibility. They may share responsibility with a consultant, but they cannot offload it completely. Most importantly, the plan fiduciaries will always be responsible for overseeing the consultant. Why is this difficult? The sad reality is that some