Westminster Consulting Brochure Defined Contribution & Defined Benefit | Page 19

[ERISA Sec.404 (a)(1)(B)] An advisor who adopts fiduciary status bears a burden similar to the institutional trustee; they must act with undivided loyalty to the interests of the owners and avoid (or disclose) any possible conflicts of interest. This is the fiduciary standard. Conversely, non-fiduciary advisors are subject to a lesser burden: the suitability standard. Legally, this often means that the financial advisor is required to offer an individual investor options which only meet their needs based upon their particular circumstances. Advisors may select products or services that are “suitable” for the client, but not necessarily the best choice. “A fiduciary … may employ one or more persons to render advice with regard to any responsibility such fiduciary has under the plan. [ERISA Sec. 402 (c) (2)]” However, recent court decisions point to a more vigorous monitoring of the choices being offered by these non-fiduciaries. In other words, the investment choices being given should be more suitable for the client(s) and less self-serving to the non-fiduciaries and the companies they serve. Closer scrutiny is being paid to these transactions which both buyers and sellers should start paying closer attention to moving forward. The car salesman will show you cars that go from point A to point B; he may show you suitable options. However, he has a vested interest in higher commissions, or perhaps moving particular models that aren’t necessarily your ideal selection. From a broader perspective, imagine that this particular used car lot has your dream car with everything you want. The only problem is a competitor’s car lot across the street has the exact same vehicle for $5000 less. A salesman following the suitability standard has no obligation to tell you about the cheaper dream car across the street; his interest is selling the car from his own dealership and certainly your dream car is a suitable choice. Even more insidious, the salesman simply may not know about better options outside of their own car lot; their job is to sell cars, not to know about the entire universe of options. WHERE IS THE HARM? Now, apply this illustration to the context of investments. Imagine you are an employer – John Doe Computers - with a 401k retirement plan and that you’re working with ABC Mutual Fund Company to run the recordkeeping, participant education, and investment management services. ABC Mutual Funds are the only allowable investments in the retirement plan. So, John Doe Computers only receives recommendations of which ABC Mutual Funds to include in the retirement plan, but with tens of thousands of investment options available, how can the employer know that ABC funds are the best options for their employees? Alternatively, imagine that the ABC investment family of products don’t pass any fiduciary standard (e.g. – they’re more expensive than peers, all of their portfolio managers and analysts were replaced, risk adjusted returns are terrible, etc.). Imagine that ABC is charging too much for recordkeeping, but they won’t bring these issues to John Doe Computers’ attention. The employer might never know about these failings because there is a conflict of interest; ABC simply won’t fire themselves and it falls on the board or a fiduciary advisor to properly vet their advisors. Example: Buying a Car It might be useful to think of a car salesman as following the suitability standard. Imagine you walk onto a used car lot and talk to the salesman on duty to show you a few cars; the salesman will show cars, but they get to choose how to sell them. Do they show you a selection of sporty cars with high markups? Imagine that this particular salesman is the head of the Model Ts and they are compensated based on the number of Model Ts sold, but not Saturns; might they try and steer you towards a particular brand or model? Is there an unreliable Edsel that the car dealership is trying to get rid of, such that they are willing to give you a bargain? For non-qualified plans- the harm of operating without fiduciary coverage is more subtle. Certainly, the committee members and other fiduciaries working on behalf of the plan have been entrusted with fiduciary duty, but their advisors are not always required to share this burden. If a committee is made of lawyers and accredited fiduciaries and they have borne the responsibility for governance review, investment manager due diligence, peer review, and so on, they may have s