Westminster Consulting Brochure Defined Contribution & Defined Benefit | Page 20

The conflict-of-interest inherent in a non-fiduciary advisor conducting fiduciary tasks can easily become the basis of a lawsuit against any decision makers or fiduciaries working for the benefit of the plan. THE ROLES OF A FIDUCIARY ADVISOR VS. A NON-FIDUCIARY ADVISOR Thus far, we have looked at the relative benefits of working with a fiduciary advisor and the potential hazards of working with a nonfiduciary advisor. This raises the question: is there any advantage of working with a non-fiduciary advisor? The short answer is “yes”. To begin with, a non-fiduciary advisor may be a specialist in their particular field. Returning to the car salesman example, a salesman may know the history and subtleties of every car on their lot and they could provide a lot of useful knowledge about their own products. Similarly, a spokesman for ABC’s Mutual Fund Company may have accumulated a great deal of knowledge and experience about their products and how to integrate their product suite into an effective retirement plan lineup. Fiduciary advisors may take advantage of this expertise by inviting product specialists to discuss their particular suite of products. However, the fiduciary has to look at a broad pool of investment options in order to fulfill the duties set forth under ERISA. Missing options which apply to individual investors is done with a certain amount of risk for fiduciaries and the courts have upheld their liability, especially when they have failed to seek outside professional advice. “A trustee’s lack of familiarity with investments is no excuse: under an objective standard, trustees are to be judged according to the standards of others acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters. [Marshall v. Glass/Metal Association and Glaziers and Glassworkers Pension Plan, 507 F. Supp. 378, 2 E.B.C. 1006 (D. Hawaii 1980)]” The non-fiduciary, subject to the lesser suitability standard can become a greater expert on certain specific investment options due solely on the fact that they do not have a duty to find the best option and can therefore limit their search. Ironically, the limited search may actually yield the best option for the investor client! For employer retirement plans, like a 401(k), there is another area where the roles of fiduciary and non-fiduciary advisors are distinct: investment advice vs. education. Imagine an employee at John Doe Computers, Bob, wants to know how to invest his 401(k) savings. Specific recommendations given to the employee (i.e. – “Bob, we’ve had a one-on-one discussion and I think you should put 50% of your money in this equity fund, and 50% in this other fixed income fund”) is considered investment advice. Investment advice given to employees (i.e. plan participants) is solely the purview of a fiduciary advisor, and the recommendation a fiduciary advisor provides to employees is subject to fiduciary responsibility and potential liability. A non-fiduciary advisor cannot give specific recommendations to employees. On the other hand, a non-fiduciary advisor can provide education and guidance. So, Bob can call up the investment hotline at ABC Mutual Funds and get investment education. Bob can 18 receive general information about types of risk (market, inflation), compounding interest, risk tolerance levels & hypothetical asset allocation models, and so on. This general education gives tools to employees to make their own investment decisions, so is not subject to the fiduciary standard. As a result, the liability to the employer is significantly less. Another perceived benefit non-fiduciaries have which fiduciaries do not possess is with regard to the perception of “self-serving” transactions under ERISA and therefore the non-fiduciaries are exposing the employers to less liability than the fiduciaries. “A fiduciary with respect to a plan shall not – Deal with the assets of the plan in his own interest or for his own account; In his individual or in any other capacity act in any transaction involving the plan on behalf of a party (or represent a party) whose interests are adverse to the interests of the plan or the interests of its participants or beneficiaries, or receive any consideration for his own personal account from any party dealing with such plan in connection with a transaction involving the assets of the plan.” [ERISA Sec. 406(b)]” Let’s go back to our car salesman illustration to demonstrate how a “self-serving” transaction might still work in the client’s benefit. Imagine that you are ready to buy your car, but you don’t have enough money to purchase your car outright; you’ll need some short term financing options. A car salesman would be happy to offer you financing, but no fiduciary could ever offer to loan you money to purchase a product. A fiduciary might be able to research different loan offers and recommend a particular deal, but the car dealership could actually provide the financing directly and they may even offer a competitive rate given their desire to sell the car. Let’s apply this illustration back to the world of investing: imagine you run a foundation with a high annual spending requirement to maintain a favorable tax status. Now, imagine it’s 2008 and th