Heather Beatty joins the TCW
Group as senior vice president, institutional marketing.
Beatty will manage relationships
with the global asset management firm’s institutional investment clients on the West Coast. Based in Los Angeles, she reports to Group Managing Director and Head of Institutional Marketing Joe Carieri.
Before joining TCW, Beatty served
as a co-director of global consultant relations at Thornburg Investment
Management in Los Angeles. She previously led the institutional
business development, client services and marketing efforts for Palisades
Investment Partners. Beatty is a co-founder of the Women in Institutional
Investments Network (WIIIN), a board member of the Association of Investment
Management Sales Executives (AIMSE), and earned her bachelor’s degree from
Miami University of Ohio.
“Heather has a long and
successful track record as a liaison between money managers and their
institutional investors, as well as cultivating and sustaining relationships
with the consultant community,” Carieri says. “Her knowledge of
investment products and understanding of the complex needs of institutional
investors will continue to deepen TCW’s partnerships with clients and
consultants.”
Hueler Income Solutions offers DC plan participants an out-of-plan lifetime income solution, but the Hueler Companies CEO says providers are making progress on being able to offer in-plan solutions.
Kelli
Hueler, president and CEO, Hueler Companies, says the number one reason defined
contribution (DC) retirement plan sponsors should make lifetime income
solutions available to plan participants is that they are facing one of
most difficult financial decisions they will have in their lifetime: how to pay themselves
without running out of resources in retirement.
“Longevity
is a gift, but an expensive gift,” she explains. “A huge number of employees do
not know how to move forward. By giving them access to a competitive, objective,
low-cost platform, plan sponsors are giving them an education tool and access
to the market they cannot get anywhere else—they can purchase an option for as
low as $10,000.
Plan
sponsors are hesitant to offer income solution within their plans because of
concerns about fiduciary responsibility and portability issues, Hueler tells
PLANSPONSOR. In addition, when Hueler entered the market in 2004, most plans
had stopped offering participants the option of taking their distributions
in the form of annuities. When plan sponsors looked
at their plan data, they saw participants were not selecting this option.
Probably, Hueler says, because participants did not want to lock up all their
money—their only choice was to take an annuity or take a lump sum.
“So, we responded to
what the market was telling us. We had to come up with an out-of-plan option for
participants to set up lifetime income and it had to be voluntary, because fiduciary
responsibility guidance at the time did not provide much comfort to plan
sponsors,” she notes. “Participants want lifetime income, but not in the form
provided before—partial annuitization is more practical.”
Hueler’s
Income Solutions platform offers participants who are allowed early, in-service
distributions from their DC plans to purchase annuities with a portion of their
DC plan account balance. Participants can purchase income starting at age 65 or,
with the recently added qualified longevity annuity contract (QLAC) option, they can purchase income starting at age
85.
But,
Hueler says she sees programs evolving in which younger participants can sign
up for an income option and accumulate assets inside their DC plans to
buy lifetime income in the future. She anticipates accumulation programs will
start to become more readily available and will become a more natural part of the
plan participation process.
“[The
industry] has to figure out a way to offer lifetime income through DC plans because
employers are such an important outlet for information and education to
employees, and plan participants need an institutionally priced alternative for
lifetime income,” Hueler says.
Hueler
is one of the founding board members of the Defined Contribution Institutional
Investment Association (DCIIA) and is active on its Lifetime Income Committee.
She says there are a lot of different views from committee members, but one
consistent theme is that there is no one best way to solve for DC plan
participants’ income needs. “Plan sponsors need to know there is not one best
solution and should look at multiple alternatives to build a suite of services
and capabilities for different demographic groups in their plans,” she
contends.
Though there is no one best way to address the lifetime income issue, there are some fundamental
principles the committee believes should guide solutions— they should be
institutionally priced, efficient and easy, and there should be an opportunity
for annuitization to become part of the natural default process, just like
investment options are. “This is influencing product design, and how
policymakers and everyone else are thinking about lifetime income,” Hueler
says. “We see a lot of smart, dedicated folks working on new products for each
demographic group.”