August 13, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – LPL Financial LLC has launched its Worksite Financial Solutions website to help employees gain confidence in their financial future.
LPL Financial’s main objective in launching the website (www.worksitefinancialsolutions.com)
is to
demystify retirement by offering plan participants education about their
options through different life stages. “Providing online financial tools to
participants such as calculators, videos, articles and tutorials is intended to
help them make better financial decisions throughout their careers and become
more confident about their futures,” Adam Sokolic, senior vice president of LPL Retirement Partners, based in San
Diego, explains.
“Worksite Financial Solutions was built to help employees
organize their financial lives and become more confident about their financial
decisions,” says Dave Reich, executive vice president and head of LPL
Retirement Partners.
LPL Financial is a subsidiary of LPL Financial
Holdings Inc. The company provides proprietary technology, clearing and compliance services, practice management programs and training,
and independent research to independent financial advisers, banks and credit
unions. More information on the firm can be found at http://www.lpl.com.
August 13, 2014 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – GRQ Investment Management alleges in a new lawsuit that Financial Engines, Inc. and its subsidiary advisory firm, violated two patents related to digital investment advice and managed accounts.
In basic terms, GRQ alleges that Financial Engines, in
delivering computer-based 401(k) plan advice services, violated U.S. Patents
numbered 7,120,600 (the ‘600 Patent) and 8,229,825 (the ‘825 Patent)—both entitled
“Systems and Methods for Improving Investment Performance.” GRQ describes itself as a firm “formed to monetize the inventions of the
late Brian Tarbox and Mark Greenstein.” Complaint documents
show Tarbox and Greenstein are listed as inventors on the ‘600 and ‘825
patents. The late Tarbox is referred to in the complaint as “a leading adviser
in the field of retirement planning and financial services.”
Financial Engines is accused of “infringing and continuing
to infringe the ‘600 Patent in the State of Texas … and/or elsewhere in the
United States by, among other things, making, using, selling, offering to sell,
and/or importing, without license, directly or through its customers, managed
account services, such as its Personal Asset Manager Program or customer
programs such as the Vanguard Personal Online Advisor, Vanguard Managed Account
Programs.” Another potentially infringing service from Financial Engines listed
in the complaint is the Financial Engines’ Income+ product, which provides a computer-based
method of providing distribution recommendations from an investment account to
a retirement plan investor.
The compliant suggests these and other Financial Engines
products and services fall within the scope of at least one claim of the ‘600 and
‘825 patents, as evidenced by Financial Engines and its client’s service
descriptions.
Background materials included in the complaint show that, in
1996, Tarbox assisted William Sharpe, the founder of Financial Engines, by providing
him with guidance on an initial business model for an independent advisory
firm. Tarbox is also said to have explained this business model to at least one
third-party, so that Sharpe could obtain funding during the initial stages of
Financial Engines’ development. Specifically, Tarbox participated in Financial
Engines’ initial meeting with venture capital investors, who collectively put
up $5 million to launch Financial Engines.
The complaint alleges that, in 2001, after building upon and
further developing the initial business model for Financial Engines, Tarbox was
“instrumental in obtaining ERISA Advisory Opinion 2001-09A, more commonly known
in the industry as the SunAmerica Opinion.” One consequence of this
far-reaching opinion, the complaint says, is that independent financial advisers
were permitted to team up with money managers to offer one-stop investment management
services using an independent financial expert to provide the advice and asset-allocation
decisions on a client’s behalf. The opinion also helped establish
the regulatory framework necessary for managed accounts. Before the SunAmerica
opinion, advisers lacked key protections and many hesitated to offer true investment
“advice” to retirement plan participants covered by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
(ERISA)—opting instead to provide non-discretionary “education.”
To provide computer-based discretionary
managed accounts, complaint documents suggest, Financial
Engines had to confirm that it operates in accordance with the
SunAmerica
Opinion. In September 2004, Financial Engines made such confirmation and
offered its first managed
accounts to Motorola and J.C. Penny employees, and by December 2004 the
firm
had $1 billion in assets under management. As of the start of 2014,
Financial Engines' existing contracts cover 7.9 million workers with
$824 billion in their 401(k)
plans, and the firm is directly managing $92 billion of those assets,
according
to the complaint.
The complaint suggests Financial Engines'
admission that it complies with the SunAmerica Opinion further suggests
patent infringement, based on the opinion's requirements around the
delivery and integration of independent financial advice and plan
participant data.
Additionally, according to the complaint, Financial Engines violated
the patents in that it “provides means, operatively connected to the data
storage means, for automatically implementing discretionary investment allocation
decisions utilizing the discretionary asset-allocation program, wherein the
discretionary investment allocation decisions are automatically implemented
using a process that reduces or eliminates the at least one conflicted person’s
ability to self-deal, and wherein the discretionary investment allocation
decisions are implemented, developed, or maintained by the at least one substantially
independent person.”
GRQ filed the patent infringement complaint with the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Marshall Division. The relevant
action, according to the text of the compliant, is being filed under Title 35
of the United States Code. The complaint documents show Financial Engines was active
in the Texas region between 2007 and 2011, especially regarding services
rendered to the J.C. Penny Company and Texas Instruments Incorporated.
For example, J.C. Penny paid Financial Engines some $15.6 million
for its asset management and investment advisory services related to the
company’s 401(k) plans during the time period. Texas Instruments paid another
$5.7 million for similar services, according to the text of the complaint.
GRQ
claims that it has suffered “monetary damages in an amount not yet determined”
from these alleged infringements, “and will continue to suffer damages in the future
unless Financial Engines’ infringing activities are enjoined by this court.”
Financial Engines officials tell PLANSPONSOR that the firm has not yet been served with the complaint.
“We had received no prior communication from the plaintiff prior to the filing, and in fact, had to pull the complaint ourselves,” explains David Weiskopf, Financial Engines' senior director of corporate communications. “These types of suits are not uncommon, and we intend to vigorously defend these allegations.”