Room for Improvement in Higher Ed. Retirement Plans

October 12, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – A Fidelity report finds higher education retirement plan sponsors lag behind sponsors in other sectors in adopting plan features to improve employees’ retirement savings.

The report, the first in a series, examines trends in mandatory and voluntary plan design, and highlights three key areas for improvements in plan design: employer and employee contributions, as well as plan participation rates. Employer matching contributions are less prevalent in higher education retirement plans, Fidelity notes; however, during the past few years more plans, especially those in private higher education, have been redesigning their employer contributions to include a match.   

In higher education, an employer matching contribution is often combined with an employer core contribution. The most common design for a match-plus-core contribution is a 5% maximum match (100% up to 5%) and a 5% core contribution, resulting in a 10% total maximum employer contribution.  

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Fidelity says a shift in employer contribution dollars from core to match may result in: 

  • Greater participant engagement: Employees contributing a portion of their own salary take greater interest in and responsibility for saving for retirement;  
  • Increased retirement readiness: Average total employee and employer contributions tend to be higher (depending on plan design), leading to higher account balances; and/or 
  • Reduced costs: Transitioning from a guaranteed payment for 100% of benefit-eligible employees to a contingent payment to a smaller percentage of employees can lead to a drop in overall plan costs.  

 

Adoption of automatic enrollment (AE) and annual increase programs (AIPs) in higher education has also been limited when compared with other segments. Less than 5% of nonprofit health care organizations have adopted AE or AIP. By comparison, 29% of nonprofit health care plans use AE and 49% use AIP; 22% of corporate plans use AE and 76% use AIP.  

Fidelity concludes that implementing an employer match, as well as the use of AE, will increase plan participation rates.  

The Fidelity report is at workplace.fidelity.com/docs/Plan_Design_in_Higher_Education_Summer_2012.pdf.

GSAM Rolls Out Mutual Fund

October 15, 2012 (PLANSPONSOR.com) – Goldman Sachs Asset Management (GSAM) rolled out a new fund, The Goldman Sachs Retirement Portfolio Completion (RPC) Fund.

GSAM aims to offer defined contribution plan sponsors and investors access to the diversifying nontraditional asset classes used by pension plans in a single, daily valued mutual fund.

The fund intends to gain exposure to inflation-linked government bonds, global real estate investment trusts, commodities, emerging markets equity, emerging markets sovereign credit, North American high-yield corporate credit and hedge fund industry beta (i.e., the component of hedge fund returns that is attributable to market risk exposure, rather than manager skill).

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Within the fund, GSAM determines the allocation of each asset class and then employs a passive investment approach with respect to achieving exposure to most asset classes for efficiency and to reduce transaction costs. It is managed by the Quantitative Investment Strategies team of more than 60 investment professional and 60-plus professionals dedicated to trading, information technology and the development of analytical tools.

“Market volatility and low interest rates make it challenging for DC participants to establish a risk-managed investment portfolio,” said Phil Callahan, Managing Director, GSAM’s Retirement Services Group. “Goldman Sachs RPC shows that broader diversification and less crowded plan menus are not mutually exclusive. By combining a number of asset classes, RPC may also carry less risk and volatility than a number of its individual underlying asset classes.”

The fund’s performance benchmark is a composite of the S&P 500 Index (60%) and the Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index (40%). Additionally, GSAM created a proprietary Retirement Portfolio Completion Benchmark. RPC is offered in Class A and Class C shares, both with $1,000 minimum initial investments; it also offers Institutional, Class R and Class IR shares.

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