Molina Healthcare Close to Win in ERISA Lawsuit

A California federal judge’s ruling in an ERISA lawsuit against Molina Healthcare provides a window into this court’s thinking on ERISA lawsuits and clues to winning plan sponsor defenses.

Molina Healthcare Salary Savings Plan participants are not entitled to recover on any of their claims brought under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, a federal judge in California ruled on March 21.

The allegations from 401(k) plan participants Michelle Mills, Coy Sarell, Chad Westover, Brent Aleshire, Barbara Kershner, Paula Schaub and Jennifer Silva were dismissed with prejudice, wrote U.S. District Judge Stanley Blumenthal Jr., presiding in the Central District of California.   

For more stories like this, sign up for the PLANSPONSOR NEWSDash daily newsletter.

“The judge was persuaded by defendants’ argument that broad indices were more appropriate as comparators [of performance] than individual funds,” explains Charles Field, managing partner in the San Diego office of law firm Sanford Heisler Sharp LLP, which was not involved in the lawsuit.


The Case

The plaintiffs’ 2022 complaint in Michelle Mills et al. v. Molina Healthcare et al. challenged the selection and retention of the flexPATH Index target-date funds as the 401(k) plan’s qualified default investment alternative. It alleged Molina Healthcare breached its fiduciary duties and engaged in prohibited transactions in violation of ERISA.

Blumenthal ruled the plaintiffs failed to prove losses and instructed the parties to meet and confer no later than March 27 to file a proposed final judgment that is agreed “as to form,” he wrote.

“Even using the most profitable reasonable benchmark, the selection and retention of the flexPATH TDFs as the plan’s QDIA did not cause a loss to the plan,” wrote Blumenthal.

He also rejected the claim that the plaintiffs’ alleged payment of fees to flexPATH was an additional loss to the plan because the money paid as fees could otherwise have been invested in other opportunities.

In the class period, the flexPATH TDFs “outperformed most other retirement TDFs and all three of the benchmark indices, which are appropriate comparators in this case: the Dow Jones Target Date Total Return Index, the S&P Target Date Total Return Index, and the S&P Target Date To Retirement Index,” wrote Blumenthal. “Using any of these indices as a comparator, the plan earned more through its investment in the flexPATH TDFs than it would have earned if the plan’s funds had been otherwise invested in a prudent alternative selected by a prudent and loyal fiduciary.”

The money paid to flexPATH for its services as a 3(38) investment manager total less than $550,000, and the flexPATH TDFs earned their investors more than $3.2 million more during the class period than the best-performing benchmark index (the S&P Target Date Total Return Index), Blumenthal determined.

Precedent Setting?

As the case approaches a conclusion favorable to Molina Healthcare, it is unclear what precise basis the court is using for its dismissal and therefore whether the ERISA defense can be used by plan sponsors in future lawsuits when sponsors face similar allegations is unclear, according to Drew Oringer, partner in and general counsel at the Wagner Law Group, which was not involved in the litigation.

“Predecessor cases involving this sponsor took a number of different directions,” Oringer says. “There has been something of a trend in the courts to hold plaintiffs to increasingly higher standards in terms of alleging real bases for impudence. While the [Hughes v. Northwestern University] case did give some encouragement to plaintiffs by emphasizing the factual nature of the inquiry, it’s becoming clearer that the court’s caution about appropriate deference to careful fiduciaries is being heard by the lower courts.”

The U.S. Supreme Court issued the Hughes ruling in January 2022.  

Regardless of the national legal trends, Molina Healthcare fiduciaries’ detailed documentation of their fiduciary selection supported their defense, Oringer says.

“Where the employer goes through proper process and is conflict-free, it becomes hard to second-guess on the basis of mere disagreement with ultimate choices, absent a showing that obvious or other basic considerations were ignored,” Oringer says. “In this case, one of the allegations seems to be that the applicable investment strategies were novel. However, I would think that a court would be circumspect about saying that appropriately vetted strategies cannot be used by an ERISA plan merely because they are creative or otherwise new.”

According to Field, the ruling “gives insight into the judge’s thinking on appropriate benchmarks. Here, the judge felt broad indices were more appropriate as comparators than individual funds.

Additionally, Blumenthal’s decision “affects how plaintiffs’ experts select comparators/benchmarks against which to measure damages,” Field adds.

The Molina Healthcare plan comprises about $892.3 million in retirement assets for 19,618 participants, as of the plan’s most recent filing to the Department of Labor. Molina Healthcare is a managed care company headquartered in Long Beach, California.

The complaint against Molina Healthcare’s 401(k) plan was filed in March 2022. In December 2022, Blumenthal allowed the case against Molina to continue but dismissed the case against adviser NFP Retirement.

The class of plaintiffs is represented by attorneys with the law firm Schlichter Bogard & Denton LLP; defendant Molina Healthcare is represented by the law firm King and Spalding; NFP Retirement is represented by law firm O’Melveny and Myers LLP; and the business advocacy organization the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a filer of amicus briefs, is represented by law firm Goodwin Procter LLP.

Representatives of Molina Healthcare did not respond to a request for comment; nor did attorneys for either party.

Retirement Industry People Moves

The Retirement Advantage expands consulting team; Pantheon announces leadership succession plan; Noble appoints Johnson head of global client solutions.

The Retirement Advantage Adds Chase Meitler to Consulting Team 

Chase Meitler

The Retirement Advantage Inc., an independently owned retirement services company, announced the addition of Chase Meitler as the newest regional plan consultant. Meitler will be responsible for overseeing a territory that includes Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska, South Dakota and Wyoming. 

Meitler will report directly to Darin Erdmann, TRA’s director of sales and distribution. Meitler will concentrate on expanding TRA’s client base in the Rocky Mountain region, as well as crafting personalized retirement plan solutions that minimize taxable income for business owners.  

Never miss a story — sign up for PLANSPONSOR newsletters to keep up on the latest retirement plan benefits news.

Meitler’s various positions included senior retirement consultant and associate internal sales director at Empower Retirement and, most recently, regional retirement consultant at Transamerica. 

 

Pantheon Announces Succession Plan for CEO, CIO Roles 

Pantheon Ventures LLP announced this week that Kathryn Leaf will become CEO of the firm in 2025. She will succeed Paul Ward, who will become the executive chairman, following a tenure of more than a decade leading Pantheon through a “period of substantial growth and expansion.” 

The transition will be effective January 1, 2025, and is subject to standard regulatory approval.  

Leaf is currently co-head of investment and global head of real assets, as well as a member of the firm’s executive committee and partnership board. Since becoming partner in 2012, Leaf has led the development of the firm’s infrastructure platform and has overseen the firm’s growth to more than $20 billion in discretionary assets under management.  

Ward will step down following a 20-year career at Pantheon, having joined as vice president on the private equity secondaries team in 2003. 

Additionally, Jeff Miller, who has served as co-head of investment alongside Leaf since 2022 and as global head of private equity, will become chief investment officer. Miller is also a 15-year veteran of the firm and currently serves as global head of private equity, as well as a member of the firm’s executive committee and partnership board. 

Noble Appoints Angela Johnson as Head of Global Client Solutions and Strategic Partnerships 

Angela Johnson

The Noble Investment Group announced the hiring of Angela Johnson as head of global client solutions and strategic partnerships, a new role at the firm. Johnson will be responsible for leading Noble’s client relationships and cultivating new strategies and investment products. Johnson will also serve as a member of the firm’s investment committee.

Johnson joins Noble from venture capital firm Fifth Wall, where she was a partner and head of capital formation, leading global capital raising and investor relations. She began her career in hospitality at RLJ Development as part of its acquisitions, capital markets and portfolio management teams. She has more than 20 years of experience in the real estate sector. 

“I am honored to join the Noble team, an organization renowned for its integrity, investment performance, innovation, and leadership,” said Johnson in a statement. “I look forward to leveraging my experience to help build valuable new strategies across the Noble platform.” 

John Phillips Named Senior Strategic Adviser at FusionIQ

John Phillips

FusionIQ, a wealth management platform, announced the appointment of John Phillips as senior strategic adviser. Phillips will focus on consulting with registered investment advisers, family offices and broker/dealers to “drive growth, efficiency and transformation strategies.” 

He will also play a “key role” in expanding FusionIQ’s digital marketplace, finTAMP and self-directed investing modules as the company aims to become a leading all-in-one cloud-native wealth management platform. 

Prior to joining FusionIQ, Phillips served as executive vice president and head of platform sales at Fidelity Institutional, a division of Fidelity Investments. Phillips has nearly three decades of experience in the financial services industry. 

“We’re thrilled to welcome John Phillips to the FusionIQ team,” said Mark Healy, FusionIQ’s CEO, in a statement. “John’s deep sector knowledge, industry relationships, and strategic insights will be invaluable as we continue to enhance our platform and help our clients become digital wealth leaders. We look forward to working closely with John to deliver unparalleled value for our partners and clients.” 

Phillips will begin his new role next week. 

«