A news release said the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act (ERISA) and non-ERISA documents comply with
the IRS’s final 403(b) regulations.
“The new 403(b) regulations take effect
January 1, 2009, leaving providers with the opportunity
to provide a valuable service to their nonprofit
clients,” said Martha Kirwin, McKay Hochman’s
Director of Document Compliance, in the announcement.
“Providers will benefit by generating a reliable
403(b) plan document through McKay Hochman’s online
document creation system, the 401kPortal.”
June 28, 2006 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Money managers
polled by Russell for the June Investment Manager Outlook are
concerned the economy is heading toward recession and have
consequently boosted their outlook for large-cap issues and
sharply lowered it for small-cap and mid-cap
stocks.
In a report commentary, Randy Lert, Chief Portfolio
Strategist for Russell, said bullishness for large-cap
value stocks is up 18 percentage points over the results
of the March 2006 survey, the largest one-quarter gain in
the survey’s 2-year history. In addition, the outlook for
small-cap growth stocks experienced the largest
quarter-on-quarter drop in the life of the survey, 30
percentage points.
Money mangers’ bullishness on cash was the highest
for this asset class in the survey’s history,
38%, reflecting their concern about the economy,
according to Lert.
Managers continued to value large-cap growth stocks
over all other asset classes, with their bullishness
around 70%. Managers are more bearish about real estate
investment trusts, at a rate of 70%, than any other asset
class, the report said.
By sector, investment managers rated health care
highest of all sectors (60%), followed by the technology
sector at 58%. According to the report, bullishness for
the energy sectors – integrated oils (47%) and other
energy (56%) – has risen about 5 percentage points from
the previous survey in each case.
Most money managers believe the US Equity market is
fairly valued (62%), while about 30% said the market
is undervalued.
“The sharp swings reflect a growing view among
investment managers that the economy will slow
appreciably as two years of steady interest rate hikes by
the Federal Reserve Board, higher oil prices, inflation
and a slowing housing market might finally be slowing the
growth rate of the US economy after its higher than
average growth during the first quarter,” said Lert in
his commentary.
The survey showed that around 42% believe the major
impact of higher oil prices will be lower retail sales,
while a little under a third believe the major impact
will be higher inflation.
Representatives from 97 investment firms
participated in the Russell survey conducted between June
4 and June 12, 2006.