Segal Sums Up PPA Requirements on Individual Benefit Statements

February 9, 2007 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Segal has issued a reminder that the Department of Labor's (DoL) guidance on new requirements for individual benefit statements force plan sponsors to change the frequency in which they provide the statements and include more information in the documents.

According to the bulletin , the Pension Protection Act (PPA) required that plan sponsors provide individual benefit statements automatically to participants and beneficiaries on a quarterly basis for DC plans that allow participant-directed investments; annually for DC plans that don’t allow participant-directed investments and every three years for DB plans to active or vested participants.

In addition to changing the frequency at which statements should be issued to participants and beneficiaries, the law also added to the information that should be included on the statements:

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  • DC plan statements must include the value of each investment in an individual’s account as of the most recent valuation date;
  • DC plans that allow for participant-directed investments must describe the importance of investment diversification.

According to Segal, the key provisions in the DoL guidance are as follows:

  • Defined benefit plans are not required to provide statements until at least the 2009 plan year;
  • Statements must be provided within 45 days after the end of a period;
  • Benefit statements may be delivered in written, electronic or other reasonably accessible form;
  • DC plans that allow participant-directed investments must include language on the importance of long-term retirement security and of a well-balanced and diversified investment portfolio, including a statement that holding more than 20% of a portfolio in one entity may not be adequately diversified.
  • For DC plans that allow all participants to direct investments, the statements must describe any plan limitations on those rights.

The rules are effective for plan years starting after December 31, 2006; however participants covered by collective bargaining agreements get an extension.

For participants covered by collective bargaining agreements in plans maintained under such agreements, the rules are effective for plan years beginning after the earlier of (1) the later of December 31, 2007 or the date on which the last collective bargaining agreement terminates (without extensions), or (2) December 31, 2008.

Multiemployer plan trustees and sponsors of other plans covering a mix of bargained and non-bargained people will have to decide whether to comply in stages, based on the literal effective dates, or to treat all participants the same and comply earlier than might be required for many of the participants, Segal said.

Former Prudential Broker Charged With Fraud

August 26, 2005 (PLANSPONSOR.com) - Martin Druffner, a former Prudential Securities broker, has been charged with four counts of wire fraud and four counts of securities fraud for his involvement in an improper trading scheme of mutual fund shares between 1999 and October 2003.

Reuters reports that Druffner’s attorney says he is likely to plead guilty to the charges, but added, “…virtually everything he did with respect to market timing was approved or permitted by his superiors.”

Druffner and a group of other former employees were charged by US Attorney Michael Sullivan with market timing mutual funds on behalf of hedge fund clients, at times using false names, according to Reuters.   Druffner earned $1 million in commissions from the scheme.  

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Reuters also noted that six other former Prudential employees, including two managers, left the company in the fall of 2003, after state and federal securities regulators announced a sweeping probe of the multitrillion dollar industry, which handles the assets of half of all U.S. households.

In December of 2003, other former employees were charged with late trading by the Massachusetts Secretary of State because they ignored the actions of the former brokers (See  Prudential Securities Charged with Late Trading ).   Erlier in the month, Skifter Ajro, one of the other former brokers charged, pleaded guilty (See  Ex-Pru Broker Pleads Guilty to Market Timing Allegations ).

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