Top
Stories
Featured Article Data Bank Focus: Getting Them to Stay February 8, 2013
Featured Article Data Bank Focus: See Where Workers Are Saying 'See Ya' February 8, 2013
Featured Article Data Bank Focus: A Shrinking Pool of Job Candidates February 8, 2013
Featured Article Honoring Diversity the Hawaiian Way February 8, 2013
Featured Article Honoring Diversity the McDonald's Way February 8, 2013
Featured Article Defending Diversity February 8, 2013
Featured Article Retirement Showdown February 7, 2013
Featured Article Visa Program Sparks Debate—Again February 7, 2013
Featured Article Homeward Bound February 7, 2013
Blog: The Practical Employer Workplace Social Media Policies Must Account for Generational Issues February 7, 2013
Blog: Work in Progress Kiss and Tell February 6, 2013
Latest News

Employee Retirement Statements Get a Fee Makeover

Participants in defined contribution plans should receive the first of two fee-disclosure notices by Aug. 30. This notice should include a listing of all the investments available in the plan as well as the options' fees and historical performance.

  • By Patty Kujawa
  • Published: August 22, 2012
  • Updated: August 27, 2012
  • Comments (0)
Related Topics:
Employee Retirement Statements Get a Fee Makeover

The annual statements that employees participating in defined contribution plans such as 401(k)s receive this time of year may look different thanks to new rules that aim to help workers understand the costs of each investment in the plan.

Employers with retirement plans where participants get to choose the investments now need to show how much each option costs. The rule, finalized by the U.S. Labor Department in February, isn't exactly new; it's simply that the agency wanted a clearer set of responsibilities for providers and plan sponsors to show the costs and fees for services.

It was an important move because, last year, 71 percent of plan participants responding to an AARP survey didn't think they paid anything for investments in their retirement accounts. The new rule will make sure all participants have fee and expense information needed to make sound investment decisions, a Labor Department fact sheet on the rules says.

Participants should receive the first of two fee-disclosure notices by Aug. 30. This notice should include a listing of all the investments available in the plan as well as the options' fees and historical performance. The Labor Department requires the notice to include benchmark information for investments with variable rates of return so participants can compare options.

The second notice will go out in November and will be issued quarterly after that. This notice will be more particular to each individual's account, detailing how much the participant is paying for administrative costs and investment fees. The notice will also include information on loan fees or any other expenses associated with the individual's account.

In its final rule notice issued in February, the Labor Department estimated the new requirements annually will save nearly $2 billion and 54 million work hours participants currently spend on collecting and organizing expense information.

Since 2007, the Labor Department has been working on rules to make fees more transparent so plan sponsors could offer better investment options and participants could make solid investment decisions. After getting input from industry experts, plan sponsors, service providers and the public, the Labor Department proposed two sets of rules: The first creates a process where service providers gave plan sponsors detailed information on the fees charged, while the second set requires plan sponsors to give participants detailed information on fees. Deadlines for each rule were extended so providers and plan sponsors were given enough time to comply.

Patty Kujawa is a writer based in Milwaukee. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Leave A Comment

Guidelines: Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. You are fully responsible for the content you post.

Stay Connected

Join our community for unlimited access to the latest tips, news and information in the HR world.

Follow Workforce on Twitter
HR Jobs
View All Job Listings

Search