ERISA Requirements
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) is a federal law that sets minimum standards for most voluntarily established retirement and health plans in private industry. Understanding ERISA is essential for investment advisers who work with employer-sponsored retirement plans.
ERISA Coverage
Plans Subject to ERISA
ERISA applies to most private sector employer-sponsored plans:
| Covered Plans | Examples |
|---|---|
| Defined Benefit Plans | Traditional pensions |
| Defined Contribution Plans | 401(k), profit-sharing, money purchase |
| Welfare Benefit Plans | Health insurance, life insurance, disability |
Plans NOT Subject to ERISA
| Exempt Plans | Reason |
|---|---|
| Government Plans | Federal, state, local government employees |
| Church Plans | Religious organization exemption |
| IRAs | Individual plans, not employer-sponsored |
| Workers' Compensation | Separate regulatory framework |
Fiduciary Responsibilities
ERISA imposes strict duties on anyone who exercises discretionary authority or control over a plan. This creates a higher standard than ordinary care.
The Prudent Expert Rule
ERISA requires fiduciaries to act with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence that a prudent expert familiar with such matters would use. This is a higher standard than the "prudent person" rule:
| Standard | Description |
|---|---|
| Prudent Person | How a reasonable person would act |
| Prudent Expert | How a skilled professional with specialized knowledge would act |
Courts evaluate the process of decision-making, not just the outcome. A bad investment result does not automatically mean a breach of duty if the decision was made prudently.
Core Fiduciary Duties
1. Duty of Loyalty (Exclusive Benefit Rule)
- Act solely in the interest of plan participants and beneficiaries
- Use plan assets exclusively for providing benefits or paying reasonable expenses
- Cannot favor one group of participants over another
2. Duty of Prudence
- Investigate investments before recommending
- Monitor investment options regularly
- Compare fees against marketplace rates
- Document decision-making process
3. Duty to Diversify
- Spread investments to minimize large losses
- Consider concentration risk
- Exception: Company stock may be offered but cannot be required
4. Duty to Follow Plan Documents
- Administer plan according to its terms
- Cannot deviate even if deviation would benefit participants
Who Is a Fiduciary?
ERISA defines fiduciaries functionally—based on what they do, not their title:
| Fiduciary Status | Activities |
|---|---|
| Named Fiduciary | Explicitly named in plan documents |
| Functional Fiduciary | Exercises discretionary control over plan assets or administration |
| Investment Adviser Fiduciary | Provides investment advice for compensation |
On the Exam: The exam tests whether someone is a fiduciary based on their actions, not their job title. A person providing discretionary investment advice for compensation is a fiduciary, regardless of what they call themselves.
Prohibited Transactions
ERISA Section 406 prohibits certain transactions between plans and "parties in interest" to prevent self-dealing and conflicts of interest.
Types of Prohibited Transactions
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Sale/Exchange of Property | Fiduciary sells own property to plan |
| Lending Money | Loans between plan and party in interest |
| Furnishing Services | Excessive or unnecessary fees |
| Transfer to Party in Interest | Moving plan assets to benefit insiders |
| Self-Dealing | Fiduciary acts in own interest |
Parties in Interest
- Plan fiduciaries, trustees, and administrators
- Employers sponsoring the plan
- Employee organizations (unions)
- Service providers to the plan
- Relatives of any of the above
Consequences of Breach
| Consequence | Description |
|---|---|
| Personal Liability | Make plan whole for any losses |
| Excise Tax | 15% of amount involved (can increase to 100%) |
| Restoration of Profits | Return any gains from the transaction |
| Removal as Fiduciary | DOL can bar person from serving |
Disclosure Requirements
Summary Plan Description (SPD)
The SPD is the primary document explaining the plan to participants:
- Written in understandable language
- Provided within 90 days of becoming a participant
- Updated when material changes occur
- Describes eligibility, benefits, vesting, and claims procedures
Form 5500 Annual Report
- Filed annually with Department of Labor
- Financial statements and participant data
- Available to participants on request
- Due 7 months after plan year end
Participant Benefit Statements
| Plan Type | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Participant-Directed DC Plans | Quarterly |
| Other DC Plans | Annually |
| Defined Benefit Plans | Every 3 years |
Key Takeaways
- ERISA applies to private sector employer plans, not government, church, or individual plans
- The prudent expert rule is higher than ordinary prudence—based on specialized knowledge
- Fiduciary status is determined by function (actions), not job title
- Prohibited transactions include self-dealing and transactions with parties in interest
- Key disclosures include SPD, Form 5500, and benefit statements
Under ERISA, the "prudent expert" rule requires fiduciaries to:
Which of the following plans is subject to ERISA?
A prohibited transaction under ERISA includes:
12.2 Special Account Types
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