401K Fee Disclosure Requirements To Change

By: Ryan Taylor, CPA, Audit Manageremail

Starting January 1, 2012, the Department of Labor will require 401(k) plans to clearly spell out all fees and expenses each quarter so that investors can more readily compare the costs of their holdings and investment choices. Current laws don’t require sufficient information to allow workers to make the best investment decisions. Even if workers were given abundant investment information in the past, they didn’t always receive it in a user-friendly format. Companies must begin laying out the administrative expenses, including accounting and recordkeeping fees, and the charges that apply to the individual choices a worker makes, such as fees charged for loans. The charges for administrative expenses must be laid out in the quarterly reports workers receive and also be made available online. The fees and expenses associated with the funds a worker chooses must be explained as a percentage of assets held, and also expressed as a dollar amount for each $1,000 invested. Performance data must be provided for the various mutual funds offered, including 1-year, 5-year, and 10-year returns. Comparisons to appropriate benchmarks must also be provided for those time periods to enable investors to assess how their funds are performing. The new rules also require that workers have access to an easily understood glossary of terms to help explain the investment options, fees, and other details. These rules can help fill an important knowledge gap because many investors don’t know that more than a half a dozen fees may be charged against their 401(k) account for recordkeeping, administration, investment advisory, brokerage and management services. The regulations, however, offer protection to plan administrators on the completeness and accuracy of the information provided by a plan’s service provider, upon which the administrator reasonably and in good faith, relies. The new regulations mean that plan administrators will want to discuss with their service providers (third-party administrators, record-keepers, fund managers) the various disclosure requirements and amend plan, trust, and provider agreements as necessary to allocate responsibility for satisfying those requirements.