Much remains unsettled – and, as yet, largely unadjudicated – in the
large, and growing series of excessive fee litigation directed at
university 403(b) plans. However, certain trends in the litigation have
emerged – some very different than 401(k)s, others not. Here’s what to
look (out) for.
The list of these so-called university 403(b) suits – the first were filed in August 2016 – now includes plans at
Cornell University, Northwestern University, Columbia University and
the University of Southern California, as well as Yale. Meanwhile, some
of the earlier suits are just getting to hearings on motions to dismiss,
specifically Emory University and Duke University – both of which are currently proceeding to trial – and the University of Pennsylvania, which recently prevailed in a similar case. Another – involving Princeton University’s 403(b) plans – is on hold awaiting an appeal in the University of Pennsylvania litigation.
By my reckoning, here are the grounds upon which the university 403(b) plans that have been sued thus far have in common.
They have more than one recordkeeper.
While
not every university 403(b) plan against which a lawsuit has been filed
employed the services of more than one recordkeeper, they all seem have
done so at one point in their history.
Indeed, a couple
of lawsuits filed against university plans that have consolidated to a
single recordkeeper have pointed to the consolidation decision as proof
that the plan fiduciaries knew that the multiple provider approach was
inefficient and costly – and should have acted sooner.
They offer a “dizzying array” of funds (generally from each of the aforementioned recordkeepers).
In
the 401(k) world, large fund menus have long been considered a
nuisance, if not downright unproductive. We’ve even got a behavioral
finance study involving jams to back up the sense that, given too many
choices (whatever that may be – with jams, it’s apparently more than 6),
people tend not to decide.
With university 403(b) plans –
certainly the ones that have found themselves sued – the “norm” seems
to be in excess of 100. And frequently they approach that number with each recordkeeping provider.
That said, at least one court presented
with the issue has said “Having too many options does not hurt the
Plans’ participants, but instead provides them opportunities to choose
the investments that they prefer.” And a second one has just held that
“plaintiffs have neither alleged that any participant experienced
confusion nor stated a claim for relief.”
They offer “duplicative” investments.
One
of the reasons the fund menus, at least in total, seem to be so large
is that each recordkeeping provider seems to put forth their own optimal
menu of choices – and if you have more than one recordkeeper – well,
you apparently wind up with “duplicates” in what the plaintiffs
frequently claim are “in every major asset class and investment style.”
And in numerous of these cases, the only funds offered are the proprietary offerings of those recordkeepers.
Their recordkeeper choice “tethered” them to certain fund options.
Many,
though not all, of the lawsuits involve plans that had TIAA-CREF as
recordkeeper, and those all cite how the choice of TIAA-CREF as
recordkeeper bound (“locked” and “tethered” are other terms employed to
describe the arrangement) the plan to include certain (allegedly
inferior) TIAA-CREF investment options on the menu, notably the CREF Stock Account and Real Estate Fund. Other issues unique to some TIAA-CREF investments are certain transfer restrictions, and some differences in their loan account processing.
Share ‘Alike’
There are, of course, elements that these programs share with their 401(k) brethren.
They use retail class mutual funds and/or active when passive would “do.”
Yes,
not only are those fund options “duplicative,” they are often retail,
rather than institutional class. Or actively managed when passive
varieties were available. And thus more expensive, so the argument goes.
They pay for those (multiple) recordkeepers via asset-based, rather than per participant fees.
This
wasn’t always an issue in excessive fee litigation, but in recent years
– well, it’s become something of a regular “feature” of this type
litigation – and it’s been part and parcel of the fabric or 403(b)
university plan litigation.
The argument, of course, is
that recordkeeping is about keeping up with individual records, and
whether that individual account balance is $100 or $100,000, the cost of
keeping up with the balance is the same. However, not content to argue
with the method of calculation, these days the plaintiffs nearly always
take the next step – and proffer what they consider to be a reasonable
per-participant fee – on their way to alleging that the fees being
charged – are not.
They are big plans.
Nearly
all of the 401(k) excessive fee lawsuits filed since 2006 (when the St.
Louis-based law firm of Schlichter, Bogard & Denton launched the
first batch) have been against plans that had close to, or in most cases
in excess of, $1 billion in assets. There’s no real mystery here.
Willie Sutton robbed banks for the same reason.
And if
you’re a class action litigator, that also happens to be where a large
number of similarly situated individuals can be found; a.k.a.
plaintiffs.
Less cynically, the plaintiffs generally
charge that, despite the plan’s large (“jumbo”) size, rather than
“leveraging the Plans’ substantial bargaining power to benefit
participants and beneficiaries, Defendant caused the Plans to pay
unreasonable and excessive fees for investment and administrative
services.”
Where does this leave your “average”
multibillion dollar 403(b) university plan? Well, they say that
forewarned is forearmed. However, the reality is that corrective actions
now may not be enough to keep the plan out of “cite” – but it might be
enough to keep your plan out of court.
- Nevin E. Adams, JD
Note: It
bears acknowledging that the reason that so many of these suits allege
the same things is not only that the plans have similar structures and
characteristics, but that many of the suits have been filed by the same
firm (Schlichter Bogard & Denton) – or by firms that have taken
pages (literally in some cases) from the suits filed by that firm.
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