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New Regulations for Retirement-Plan Sponsors to Take Effect on July 1

New Regulations for Retirement-Plan Sponsors to Take Effect on July 1
Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Recent Department of Labor regulations slated to take effect on July 1, 2012, require retirement-plan service providers to disclose any direct and indirect compensation and potential conflicts of interest to employment-plan sponsors.

These newly-required disclosures are required for service providers to qualify for a significant statutory exemption under ERISA Section 408(b)(2) that not only allows providers to avoid the characterization of a contract with a plan sponsor as a prohibited transaction, but also allows sponsors to evade potential breach of fiduciary duty liability.

The disclosure regulations, however, are far from straightforward, and compliance may be based on inaccurate service-provider information. The onerous compliance requirements, coupled with the fact that the burden of determining the “reasonableness” of service providers compensation is borne by the plan sponsor and its investment-management fiduciary, subjects plan fiduciaries to a high standard that could put fiduciaries in difficult situations.

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