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    401(k) Plans Step Into the Sunshine

    New Labor Department Rules Will Require Fee Disclosures

    The rules governing America's most popular retirement vehicle are about to change, and that could mean huge savings for millions of workers building nest eggs for the future.


    Spurred by the U.S. Labor Department's effort to force plan administrators and investment companies to disclose the cost of 401(k) retirement plans, companies are looking to reduce fees and offer new investing choices.


    Under current rules, it is difficult—if not impossible—for many 401(k) participants to determine how much they are paying in fees. The fees, which vary by type and size, aren't typically disclosed in annual statements to investors. Because of the extended time frame involved in retirement accounts, a small percentage change in an annual fee can make a big difference in the investment performance.

    Analysts and companies in the industry say the increased disclosure will allow companies to negotiate better deals and employees to request more cost-efficient plans. Already, the prospect "is putting downward pressure on fees," said Lori Lucas, leader of consulting firm Callan Associates Inc.'s defined-contribution practice.

    The Labor Department had hoped to roll out the rules by Jan. 31. A department spokesman said it would likely happen within a few weeks.

    [More from WSJ.com: What Should You Do With Your 401(k)?]

    Fidelity Investments, ING U.S., Manulife Financial Corp.'s John Hancock unit and BlackRock Inc. in the past few years have rolled out low-cost index mutual funds alongside their higher-fee actively managed funds.

    On Jan. 10, Charles Schwab Corp. introduced a new 401(k) product consisting only of inexpensive index funds.

    Employers, for their part, are shopping around their retirement-plan business more aggressively. Fidelity Vice President Beth McHugh said the firm is seeing companies "doing more due diligence to make sure they're comparing what they have with what's available out there in the marketplace."

    Kevin Crain, head of Bank of America Merrill Lynch's institutional retirement business, said his firm had a record number of requests for proposals in 2011.

    401(k) plans have grown in prominence since an Internal Revenue Service regulation in the early 1980s allowed workers to contribute their own money to the accounts on a tax-deferred basis. By 1990, 401(k) plans had about $900 billion in assets; by 2011, the figure had swelled to $4.3 trillion.

    Yet until now the industry has been opaque, critics say. The new disclosure rules are "going to give employers more control and leverage to negotiate lower fees," said Pamela Hess, director of retirement research at Aon Hewitt, a human-resources consulting company.


    The Labor Department's long-awaited rules will require that mutual-fund firms and other 401(k) administrators disclose to employers details about the fees they are charging to run the plans. Administrators, in turn, will have to disclose the costs to the workers investing in the plans.

    [More from WSJ.com: The Private Pension Plan]

    The deadline for the disclosures to employers is expected to be April 1, though that could be pushed back, say industry experts. And 60 days after that disclosure, employers would have to provide detailed information to participants about fees, expenses and investment performance.

    Some companies have taken steps to improve disclosure.

    Putnam Investments has been producing a full breakdown of administrative and investment fees since 2010. Lincoln Trust Co. of Denver has developed what it calls a "personalized expense ratio" so participants can see the cost easily, said Tom Gonnella, Lincoln's senior vice president of corporate development.

    M.A. Mortenson Co., a Minneapolis construction company, is preparing to send employees in its 401(k) plan a special mailing and also include fee disclosure in their regular account statements and annual statements, said Annette Grabow, manager of retirement benefits for the firm's several thousand employees.

    Experts said the increased focus on fees should benefit workers. "The fee disclosure regulations may very well turn out to be the most important change in the history of the 401(k) plan," said Mike Alfred, chief executive of retirement-plan research firm BrightScope Inc., in San Diego. Workers enrolled in plans "are likely to win big," he said.

    [More from WSJ.com: The Disappearing IRA Charitable Donation]

    Savings of as little as 0.5% a year of assets could make a big impact on workers' nest eggs. Over a 30-year career, an extra 0.5% annual fee can slash a worker's savings at the time of retirement by 10%, according to Vanguard. A worker who saved $10,000 a year in a fund with expenses of 1% would wind up with $829,000, $91,000 less than a worker paying 0.5%.

    The prospect of increased scrutiny on fees is prompting employers to change their investment lineups to offer more low-fee funds. In a survey last November of 600 employers, 67% had tweaked their investment lineup, compared with about 10% in most years, said David Wray, president of the Plan Sponsor Council of America in Chicago.

    Index funds appear to be the most popular choice. Among the 401(k) plan sponsors that made changes to their investment lineups in 2011, the vast majority increased the proportion of passive funds on the menu, according to a recent report published by Callan Associates.
     

    33 comments

    • Interesting times  •  25 days ago
      Yes, reduced fees of a fraction of a percent will fix all of our problems. I can't believe all of the Americans retirement portfolios added together is only $4.3 trillion. Our national deficit is over $15 trillion and growing and that doesn't include the state and local governments. Congress is also estimated that we'll increase the deficit by over $1 trillion annually for the next several years. Do I see us paying higher or lower taxes, when we start drawing money out for retirement..hmmmm
    • Beachcomber  •  25 days ago
      You should be able to direct the 401k to where you want it go.
    • speeding along in NY & ...  •  Torrance, California  •  25 days ago
      What about those without access to a 401k? Why not have the same maximum contribution for a 401k for a regular old IRA?
    • Debbie  •  Fair Oaks, California  •  24 days ago
      you will pay 100,000 dollars of fees and taxes by the time you are done with your 401k. We should have a much better selection of stocks than what "my company" will provide. It should have a much wider selection that is why I put everything into stable fund.They would have better success having everyone in a roth.
    • stuck in a rut  •  25 days ago
      It is not the FEES that are the problem but rather the choices people have.
      When the market goes down people do not have the abilitiy to put their money in a cash option and hence their value goes down with the market.
      At a minimum the choices should include cash, and them some ETF's versus mutual funds that impose penalties for moving your money before a certain time period.
    • Greg  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  23 days ago
      How about the investors only get a fixed fee. 5% of what they make for you. If you dont make or loose money they get nothing. If they want more they have to make you more to get it.
    • Mike E  •  Ashburn, Virginia  •  25 days ago
      I wish I could contribute 10K a year to my 401K... Once again, the government thinks we all earn 6-figure incomes.
    • Locke  •  23 days ago
      What about these people in office (every branch of government) show thier tax returns and all governmental agencies? Let's see full disclosure before and after office. And The branches of government have 4 trillion and the American people have .3 of that.
    • NotABeliever  •  Hicksville, New York  •  23 days ago
      I will not hold my breath, there is strong doubt that the current government of the corporations, for the corporations will do anything that will benefit the middle class. The only reason this is even being looked at most likely is a result of some corporat big wig that wants his bonus check larger and these pesky fees interfere with that is some way. Take away the cushy pension plan of these government goons and make them have to put up with either SS or a 401K plan and see how fast they pass some decent legislation.
    • T-Bird  •  Richardson, Texas  •  25 days ago
      Every corporate retirement plan should have a 3(38) investment advisor. My total plan fees are .93% and my account is truly actively managed (not target date or lifestyle crap) by the investment company according to my risk profile. Its the best thing to ever happen to our retirement plan, and its still with Fidelity.
    • simplicity  •  Wilton, Iowa  •  25 days ago
      Your money being held hostage is never a good idea. Being debt free should be #1 focus. If you have NO bills and a steady income that nest egg will build rapidly.
    • d.  •  23 days ago
      It's my money and i want it now...
    • Gary A  •  23 days ago
      Fee disclosure is a good thing but each layer of 401k regulation knocks out a few more small company 401k plans as the cost to administer the plan per participant rises to a point where it is no longer cost effective to sponsor a plan. I have a small company which had 50 employees in 2007 but am now down to 30 employees. We are on the bubble as to keeping or terminating our plan. Same thing happened to defined benefit pension plans 20 years ago. The government implemented regulation upon regulation, all with good intent, but the end result was the elimination of virtually every private sector pension plan.
    • Fred  •  25 days ago
      You can avoid fees by rolling over your 401k into an IRA. I rolled over a majority every year and self directed my own assets without hidden fees.
    • Mozart  •  25 days ago
      I can see the fees each of my 401(k) plan choices charge. Maybe some of the shadier 401(k)'s don't do this? You know, like the ones run by the Madoff's of Wall Street. And to be sure, there are more Madoff's out there. They are like cockroaches. You may squish one but there are plenty more hiding in the dark corners of Wall Street. Sadly, the SEC is ineffective at pest control.
    • cecebe_ont  •  Alexander City, Alabama  •  25 days ago
      401k Fund managers should only be paid when they make money for their customers, and not by doing nothing at all. Most of then sit on their backsides and match us loose money wihile they make money.
    • ak-roady  •  23 days ago
      I've been saying for years that the Federal Government will eventually rob our 401Ks to fund their ever expanding array of agencies and programs. If they did it to social security, they can do it to us. I'd like to actually read this new regulation and see if it in fact provides them a side door to our investments. Remember, they consider this a "deferment" of taxable income...they could easily decide to collect some of it now!
    • UGLY KID  •  Toms River, New Jersey  •  25 days ago
      401 K fees are the biggest JOKE and RIPOFF ever created....
      4% a year....for 50 years.....i would have been better off burying the money or converting it to silver and digging a big hole in the backyard and calling it Fort Ugly Knox
    • prin  •  Pasadena, Texas  •  25 days ago
      OH! I thought the wall streeters were gone.
    • UGLY KID  •  Toms River, New Jersey  •  25 days ago
      Once the banksters find a way to take the 401K away from us.....Pandora's Box will be open

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