Roadways to Retirement
403(b)s, Cash Balance Plans and other topics
A value-added conference call from BPAH
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Roadways to Retirement
A few short updates for clients…
bpah.com has a new look!Rollout of the DCRN (delinquent contribution
reminder notice) to assist plan sponsorsAdditional education /guidance tool in
participant websiteNumerous product initiatives underway2008 shaping up as a year of strong growth for
our partnersIn this call, we look forward to sharing ideas
– The new 403(b) landscape
– Cash Balance Plan review
– Open Q&A
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
Generally effective January 1, 2009
Greater Plan Sponsor Responsibilities
Plan Document Requirements
Contract Exchanges-Information Sharing Agreements
Multiple Vendors vs. Single Vendor
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
Greater Plan Sponsor Responsibilities
– Plan Document Requirement
– Plan Investment Committee
– Investment Policy Statement
– Plan Decision Makers
– Coordinating Plan Administration among Multiple Vendors
– Timely Deposit of Contributions
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
Plan Document Requirement– All 403(b) contracts must be governed by a plan
document that satisfies the requirements of 403(b) in form and operation
– Must contain all of the following: eligibility, contribution limitations, vesting, time and form of benefits, distribution guidelines
– Plan can incorporate other documents by reference so there is no need for a single document
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
Contract Exchanges-Information Sharing Agreements
– Plan must specifically allow for contract exchanges
– Distribution restriction rules must be followed by the receiving contract from the original contract
– Employer must have Information Sharing Agreement (ISA) in place with issuer of receiving contract
– Rules apply to exchanges after September 24, 2007
– If no ISA is in place on January 1, 2009, the exchange is a taxable event
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
Multiple Vendors vs. Single Vendor– Plan sponsors must now decide whether to offer a
single vendor solution or continue with multiple vendors
– The ability to offer a multiple vendor solution will require the gathering of all data from all vendors to coordinate loans, distributions, and account recordkeeping for participants
– The single vendor solution will offer a plan sponsor a consolidated plan offering for all plan participants
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Roadways to Retirement
Final 403(b) Regulations
How can BPAH help?
– We work with plan sponsor and financial intermediaries to help guide through these changes
– We are currently working with a document provider to offer plan documents for all sponsors
– We are in the final review stages of an ISA for our plan sponsors
– We offer a single vendor and can be a part of a multiple vendor solution to all 403(b) plan providers and sponsors (single vendor is generally the way to go)
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Roadways to Retirement
Contact Information
Joseph Corona, QKA - BPA
– Phone:(315) 292-6953
– Fax: (315) 292-6420
– Email: [email protected]
– Website: www.bpah.com
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Roadways to Retirement
DC Plans remain extremely popular ($2.5 trillion of plan assets, over 65 million participants)
For some firms, however, there is a desire to contribute much more than a DC plan will allow
There are many possibilities, provided that the employer is willing to meet some level of “gateway” contribution (typically, 7.5% of pay in ER contributions to rank and file)
For the right type of employer, some excitingnew possibilities become available
The environment today
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Roadways to Retirement
Retirement Income Issues
In a low interest rate environment, one will need a larger pool of assets to provide the same retirement income.
To provide retirement income at age 62 of $100,000 per year to a married couple, one will need to accumulate about $1.6M…and that’s if one buys an annuity. If one wants to draw down at a rate of 5% per year and preserve principal, then one needs $2M to provide $100,000 of annual income.
How many employees are “on target” for their retirement income goals?
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Roadways to Retirement
Retirement Income Issues
If an employee is receiving maximum DC plan contributions of $46,000 in 2008, and earns annual investment returns of 7%, it will take more than 18 years to accumulate $1.6M, or 21 years to accumulate $2M.
If an employee is over age 50, there is not enough time to accumulate a large enough balance in a 401(k) plan alone.
How can an employee get to this goal faster? A) take more investment risk, or B) contribute more.
A defined benefit plan allows a much greater amount to be contributed on a tax-deferred basis than a DC plan alone.
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans for small business owners/professionals DB plan allows for significantly larger tax-deferred savings than a
401(k) Plan, and increases as business owner ages:
Age Contribution Deferral
35 53,000$ 22,260$ 40 69,000$ 28,980$ 45 90,000$ 37,800$ 50 118,000$ 49,560$ 55 154,000$ 64,680$ 60 201,000$ 84,420$ 62 224,000$ 94,080$
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans - Selling Points
Significantly greater tax-deferred savings than in a 401(k) Plan.
Maximum target benefit is a life annuity of $185K per year starting at age 62 or older. This has a lump sum value of approximately $2.24M at age 62.
Unlike a DC plan, a DB plan allows company to target a benefit based on past service and “make up for lost time”.
Benefits may be taken as a lump sum that can be rolled over to an IRA at termination of employment, retirement or death.
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans - Selling Points
Can have 401(k) plan deferrals in addition to the contributions to the DB Plan. (Employer provided match and contribution in the 401(k) plan may be reduced or eliminated if a DB plan is also sponsored.)
If ratio of employees to owners is 5 to 1 or more, typically owners can receive DC plan maximum contribution in addition to DB plan contributions.
The contributions made on behalf of employees to permit maximum DB/DC contributions for owners is typically 7.5% of compensation (divided in some manner between the DB and DC plans).
Certain companies are already making total retirement plan contributions in this range. In this case, DB plan may end up being an add-on benefit, mainly benefiting company owners.
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans - Selling Points
Funded through one pooled investment account—no need for individual funds or investment education.
Benefits accumulate in an ERISA trust, safe from creditors and potential lawsuits (a far better environment than non-qualified plans)
Trustee will manage Plan assets, keeping accounts on its trust system
For larger incorporated groups, the savings in FICA (Medicare portion) is often greater than the DB Plan’s administrative costs since pension plan contributions are not subject to FICA (either going into or coming out of the plan). Therefore, in may cases administration is “free”.
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans – Issues to Consider
Business owners/Professionals needs to be committed to level of contribution…it’s not a profit sharing plan. That said, if financial conditions change down the road, the DB plan can be frozen to reduce or eliminate required contributions.
Permanency requirement means plan should be in force for at least five years.
If there are older employees, DB plan may be expensive.
Funding levels are typically for 10 years, with plan being fully funded thereafter.
Requires actuarial valuation and may require non-discrimination testing.
Employer bears the investment risk, but this can be tempered with low guarantee to employees (e.g. yield on Treasuries).
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Roadways to Retirement
What IS a Cash Balance Plan?
A defined benefit plan where instead of funding for an annual benefit payment beginning at retirement age, participants have an account balance (easier to understand, conceptualize)
Each year, participants receive service credits per a formula (e.g., 5% of compensation as defined by the plan)
Each year, participants receive an interest credit, somewhere between the guaranteed minimum and maximum rates of return (as defined by your Plan)
A reasonable degree of parity must be maintained between the accrued benefit obligation and the plan’s actual level of assets
An actuary helps the plan sponsor manage the plan and anticipate / plan for various issues
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans – Administrative Costs
One-Person Plans (i.e. business with no employees)
– $800 to set-up– $1,600 annual administrative fee, (covers actuarial valuation
and Form 5500)
Company with employees (e.g. Professional Practice Groups)
– $8,500 to design and create a plan document, implement Plan.– Annual Administrative fees of $5,000 plus $25 per participant,
which includes actuarial valuation, participant statements and IRS/PBGC forms.
– If company is not a professional services firm or has more than 25 employees, plan must be covered by PBGC at a cost of $33 per participant annually (2008 level).
– If creative plan designs are used requiring non-discrimination testing, $1,500 to $2,500 to cover testing every one to three years.
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Roadways to Retirement
Example 1: Physician Group with 20 Doctors, 200 Employees
DB plan contributions
DC plan contributions
Total
Physicians over 60
$160,000
$45,000 /$50,000
$205,000 /$210,000
Physicians 52 – 59
$120,000
$45,000 /$50,000
$165,000 / $170,000
Physicians 45 – 51
$75,000 $45,000 $120,000
Physicians under 45
$50,000 $45,000 $95,000
Employees
1.5% of pay
6.0% of pay
7.5% of pay
Total annual contributions
$1.4 million
$1.1 million
$2.5 million
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Roadways to Retirement
Example 2: Dentist with Spouse, and 5 Other Employees
DB Plan Contributi
ons
DC Plan Contributions
Total
Dentist age 60
$195,000
$34,000 = 6% + max
401(k)
$219,000
Spouse age 44
4.0% of pay
6.0% of pay
10.0% of pay
Employees 4.0% of pay
6.0% of pay
10.0% of payIn this plan, the total Cash Balance plan contribution for the initial year was approximately
$203,680. Of this total, $196,440 (96%) was credited to the owner and his spouse. While this company had an ideal configuration (and the demographics of each employee group will ultimately determine the outcome), these concepts can make a Cash Balance Plan very compelling to certain plan sponsors.
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Roadways to Retirement
DB plans - Proposals
For Harbridge to prepare a potential Plan Design, we need census data:
– Name– Date of Birth– Date of Hire– Salary Level
We also have a questionnaire about company objectives, other plans, and income/profits available for funding.
No cost for Harbridge to prepare potential design—cost is incurred only if Harbridge is engaged to prepare a plan document.
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Roadways to Retirement
Who are typical candidates for Cash Balance plans?Sole proprietors who are age 40 or older,
earn more than $200,000 and want to save as much as possible on a pre-tax basis.
Profitable, closely-held small businesses.Professional service organizations like
physician groups, law firms, dental groups, accounting and engineering firms.
Companies who have non-qualified retirement plans in place for their key executives.
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Roadways to Retirement
BPAH: Who we are (www.bpah.com)
Full-service retirement provider, servicing the entire spectrum of retirement plans
– DC plans: 201,000 employees, 130,000 with balance; 1,400+ plans– DB plans: 50,000 participants, 130+ plans– 170 employees, within parent company of 1,400
Wholly owned subsidiary of a NYSE-traded company (NYSE: CBU)
Recordkeeper, agent-to-trustee and NSCC member, all in one firm (BPAH / CBNA)
Harbridge: Previously a division of PriceWaterhouseCoopers LLP, an actuarial practice located in Syracuse, NY
Eleven credentialed pension actuaries with vast experience
The highest level of plan design and consulting expertise, but provided at reasonable fees
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Roadways to Retirement
Getting more information
Ken Pliszka, Harbridge (315) [email protected]
Ken Prell, Harbridge (315) [email protected]
Paul Neveu, BPAH (603) [email protected]
Kay McManus, BPAH (713) 725-7304
For more information or a proposal for a specific company, please contact Ken Prell or Ken Pliszka.