III. Default investments
Current Law: ERISA section 404(c) provides relief to fiduciaries to the extent participants direct the investment of their own accounts under the plan. Section 404(c) does not provide fiduciaries relief where a participant does provide investment direction and their accounts are invested in the planâs âdefaultâ investment.
PPA: As directed by PPA, the Department of Labor issued regulations providing safe harbor guidance on the designation of default investments under ERISA section 404(c). The default investments should include âa mix of asset classes consistent with capital preservation or long-term capital appreciation, or a blend or both.â
IV. Investment advice
Current Law: ERISA restricts fiduciaries from entering into specific âprohibited transactionsâ as provided under ERISA. Under current law, it is difficult for a party to provide investment advice to a plan participant without violating one or more of ERISAâs prohibited transactions if the adviser receives compensation from the investment provider.
PPA: The new law provides an exemption to ERISAâs prohibited transaction rules for advice provided by a âfiduciary adviserâ under an âeligible investment advice arrangement.â The exemption covers advice provided to a participant in the plan, but not advice to the plan. In order to qualify for the exemption, the eligible arrangement must either (1) provide that the fees or other compensation received by the fiduciary adviser do not vary depending on the investment option chosen or (2) use a computer model under an investment advice program meeting certain criteria. An independent fiduciary would need to approve the arrangement.
The fiduciary adviser also would be required to provide advice in a format designed to be reasonably understood by the average investor. Plan participants must receive notices regarding the fiduciary advisorâs relationship to the investment provider among other requirements.
http://www.biztimes.com/news/2006/10/27/pension-protection-act-changes-401k-provisions