Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Reuters: Small Business News: Study: 401(k) fee disclosure leaves small U.S. firms with questions

Reuters: Small Business News
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Study: 401(k) fee disclosure leaves small U.S. firms with questions
Sep 11th 2012, 18:19

By Jessica Toonkel

NEW YORK | Tue Sep 11, 2012 2:19pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A recent rule that requires companies that service 401(k) plans to disclose what they are charging employers for their services is leaving many small business owners with more questions than answers, according to a new study.

As of July, 401(k) plan providers, which include financial advisers, fund companies and plan record keepers, had to provide employers with documentation of all the fees they charged.

The goal of the fee disclosure, which was mandated by the U.S. Department of Labor, was to help employers better understand the fees they pay.

But a new study scheduled to be released Wednesday shows that 83 percent of small business owners, or those with 100 employees or less, have more questions about what the fee disclosures mean.

Specifically, small business owners do not understand if the fees they are paying are appropriate or too high. Forty-five percent of the 500 respondents said that they thought 4.00 percent was a reasonable fee to pay for a 401(k) plan, according to the study, which was sponsored by ShareBuilder 401(k), which provides plans to over 3,500 small employers. The average all-in 401(k) fees paid by plans with less than $1 million in assets is between 0.99 percent and 1.83 percent, according to a 2011 study conducted by Deloitte and the Investment Company Institute.

"It really surprised me that these businesses think that 4 percent is an acceptable amount," said Stuart Robinson, president of ShareBuilder 401(k).

While the fee disclosure statements are helpful for those employers that take the time to delve into them, they are lacking in that they do not provide any guidance on how much employers should be paying, employers said.

"There should be some kind of industry average or benchmark," said Steve Hazelton, chief executive officer of Newton Software, a San Francisco-based software company with 12 employees. "That would really be helpful."

But even with more information, many employers may remain in the dark about the fees they are paying because they have not read the documentation.

Only 50 percent of the small business owners surveyed by ShareBuilder said they recall receiving the new documents at all.

(Reporting By Jessica Toonkel; Editing by Phil Berlowitz)

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