Is your 401(k) plan protected
By DAVID PITT
With the turmoil in the financial services sector, you might be
concerned about the safety of all that money you've allowed to be
deducted from your paycheck and invested in a 401(k) or other
retirement account.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. guarantees up to $100,000
for your bank account, the Securities Investor Protection Corp.
provides up to $500,000 in cases of missing assets from a brokerage
account and even traditional pensions are backed by the
government's Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., but who's watching
your 401(k) funds? That's the burning question for this week.
Q: What safety measures are in place to protect the money I have
invested in my company's 401(k) account?
A: The federal government has established rules for the people
running your 401(k) plan, whether it's company officials - common
in small companies - or a provider working with your company to
administer the retirement plan.
The Employee Benefits Security Administration, a division of the
U.S. Department of Labor, is responsible for protecting pensions,
health plans and other employee benefits held by about 150 million
workers.
EBSA often files lawsuits to recover money taken in cases of
fraud or theft from 401(k) accounts, and other federal agencies
file criminal charges when necessary to recover stolen funds.
The government averages about 14 criminal indictments a year and
has closed an annual average of 1,100 civil cases over the past
seven years involving 401(k) accounts. During that period, the
government has recovered an average of $50 million a year from
401(k) misconduct cases. Through March, the Department of Labor
says it has recovered $6.7 million, obtained five criminal
indictments and closed more than 400 civil cases with violations
this year.
Assets held in your company's 401(k) account are not insured in
the way the government-run FDIC protects bank accounts or the
industry-run SIPC protects brokerage funds.
Government regulations do require 401(k) funds to be held in a
trust separate from their employer accounts and from the companies
that manage 401(k) plans. The trust funds are overseen by
investment managers, who must carry insurance designed to help
protect a company from a fraudulent loss due to embezzlement or
other misconduct.
David Wray, president of the Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of
America, a nonprofit trade association said the regulations have
been set up to protect employee money in 401(k) accounts. Even
during the current shake up in financial services companies, he
said workers shouldn't worry that there money is at risk.
``The money that is in 401(k) plans is in a trust and it's safe
and 401(k) participants can be absolutely 100 percent confident
that their money is not threatened by any of the things currently
happening,'' he said.
Assistant Secretary of Labor Bradford P. Campbell, an EBSA
executive, said in a statement Monday that retirement plans are
safe even when an employer files for bankruptcy protection.
``Federal law requires that pensions, 401(k) plans, and other
retirement funds be kept separate from the employer's business
assets, so they are secure from the company's creditors,'' Campbell
said. ``Exactly what happens in the event of a bankruptcy will
depend on the type of benefit plan involved, and whether the
employer is reorganizing or liquidating in bankruptcy.''
On the Net: Department of Labor: http://www.dol.gov/ebsa
Have 401(k) questions of your own? Send them to: dpitt(at)ap.org
09/18/08 13:47
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