Willing Fiduciary

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Category: Current Events

Fiduciary Prologue to a Cross-Examination

The litmus test for suitable behaviors and the products that result, is woven from Fiduciary Responsibility. Breaches are born from a lack of methodology which materializes in behaviors and product selection. Perhaps these behaviors are best characterized in Trust Law which describes the prudence, commitment, and loyalty that the trustee has for the beneficiary of the asset.
According to Black’s Law Dictionary, a trustee is:
“The person appointed, or required by law, to execute a trust; one in whom an estate, interest, or power is vested, under an express or implied agreement to administer or exercise it for the benefit or to the use of another.”

In addition, Fiduciary Duty is:

“A duty to act for someone else’s benefit, while subordinating one’s personal interests to that of the other person. It is the highest standard of duty implied by law (e.g. trustee, guardian).”

The fulfillment of Fiduciary Duties becomes apparent where there is evidence of behaviors and methodology, in “content and oversight,” that improve the likelihood that the beneficiary of the asset(s) achieve their goals.

When one is compelled to discover evidence of fiduciary behaviors, clues materialize in the products that were purchased, the timing of the purchases, how such products meshed and correlated with other assets, the level of compensation, and any compensation relationships if applicable. If these facts were not transparent to the inquirer then, chances are, they weren’t to the beneficiary of the assets. Thus, the path of behavior and methodology discovery will extend and fork to include oversight.
Expert Witnesses and Subject Matter Experts
Even though there are many attorneys disciplined in ERISA and Class Actions, few have any experience in money management, financial technology, and the application of the law to fiduciary matters. That is why attorneys need assistance from Expert Witnesses and Subject Matter Experts before the case is filed.
Choosing the right experts can be a daunting task especially when the correct questions to ask are not known. Career consultants and Business Advisors are very good at methodology, modeling, and quantifying evidence. Many, however, have only “kept score from the stands” and have never “stepped into the batter’s box.” There is a clear difference between those who have applied their skill sets in different environments and those who quantify the opinions of people that do. In addition, it is probably best to seek assistance from someone who has been a fiduciary as opposed to someone who hasn’t. This is also critical in the cross examination.

Class Action: The Case Against JPMorgan Chase

A Class Action suit has been filed against the fiduciaries of JPMorgan Chase’s 21 billion dollar Retirement Plan on 1/25/2017.

Typical to most of these cases, it is “a class action brought pursuant to §§ 409 and 502 of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1109.” This is a lengthy complaint that describes a lot of investment content that includes the following allegations described in two counts:
. “failing to adequately review the investment portfolio..”
. “retaining proprietary funds…. despite the availability of nearly identical lower cost and better performing investment options.”
. “failing to affect a reduction in fees..”
. “failing to offer commingled accounts…. despite their far lower fees…”
. “the Defendants breached their fiduciary duties by failing to adequately monitor other persons..”

Causation, as described in the complaint, was “because substantial assets of the Plan were imprudently invested.”

There seems to be a lot of content and outcome evidence in this Class Action and a reference to the assets being held in a trust (which is mandated by ERISA). To this author, there does not seem to be an obvious statutory definition to Trust Law in our Courts. Perhaps it was never codified. However, trustee duties regarding the assets entrusted to him/her are characterized through judicial creation by the courts and the ensuing regulations. In a Trust relationship, rights are created and the behaviors owed by the trustee to the beneficiary that adhere to those rights are characterized. It seems to me that if Fiduciary Duties are characterized by the behaviors that are owed by the Trustees the causation of the breaches should focus on a lack of or a misguidance of those behaviors instead of outcome. Where market outcomes cannot be controlled, fiduciary behavior can be.

“The Class Action Holiday Season.”

Class Actions I bring

To Fiduciaries of your plan

Glad tidings of litigation

And a happy New Year!

Fiduciary Litigation made its appearance during this holiday season as 4 new Class Actions were filed against the following institutions:

. Starwood Hotels & Resorts
. Delta Air Lines
. Fidelity Management Trust Co.
. Putnam Investments

In aggregate, the following claims were made:

. Failure to make sure that Plan fees were reasonable
. Failure to offer a Stable Value fund
. Revenue sharing whereby kickbacks were made for including particular funds in the menu of investment choices
. Incurring unnecessary management fees by offering passive index funds which held other passive index funds (double layer of fees)
. Lower cost investment options were available; incorrect share class
. Excessive record-keeping/administrative charges
. Redundant investment options
. Retained historically underperforming investment options
. Excessive indirect compensation through revenue sharing
. Poor performance in Stable Value Fund
. Self-dealing

These claims seem to focus on performance outcome, fees, and compensation. The Fiduciary Relationship between a Plan Fiduciary and its Participants can be defined by the behaviors and duties that the fiduciary has for the participants. Interesting enough, I did not sense any motivations to focus on breaches of Fiduciary Duty via a lack of visible oversight and methodology as the causation of outcome.

Wells Fargo: Another Class Action Filed

A new Class Action was filed against Wells Fargo on 11/22. The lawsuit accuses Wells Fargo of using their own Target Date Funds as the Qualified Default Investment Alternative (QDIA) even though they underperformed other Target Date Funds while having much higher expenses. The complaint also stated that this “generated substantial revenues for Wells Fargo” and provided “critical seed money that kept the funds afloat by boosting market share.”

It should be reiterated that ERISA requires that retirement assets are to be held in trust. To be consistent with Trust Law and a trust relationship, behaviors are dominated by the fiduciary duties owed to the participant. The fiduciary must remove all conflicts of interest and provide visible/transparent evidence that their behaviors were in the best interest of the participant.
It is not enough to only accuse, in proposition and allegation, that Wells Fargo breached their fiduciary duties. The plaintiff must do more than demonstrate higher fees. It must be proven that Wells Fargo failed in prudence, loyalty, and trust by not placing the interest of the participants above theirs.

Successful Class Actions will have to exhibit Subject Matter Expertise by proving that the defendant did not have a sound visible methodology to determine investment options and, thus, both the returns and likelihood that the participants will satisfy their retirement goals were reduced.

Litigation Failure: White vs. Chevron Corp

Even though the allegations may be sound, the conclusions may not be supported with the sufficient facts “to infer that the fiduciaries had breached their fiduciary duties.”

Though the plaintiffs have until September 30th to amend the complaint, such is the recent case, White Vs. Chevron Corp.

The plaintiffs argued:
. the wrong types of investments were offered rather than “others” (they offered investments with higher expenses/expense rations while similar investments were available with lower expense/expense ratios)
. there were revenue sharing relationships based on AUM (as the plan grows, the charges increase) instead of a per participant basis
. failure of oversight (a poor performing investment option should have been removed earlier)

These are all sound reasons that cause “suspicions or inferences of fiduciary breaches” but none are demonstrative that one has occurred. Conclusive evidence must be provided as to how these allegations prove that the participant’s interest didn’t come first in content and oversight.

This story exemplifies the reasons why Attorneys need someone with experience in Portfolio Construction, Financial Technology/Analytics, and Legal Application expertise to support their allegations.

Fiduciary Herein Granted

Is there any doubt what the Founding Fathers intended in the very first Article and Section of our Constitution?

“All legislative Powers herein granted shall be vested in a Congress of the United States, which shall consist of a Senate and House of Representatives.”

HEREIN GRANTED which indicates possessing only specified or enumerated powers whereby the stated body CAN NOT claim an unlimited, inherit, or elastic authority to legislate. Our government wields only such power as the people ENTRUST to it.

As to entrust and to accept, a specified office or Fiduciary Duty involving trust. In matters of right, sovereignty, legality, and crucial advice should anyone accept anything less than Fiduciary Herein Granted? Could accountable Fiduciary Relationships be the brick and mortar to the sustainability of a relationship? Company? Nation? Herein Granted!

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