How 401k Plan Sponsors Are Responding to Coronavirus and CARES

401k, resonse, CARES Act, plan sponsors
There’s A LOT happening and they need help.

Employers are still evaluating the retirement-related optional provisions in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES), according to a survey by the Plan Sponsor Council of America (PSCA).

“Considering the breadth and potential depth of those retirement plan options now on the table, it is perhaps not surprising that nearly half (47.4%) of the 152 plan sponsor respondents indicated they are still deciding which of the CARES Act provisions to implement,” PSCA, part of the American Retirement Association, reports.

Larger plans (plans with 5,000 or more participants) are more likely to have made a determination, it adds, with two-thirds already making a decision, while fewer than half of smaller plans (plans with fewer than 200 participants) have made one (48.3%).

[THE FULL REPORT IS AVAILABLE HERE]

“Employers are being forced to make difficult decisions between business needs and what is in the long-term best interest of their participants,” Hattie Greenan, Director of Research, said in a statement. “They want to provide immediate relief to employees directly impacted by COVID-19 but are also thoughtfully considering the impact on their employees’ long-term financial stability and ability to retire.”

Implementation of optional CARES Act provisions

Overall, plan sponsors seem somewhat more open to adopting emergency distribution provisions than increasing loan limits, with nearly half (45.4%) already moving to do so, compared with just a third (32.2%) adopting the new loan provisions.

Additional findings include:

  • COVID-19 distribution: Nearly 70% of large organizations are allowing the distribution of up to 100% of the vested account or $100,000 vs. only 20.7% of smaller organizations.
  • Distribution repayment: Nearly half of respondents (46.7%) have embraced the option to allow repayment of coronavirus-related distributions during the next three years. This is also size-correlated with 68.1% of large organizations allowing it versus only a third of smaller organizations.
  • Loan limits: While a third of respondents overall are increasing the plan loan limits in COVID-19 qualified circumstances to $100,000 or 100% of vested account balances, this is true of only 17.2% of small organizations, vs. nearly half (46.8%) of large organizations.
  • Loan payments: More than 60% of large organizations are suspending loan payments due on or before Dec. 31, 2020, and deferring repayment for up to a year, versus only one-in-five (20.7%) of small organizations.

About one-in-ten (9.2%) aren’t planning to adopt any of these new options, though that is the case at only 2.1% of large organizations.

“During the financial crisis of 2008-2009, about 20% of companies suspended or reduced plan contributions, and most resumed them relatively quickly,” Greenan said. “While the current situation is very different, our current survey results suggest approximately the same numbers. Whether they hold largely depends on the length and ultimate severity of the current crisis, especially as it relates to small businesses.”

Plan changes

While the full impact of the COVID-19 pandemic is not yet known, most plan sponsor respondents—76.5%—are not currently contemplating changes to their current plan designs as a result, including more than 90% of small organizations. However, more than 20% of large organizations indicated they are suspending matching contributions, while only 3.6% of small plans have moved to do so.

  • Suspending Matching Employer Contributions: 16.3% of plans
  • Reducing Matching Employer Contributions: 8.7% of plans
  • Suspending Non-matching (Profit Sharing) Employer Contributions: 6.5% of plans
  • Reducing Non-matching (Profit Sharing) Employer Contributions: 2.2% of plans

Other plan changes plan sponsors are making in response to the COVID-19 pandemic include:

  • Changes to loan provisions including repayment after termination
  • Allowing loans during a leave of absence,
  • Increasing the number of loans allowed
  • Changing the timing of employer contributions from per-pay-period to annual and making a year-end true-up contribution.

As noted above, the CARES Act and its provisions are just two weeks old. Plan sponsors and their service providers are still dealing with an enormous array of complex and sensitive human resource policy, employment, compensation, and benefit issues.

John Sullivan
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With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.

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