When your company sponsors a qualified retirement plan, you must comply with complex rules established by the IRS and the Department of Labor. Ignore the rules and your firm could face costly penalties from federal regulators — and plan participants might sue you for mishandling trust assets.
This is no time to be a do-it-yourselfer. You need the help of a skilled professional who knows the requirements and can help you stay in compliance. Here’s why.
However, investing all of a fund’s money in Treasuries or Certificates of Deposit won’t keep you out of trouble either. Those investment vehicles have under performed equities in virtually every extended period. There have been court cases that involved employees suing their retirement plans because they earned low returns when the stock market was way up.
If your plan earns, say, 5% per year in low-risk investments while the major stock market averages go up 20%, you could be forced to pay all — or part — of the differential to employees.
Of course, you should hold some money in T-bills or money funds so you can quickly convert it to cash for distributions. The older your employees and the closer your obligation to paying distributions, the greater your need for ready cash.
One way to avoid some of the liability: Set up a SEP or 401(k) plan that allows employees to make their own portfolio decisions. Under this option, a skilled professional or mutual fund company helps set up the program. And staff members make their investment choices from a list of mutual funds.