This isn't law yet, but it has overwhelmingly passed a vote in an influential House committee. If this bill passes, and is signed into law, it will restrict 401(k) advice to independent advisers, taking away the ability of commissioned brokers from charging high fees in these plans. The high fees has long been one of our criticisms of many 401(k) plans. Unfortunately, they are pitched to employers as plans that will not cost the employer any administrative fees. Of course, the revenue is then collected from the high cost investment options given to the employees.
To quote the last line of the article, "it's about time that Wall Street stop viewing workers' 401(k) accounts like a gold deposit to mine."
This brings the working/investing public one step closer to having freedom and independence in how their 401(k) assets are invested. Currently, most plans have a limited set of mutual funds for plan participants to choose from. In most cases, the investment selection is limited to inadequate due to a number of reasons:
- The funds offered have high expenses. Whether this is due to broker related commissions or the high cost of active management varies. In many cases, it may be both.
- The breadth of funds is not complete to construct a well diversified portfolio, especially in the small cap, international, international small and emerging markets.
- The fund choices usually consist of actively managed funds. There is considerable academic evidence that active management does not add value over a passively managed portfolio, especially over the long term.
We applaude companies such as Northrop Grumman, which offers employees the option to invest their 401(k) assets independently through the Schwab Personal Choice Retirement Account (PCRA). This option effectively turns the employee's 401(k) assets into a self-directed brokerage account. Employees may invest in stocks, bonds, no-load mutual funds or hire an independent Investment Adviser to assist them with the investment of these assets.
Here's the complete story in the Investment News: "House committee approves bill that restricts 401(k) advice to indie advisers"




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