Biden’s first veto preserves 401(k) investment rule about ESG funds

on Mar21
by | Comments Off on Biden’s first veto preserves 401(k) investment rule about ESG funds |

Photographer: Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Biden veto preserves Labor Department’s ESG rule

Few 401(k) plans — about 5% — offer an ESG fund, according to PSCA survey data. Employers cited lack of regulatory clarity as one of the top reasons they haven’t offered one to workers.

The Trump-era Labor Department rule doesn’t explicitly call out or forbid ESG funds in 401(k) plans. But experts say the rule stymied uptake due to a general requirement that employers only use “pecuniary factors” when choosing 401(k) funds for workers.

Those factors restrict fund analysis to purely financial measures like fund fees, return and risk, experts said. Environmental, social and governance factors are generally “non-pecuniary,” however.

“The Trump rule made it so harsh, so difficult, that it put a cold blanket over E, S and G factors,” said Philip Chao, founder and chief investment officer of Experiential Wealth, based in Cabin John, Maryland. “Whereas this one doesn’t really talk about ESG factors being right or wrong.

“It returns power back to the fiduciary,” he added.

The [Biden] rule doesn’t force you to consider ESG. It says ‘you may’ do that.

Philip Chao

chief investment officer of Experiential Wealth

Employers serve as a fiduciary to their company 401(k) plans under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974.

Broadly, that fiduciary duty means they must operate the plan — including investment choice — solely in workers’ best interests. Under the Biden rule, employers must still consider ESG within the context of what is in investors’ best interests.

The Labor Department in November clarified that employers wouldn’t breach their legal duties by considering workers’ non-financial preferences in their final fund choice. Accommodating those preferences might encourage more plan participation and boost retirement security, for example, the agency said.

“The [Biden] rule doesn’t force you to consider ESG,” Chao said. “It says ‘you may’ do that.”

The veto may not change behavior much

While the Biden administration’s rule is poised to remain intact, it’s unclear whether it will give employers peace of mind.

The issue has been like political whiplash, subject to whims of new presidential administrations, and employers remain afraid of getting sued for their investment choices against the backdrop of regulatory uncertainty, Hansen said.

“If anything, the CRA vote, the veto, made things more uncertain as to what they can do or should do,” Hansen said.



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