ING Closes Acquisition of CitiStreet
Transcription
ING Closes Acquisition of CitiStreet
S U M M E R / F A L L 02 2 0 0 8 “ T H E A T R O U B L E W I T H R E T I R E M E N T P U B L I C A T I O N F O R I S T H A T I N G Y O U N E V E R P L A N G E T A D A Y O F F ” A B E L E M O N S S P O N S O R S ING: GLOBAL AND DOMESTIC LEADERSHIP POSITION 03 04 TARGET DATE FUNDS: STILL MAKING DECISIONS EASIER NEW PARTICIPANT INVESTMENT ADVISORY SERVICE NOW AVAILABLE 05 07 10 STAYING AHEAD OF THE CURVE FIDUCIARY SOLUTIONS WHAT’S RIGHT FOR YOU? YOUR NUMBER This information is not intended to be considered tax or investment advice. It is provided, for your education only, by ING Financial Advisers, LLC (member FINRA, SIPC). For more information about the ING family of companies, please contact your local ING office or representative, or visit us at www.ing.com/us C08-0808-002 (9/08) ING Group announced on July 1, 2008 that it received final regulatory approvals and completed its acquisition of CitiStreet LLC, one of the premier retirement plan and benefit service and administration organizations in the US, which includes CitiStreet’s Australian operations. The transaction closed quickly, in approximately 60 days from signing, reflecting the complementary nature of the two organizations and the seamlessness of the transition. ING’s US Wealth Management business has a leadership position in a wide range of businesses, including defined contribution retirement plans, defined benefit pension plans, fixed and variable annuities, retirement income solutions, managed accounts, financial planning, retirement plan rollovers, stable value programs, as well as a health and welfare operation. ING Closes Acquisition of CitiStreet Solidifies Leadership Position in Defined Contribution Retirement Plan Market “ Kathleen Murphy, CEO, ING US Wealth Management said, “We have all the characteristics of an undisputed market leader – scale in our market segments, an outstanding technology platform, innovative products, strong distribution relationships, and a powerful global brand. In addition, what truly differentiates ING and will allow us to further grow the business is our committed focus on our customers, and helping them successfully prepare for their retirement. ING is one of the few retirement services companies that has a scaled leadership presence in the small-, mid- and large-corporate, education, and government and health care markets, which allows us to design and implement retirement and benefit solutions for any plan sponsor we encounter.” Sandy McCarthy, previously president, CitiStreet, and now president, Institutional Plan Services, ING US Wealth Management said, “The integration of our customer-centric organization has been seamless, orderly, and has revealed the true potential of the combined organizations to meet the retirement and other benefit needs of plan sponsors and plan participants. We have generated significant momentum and enthusiasm, and are ready to address the marketplace with a value proposition that spans the full spectrum of the plan sponsor marketplace.” In aggregate, the combined ING US Wealth Management and CitiStreet businesses, which includes CitiStreet’s Australian operations, has more than US $408 billion in combined assets under management (AUM) and assets under administration (AUA) and more than 16 million customers (as of March 31, 2008). According to the most recent third-party data1, ING is now the third largest defined contribution business in the US based on combined AUM and AUA with more than US $300 billion; the second largest based on number of plan participants with approximately 9.8 million; and the largest based on number of plans with approximately 60,000. Under the terms of the agreement, ING acquired 100 percent of CitiStreet for a total consideration of approximately US $900 million. The acquisition was financed entirely from existing internal resources and will be booked in the third quarter. 1 From 2008 PLANSPONSOR recordkeeping survey data SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 1 EDITOR: KRISTIN McMANUS BOARD: LOU BACHETTI RON BARHORST BRIAN COMER DOROTHEA GLATTE BRIAN HAENDIGES BILL JASIEN BILL LOWE RICK MASON JANICE MELVIN PAM MULVEY SRI REDDY LINDA SEGAL-BLINN MIKE SMITH RUSS WAESCHE JUDEEN WRINN CONTRIBUTING: DIANA CRECCO DEB DUPONT DESIGN & PRODUCTION: WINDSOR DESIGN TEAM BOB REGAN ING: Global and Domestic Leadership Position When you choose to do business with the ING family of companies, you are choosing to do business with a global leader. Every year Fortune publishes a list of the world’s leading companies based on revenues; this list is a frequently cited thermometer – both in the United States and across the globe – of what are thought to be top companies. In 2008, ING Groep, N.V. was No. 7 on the global list, and the only financial services company in the top ten. PLANSPONSOR magazine is an industry publication for employers who sponsor workplace retirement plans such as 401(k)s, 403(b)s and 457 Deferred Compensation plans for employees of corporations, healthcare and educational institutions and governmental entities. Each year, PLANSPONSOR analyzes and ranks the companies that provide products to these plans based on a number of measures, including number of plans, number of employees participating and assets under management. For 2008, the newly combined ING/CitiStreet organization in the United States ranked No. 1 for number of plans, No. 2 for number of employees, and No. 3 for plan assets under management. ING is committed to the retirement plan marketplace for the long term, and we're honored to be your service provider. We continue to seek innovative solutions to meet your unique company benefit needs. ONLY Financial Services Company in the Fortune Top 10! For Qualified Default Investment Alternative (QDIA) and Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) updates, visit the ING Institute for Retirement Research: ing.com/us/sponsorIIRR www.ing-usa.com www.ing.com/us/sponsorIIRR 2 – IMPACT – SUMMER/FALL ‘08 COMPANY #1 Wal-Mart Stores #2 Exxon Mobil #3 Royal Dutch Shell #4 BP #5 Toyota Motor #6 Chevron #7 ING Groep, N.V. #8 Total #9 General Motors #10 ConocoPhillips CATEGORY General Merchandisers Petroleum Refining Petroleum Refining Petroleum Refining Motor Vehicles & Parts Petroleum Refining Financial Services Petroleum Refining Motor Vehicles & Parts Petroleum Refining Source: Fortune Global 500 List; Rankings based on revenues, July, 2008 PLANSPONSOR 2008 Defined Contribution Recordkeeping Survey (Combined ING Life Insurance and Annuity Company/CitiStreet organization in the United States) #1 Number of Plans #2 Number of Participants #3 Assets Under Management 59,798 9,756,510 $307 Billion TARGET-DATE FUNDS: STILL MAKING DECISIONS EASIER Over the years, asset allocation decisions have been made easier by target-date funds. That’s because the participant makes one investment decision based on an expected retirement date. Compare that to participants not taking the time to make informed decisions, taking advice from co-workers, or perhaps worse, chasing performance. “Many defined contribution plan participants have a common problem: They cannot separate their investments from their emotions,” said Lisa Gilarde, ING Vice President, Mutual Fund Due Diligence and Analysis. “Left to their own devices, participants make common mistakes like chasing recent performance, over-allocating to safe, low-return investments, loading up on familiar, brand-name funds and company stock, or misallocating their portfolios initially and never rebalancing.” Target-date funds are designed to make diversification easier, and provide automatic rebalancing. These are crucial points as over 50 percent fail to diversify and almost none rebalance in response to age or market returns. “Target-date funds make it easy for participants to choose their portfolio – no further decisions are required. Ongoing professional management handles all the details,” Gilarde said. In addition to aiding with diversification and rebalancing, target-date funds also help employers: • increase plan participation through streamlined decision-making processes; and • satisfy Qualified Default Investment Alternative Requirement (QDIA). New Target-Date Investment Solution: ING Index Solution Portfolio ING has rounded out its target-date fund offerings by adding a suite of passively managed index-based funds: ING Index Solution Portfolios. This suite joins the actively managed ING Solutions Portfolios, with both suites having the same target dates for their range of portfolios (2045, 2035, 2025, 2015, and Income). This new suite rounds out ING’s target-date fund solution for sponsors wanting to give plan participants more investment selection options. All portfolios will fluctuate in value, and there is no guarantee that any investment option will achieve its stated objective. Stocks are more volatile than bonds, and portfolios with a higher concentration of stocks are more likely to experience greater fluctuations in value than portfolios with a higher concentration in bonds. Foreign stocks and small and midcap stocks may be more volatile than large cap stocks. Investing in bonds also entails credit risk and interest rate risk. Generally investors with longer timeframes can consider assuming more risk in their investment portfolio. The ING Solution Portfolios are actively managed and the asset allocation adjusted over time. Refer to the prospectus for more information about the specific risks of investing in the various assets classes included in the ING Solution Portfolios. You should consider the investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses of the investment options offered through a retirement plan carefully before investing. Prospectuses containing this and other information can be obtained by contacting your ING Registered Representative. Please read the information carefully before investing. “ Target-date funds make it easy for participants to choose their portfolio – no further decisions are required. Ongoing professional management handles all the details. ” - LISA GILARDE, ING VICE PRESIDENT, MUTUAL FUND DUE DILIGENCE AND ANALYSIS SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 3 New Participant Investment Advisory Service Now Available Now, you can provide professional investment expertise to help the specific needs of different participants and their individual savings and investment goals. ING makes advice and managed accounts participant advisory services available online from independent third party Morningstar Associates, LLC (“Morningstar”) through Morningstar® Retirement ManagerSM. > Morningstar, a leading provider of investment advisory services for the retirement plan industry, is a registered investment advisor and wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc., a company known for its independence and investor focus. Morningstar serves institutions and individuals at all stages of retirement plan development – including plan lineup development, investment monitoring, and participant recommendations. A pollster or marketer might look at your employee population and see all kinds of labels: gen-Xers, baby-boomers, sandwich generation – even soccer moms and helicopter parents. As a plan sponsor and fiduciary, you might look at that population and see two distinct groups: those who want to manage their investments and those who prefer to have a qualified professional do it for them. Morningstar® Retirement ManagerSM Helps Different Employees Managed by You This service provides participants the tools and information needed for them to actively and intelligently manage their retirement account investments. As with any active investment management, the participant must assess and make changes when necessary. There is no additional charge for using Managed by You. Managed by Morningstar NEW [NOTE: Not available in all products] Participants who enroll in this new service generally lack the time or desire to actively manage their retirement account. Morningstar provides participants a personalized retirement strategy, discretionary asset management, and ongoing oversight to help them meet their retirement 4 – IMPACT – SUMMER/FALL ‘08 objectives. The participant assigns Morningstar the responsibility for managing their retirement income assets, and pays a fee based on a nominal percentage of his or her account balance (less than 1%). Participants can be confident knowing that a professional investment manager is overseeing their custom strategy on an ongoing basis. A Retirement Strategy for Everyone Whether participants choose Managed by You or the Managed by Morningstar service, the underlying methodology is consistent across services. Morningstar uses sophisticated quantitative and qualitative analysis to provide participants with a retirement strategy. “Investing for retirement can be a challenge for many individuals who may be overwhelmed by the complex decisions they face in their employers’ plan,” said Rick Mason, Head of Intermediary Market Segments at ING. “These investors recognize that retirement is not a ‘do-it-yourself’ project they can handle on their own.” Participants receive a personalized retirement strategy consisting of recommendations for: • target retirement income goal; • savings rate; • asset mix; • investment selection; and • handling company stock (if applicable). widely recognized and trusted brand name: Morningstar. “Plan sponsors and their advisers increasingly seek products like Retirement Manager, which can give participants the added confidence they need in their investment decisions, which helps them to remain invested,” Mason said. So, no matter what labels can be applied to your workforce, the most important are the ones they give to themselves when they describe themselves as investors. As a plan sponsor, you can feel confident you are meeting your employees’ needs when you offer Morningstar Retirement Manager. “Investors can panic during times of economic uncertainty and sabotage their retirement goals. Having a long-range plan and staying the course through bull and bear markets can help investors save enough to provide income after they leave the workforce,” said Patrick Reinkemeyer, president of Morningstar Associates. “Consequently, we’re focused on helping people create a retirement strategy that establishes long-term savings, contributions, and income goals. Once a strategy is established, our investment professionals can then create and manage an investment portfolio that is designed to meet those long-term objectives, and move investors closer to a successful retirement.” Enrollment is Easy Enrollment in the Managed by Morningstar service is made possible through the Internet or at enrollment into the plan. Participants can use the Managed by You service through the ING retirement site. Morningstar Retirement Manager also Benefits Plan Sponsors Offering Managed by You and Managed by Morningstar can help reduce fiduciary risk because Morningstar is a registered investment advisor and accepts fiduciary responsibility for the advice it provides.* These services also help plan sponsors improve the competitiveness of their benefits package by offering professional investment advice from an independent, objective investment expert with a *For the managed account service, Morningstar acts as the investment manager with discretionary authority. If a named fiduciary of the Plan properly appoints Morningstar as the investment manager, Morningstar will have fiduciary responsibility for its investment decisions. IMPORTANT: The projections or other information generated by Morningstar Retirement Manager regarding the likelihood of various retirement income and/or investment outcomes are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual results (including investment results) and are not guarantees of future results. Results may vary with each use and over time. Annual Retirement Income Outlook considers such things as your asset mix and Morningstar Associates’ (“Morningstar”) own forecasts for return, risks and correlation for various asset classes. The Expected Retirement Income noted within the tool is the amount the simulation has determined as having a 90% probability of being achieved. Annual Retirement Income Goal is calculated by taking 70% of your projected salary at retirement, expressed in today’s dollars. Your projected salary at retirement is determined by a proprietary salary growth curve and your projected social security benefits. Morningstar’s salary growth curve assumes your salary will grow at rates that vary with your age. Projected social security benefit is based off an algorithm supplied by the Social Security Administration. Proposed Asset Mix is derived from various factors such as your years to retirement, your projected salary growth and results from an asset-liability analysis. The asset-liability analysis is an economic concept that is helpful in understanding your ability to withstand financial losses by incorporating a projected future stream of income into your current financial situation. Investment advisory products and services are provided by Morningstar Associates, LLC (“Morningstar Associates”), a registered investment advisor and a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. Morningstar Associates’ advisory service relates solely to the investment options offered under the plan. Retirement plan funding is offered through ING Financial Advisers, LLC (member SIPC) or other broker dealers with which it has selling agreements. ING provides Morningstar Associates with the plan's investment options and information about participants but the decisions regarding the advice provided are made by Morningstar Associates. ING and its companies are not affiliated with Morningstar Associates or its affiliates, and receive no fee or other direct financial benefits from Morningstar Associates in connection with the use of its services. The Morningstar name and trademarks are used under license from Morningstar Associates. Staying Ahead of the Curve It has been just over a year since the IRS issued final regulations that changed 403(b) plans dramatically. ING has spent that time helping plan sponsors take control and keeping them ahead of the curve. The January 1, 2009 deadline for adopting the regulations is looming, but plan sponsors can continue to count on ING for expertise and tools to handle the changes with ease. “We are committed to helping 403(b) plan sponsors meet the new IRS rules, whether or not they are subject to ERISA,” said Linda Segal Blinn, ING’s Vice President of Technical Services. “Our 403(b) plan documents, information sharing toolkits, 403(b) plan administrative services capabilities, local presence and dedicated 403(b) expertise all distinguish ING in the marketplace.” Knowing that the time and resources of plan sponsors can be limited, ING has created comprehensive tools for the education, healthcare, and not-for-profit markets, including: • Specimen plan documents for 501(c)(3) organizations; • Specimen plan documents for public schools; • Common Remitter service that accepts and splits plan contributions to multiple investment providers; • planwithease.com® plan administrative service that is designed for use by both sponsors and employees of 403(b) plans and their side-by-side 457 plans; • executable information-sharing agreements; • plan sponsor checklist for plan document drafting; • sample resolutions to request authority from school boards to adopt a plan document and select vendors; • and more. ING will continue to take a proactive approach to easing the complexities of plan administration and operations. If you have questions, please contact your ING representative. Common remitter services offered through ING Financial Advisers, LLC (IFA), a broker/dealer registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and ING National Trust, a national banking association limited to fiduciary powers. IFA is responsible for collecting all data and payment instructions and forwarding such information to the investment product providers. ING National Trust is responsible for holding the bank account that will receive remittances from the Employer and forwarding such payment to the investment product providers as directed by IFA pursuant to the Employer's instructions. planwithease.com is a plan data aggregation and management service, providing contribution limit testing, an automated approval process for plan distribution requests, and more, freeing sponsors from the day to day administration of their 403(b) plan. It also provides their employees with plan information, financial education and, once enrolled under the plan, access to a consolidated view of their account status across all vendors – including legacy vendors. It’s Time to Restate Pre-Approved Plans for EGTRRA Harry Truman nicknamed the 80th Congress the “Do Nothing Congress”; one wonders what he would think if he were a plan sponsor today dealing with legislation pertaining to retirement plans! It’s time to restate pre-approved plans for the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act (EGTRRA) of 2001. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has stated that all pre-approved plans (e.g. prototypes and volume submitters) must be restated (re-written) and signed by adopting employers for the requirements under EGTRRA by April 30, 2010. Under the final 403(b) regulations, sponsors of voluntary 403(b) plans must have a higher level of involvement in documenting and operating the plan. Among other requirements, sponsors will be responsible for: • a written plan document; • vendor selection; • approval of loans, hardship withdrawals, transfers and other distributions; and • annual notices to employee about their eligibility to participate in the plan. Complete details are available online: www.ing.com/us/403bregs. Some of the key provisions of EGTRRA include: • the option to permit catch-up contributions by older workers • rollovers permitted between different plan types • enhanced deduction limits • accelerated vesting rules Annuity Company, and you use a Third Party Administrator (TPA) to assist you with plan administration and plan drafting services, the EGTRRA restatement information will be forwarded to you from your TPA. Your TPA will work with you to restate your plan document for EGTRRA. While plans are required to comply in operation with the changes under EGTRRA according to the effective date of each provision, the IRS mandates all plan sponsors eventually to modify their written plan document to conform to the way the plan has been operated. All other adopters of the ING plan will receive the document directly from ING to be completed and executed by the adopting employer. As a plan fiduciary it is important that you make sure your plan is updated and signed by the April 30, 2010 deadline. The restatement process can be time consuming so it is important that you include this crucial task in your planning process. ING Prototype Plan and Trust Approved ING has received IRS approval on its defined contribution prototype plan and trust updated to comply with EGTRRA. (ING Prototypes are only available to 401(k) plans). If you have adopted a pre-approved plan document sponsored by ING Life Insurance and Count on ING Congress is making changes continually to the laws affecting retirement plans. ING is committed to keeping you informed of any important regulatory developments affecting your retirement plans. SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 5 Top retirement industry leaders and academics named to Board of Directors at ING’s Institute for Retirement Research ING TO BROADEN ITS STUDY OF BEHAVIORS IMPACTING RETIREMENT SAVINGS The ING Institute for Retirement Research recently announced the addition of eight academic and retirement industry pioneers to its Board of Directors. The ING Institute for Retirement Research is dedicated to exploring the new dynamics of an evolving marketplace for defined contribution plans. ING believes by joining forces with these independent thought leaders, it can achieve its goal of uncovering strategies most likely to motivate savings, and move the needle closer toward retirement readiness. “We’re thrilled to be partnering with such a well-respected team of visionaries who share ING’s commitment to understanding the behaviors preventing many Americans from saving as much as they can,” says Rick Mason, Head of Intermediary Market Segments at ING. Mason, along with Brian Haendiges, head of ING’s Center for Savings Innovation, will serve as Institute co-Chairs. The ING Institute for Retirement Research has also made the following appointments to its Board: • Dr. David Laibson, Professor of Economics, Harvard University. Professor Laibson’s research focuses on psychology and economics; he is currently working in the fields of behavioral finance, cognitive decision and cognitive sciences, and macroeconomics. He served as an external peer reviewer for the Department of Labor regulations that accompany the Pension Protection Act. • Dr. Sheena Iyengar, Professor of Management, Columbia Business School. Professor Iyengar is one of the leading experts on the psychology of choice; her research examines the importance of choice in all aspects of people’s lives, from the seemingly mundane to the most consequential. • Dr. Alessandro Previtero, Postdoctoral Fellow and member of the Behavioral Decision Making Group at The Anderson School at UCLA. Dr. Previtero is currently conducting research with UCLA Professor Shlomo Benartzi on retirement income, and on helping retirees to hedge longevity risk. • Dr. Thomas Woodruff, Director, Retirement & Benefit Services Division, State of Connecticut. Dr. Woodruff was also the Executive Director of the President’s Commission on Pension Policy during the Carter administration, a visiting professor at Cornell University, and Executive Director of the foundationsupported Commission on College Retirement. 6 – IMPACT – SUMMER/FALL ‘08 • Ted Benna, Chief Operating Officer, Malvern Benefits Corporation.* Benna is widely referred to as the “Father of 401(k),” having created and gained IRS approval for the first 401(k) savings plan. He has received many citations for his work in the retirement industry, and is the author of four books. • Warren Cormier, Co-founder of the Be-Fi Forum, and founder and President of the Boston Research Group.* Cormier is widely recognized as a leading market research provider in the defined contribution industry today. • Charles Ruffel, Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Asset International.* Asset International is the parent company of PLANSPONSOR Magazine, PLANSPONSOR.com, the PLANSPONSOR Institute, and Global Custodian Magazine. Ruffel is an authority on global pension issues. He previously held posts at Institutional Investor and McCann-Erickson. • Marcy Supovitz, Principal, Boulay, Donnelly & Supovitz Consulting Group.* Supovitz is recognized industry-wide as an architect of innovative retirement plan strategies, most recently pioneering the Uni-K concept, which became the first IRS-qualified 401(k) plan for owner-only businesses. She is a nationally known speaker on retirement issues. The addition of these new board members deepens the inroads ING’s Institute for Retirement Research has already made in the area of behavioral finance. It has embarked on several research initiatives, having sponsored cutting-edge work with Harvard, Yale, UCLA and Columbia. “The concept of ‘benchmarking’ is of particular interest to ING, as it explores whether individuals are motivated to improve their retirement savings when they compare themselves to their peers,” explains ING’s Haendiges. “As a leading provider of workplace savings plans, ING recognizes the challenges many working Americans face in achieving their retirement goals,” Mason added. “Our research can perhaps influence the design of ING’s next generation of retirement investment products.” More information about the Board of Directors for the ING Institute for Retirement Research can be found at www.ing.com/us/sponsorIIRR * Not a member of the ING family of companies. Fiduciary Solutions: What’s Right for You? ING Fiduciary Toolkit Walk into any home improvement store and you can find all types of people. There are the avid do-ityourselfers who delight in remodeling their own kitchens. At the other end, you have the folks who go straight to the design center and hire the professionals. There is no one-size-fits-all answer and the same is true for sponsors of ERISA retirement plans managing their fiduciary responsibilities. While managing that responsibility is paramount, it doesn’t have to be difficult if you have the proper tools. Providing employers with the fiduciary management tools they need is what ING’s Fiduciary Solutions are all about. Third-Party Certified ING FUND EVALUATION SCORECARD CERTIFICATION According to Wilshire Associates, a renowned investment management firm that offers independent, third-party consulting services, analytics tools and solutions worldwide, the ING Fund Evaluation Scorecard is an appropriate and sound fiduciary assistance tool that reflects an analytical evaluation process that is fair, sound, prudent and consistent with industry norms. The ING Fiduciary Toolkit is for the “do-it-yourselfers” who prefer to take a more active role in managing their fiduciary responsibility. The toolkit is comprised of several components. The Fiduciary Investment Guide provides sponsors with a framework for carrying out the fiduciary responsibilities associated with the investments in their plan. The guide helps you identify many issues fiduciaries need to consider when sponsoring a retirement plan, including: • establishment of written policies; • selection and ongoing evaluation of investment options; and • diversification of investment options. The ING Fund Evaluation Scorecard is a proprietary analytical tool that offers a thorough investment option review to help you with fund selection processes: • analyzing fund characteristics; • comparing investments within asset classes; and • monitoring investments on an ongoing basis when using Scorecard reports consistently over time. This tool provides a meaningful comparison of a fund’s historical performance relative to its appropriate peer group. Each investment offering is evaluated against its peers on the basis of nine different factors that fall into five broad categories: performance, risk, risk-adjusted return, style consistency, and fund expense. • A sample Investment Policy Statement (IPS) provides a framework for sponsors to work with their legal counsel to craft an IPS that is tailored to their plan. The IPS defines how the investment options and investment managers are selected, monitored, and evaluated. It also describes how the investment objectives are related to investment decisions. • The ING Fiduciary Checklist is an easy-to-use reference tool that helps plan sponsors organize plan documents and fiduciary requirements. ING Portfolio BlueprintSM Professional Assistance ING Portfolio Blueprint is for plan sponsors who want professional assistance and an enhanced level of fiduciary support in the industry. ING joined forces with Morningstar Associates, LLC to offer defined contribution retirement plan fiduciaries an enhanced and objective level of investment expertise and fiduciary support. Morningstar Associates, a registered investment advisor, and an independent third party with tremendous brand recognition and a high-quality reputation in the financial industry, acknowledges a fiduciary adviser role under Section 3(21)(a)(ii) of ERISA. • Morningstar Associates uses the sponsor’s chosen Workforce Profile to recommend an appropriate fund menu based on employee demographics, education levels, investment sophistication, investment allocation, and plan participation. Plan fiduciaries work with their financial professional to select appropriate investments from Morningstar’s recommended Fund menu. • Morningstar Associates creates a customized Investment Policy Statement (IPS) to establish objectives for structuring a retirement plan suitable for the long-term needs and risk tolerance of employees. The IPS states appropriate asset categories and investment options within the framework of the retirement plan. It also establishes prudent procedures for monitoring and evaluating the performance of investments within the plan, as recommended by Morningstar Associates. • The plan sponsor’s fiduciary responsibility is mitigated because Morningstar Associates will indemnify and bear the reasonable cost, including attorneys’ fees, of defending a claim related to breach of their fiduciary obligation with respect to investment advisory service as long as the employer accepts the Recommended Fund Menu and subsequent recommendations. Through a strategic relationship with Morningstar Associates, LLC, a registered investment advisor and wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc., ING makes available Portfolio Blueprint, a service offering investment solutions and fiduciary support from Morningstar Associates for plan sponsors. Morningstar Associates makes its fund selections from the fund platform that is available under the applicable ING product, which is a subset of the broad fund universe. The fund platform includes both proprietary and non-proprietary funds. Only ING proprietary options are made available in the money-market and stable-value categories. ING may at times request that Morningstar Associates reconsider specific fund selections but the final decision on which funds are selected for Portfolio Blueprint is Morningstar Associates'. The Morningstar name and logo are registered marks of Morningstar, Inc. All other logos and marks are the property of their respective owners. ING and its companies are not affiliated with the Morningstar family of companies and receive no fee or other direct financial benefits from Morningstar in connection with the use of its services. SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 7 INVESTORS BEHAVIN DALBAR Study Finds that “Average” Investors Under Behaviors have consequences. It’s something everyone learns – hopefully productively – early in life. Presumably, bad behavior produces unpleasant consequences. And vice versa. Investors demonstrate certain behaviors as well, and many of these behaviors run counter-productive to long-term results. An entire field of study, Behavioral Finance, explores the reasons – and potential fixes – for retirement and investment behaviors that do not significantly contribute to long-term retirement security. With respect to investment behaviors, it’s becoming common knowledge in the academic, investment, provider, and plan sponsor universes that presumably irrational behaviors are at the root of many individuals’ investment decisions: • rules of thumb that are easy to follow – for example spreading an investment evenly among available options; • overconfidence in their own abilities; • familiarity bias driving investment to what’s familiar (i.e., company stock) or safe (i.e., money market or Stable Value; 8 – IMPACT – SUMMER/FALL ‘08 • representativeness, in which people over-weight recent experience at the expense of considering long-term averages; and • fear of loss, or “loss aversion,” in many folks who find loss far more painful than they find “gain” to be pleasurable. What is the end result of practicing some of these behaviors for the individual? It can be a powerfully negative effect on long-term investment results. DALBAR, Inc., a Boston-based research firm, regularly studies the results of investor behavior over time. Released in May 2008, DALBAR’s Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behavior compares “average” investor behavior – in equities, fixed income, and asset allocation mutual funds – with that of relevant industry benchmarks and inflation. The results are dramatic… Average Investor Annualized Returns vs. Benchmarks and Inflation 20-Year period ending 12/31/07 14.00% 12.00% 11.81% 10.00% 8.00% 6.00% 7.56% 4.48% 4.00% 3.45% 3.04% 1.55% 2.00% 0.00% Equity Asset Fixed Allocation Income S&P 500 Lehman Inflation Aggregate QAIB 2008, Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behavior, May, 2008, © 2008, DALBAR, Inc. QAIB uses data from the Investment Company Institute, Morningstar Associates, and Lehman Brothers to compare mutual fund investor behavior with an appropriate set of benchmarks. Covering the period from January 1, 1988 through December 31, 2007, the study utilized the net of aggregate mutual fund sales, redemptions and exchanges each month as a measure of investor behavior. These behaviors are then used to simulate “average investor return” on both a cumulative (total) and annualized basis. The study then compares, both in real dollar and percentage terms, the results in a $10,000 investment made in a pattern identical to the average investor with the results of a systematic investing program, also totaling $10,000 in principal over the same time period. G BADLY? Perform Market Benchmarks • With respect to the equity, fixed income and asset allocation “investors,” in no instance did individual results outperform either benchmark • The S&P 500 returned 7.33% more than the average equity investor • The average fixed income investor earned 6.10% less than the Lehman Aggregate Bond Index • The Asset Allocation investor lagged the S&P by 8.36 and the Lehman Bond Index by 4.11 • Inflation BEAT the Fixed Income investor by 1.45%; Asset Allocation only edged ahead of inflation by 0.40% 14.00% 12.00% 7.33% 10.00% 8.00% 6.00% 4.00% 2.00% 0.00% Equity “ Different approaches to plan design, new approaches to communication, options that take the guesswork out of investment decisions, such as lifecycle funds, all can play a role in helping these individuals make better decisions, long-term. 8.00% 14.00% 7.00% 12.00% 6.00% ” - RICK MASON, HEAD OF INTERMEDIARY MARKETS SEGMENTS S&P 500 5.00% 0.40% Helping plan sponsors and individuals – you and your employees – to invest appropriately and productively remains one of ING’s highest priorities on an ongoing basis. Two recent initiatives, the ING Institute for Retirement Research (see related story) and the Center for Savings Innovation are dedicated to uncovering and developing new breakthrough strategies to usher in the next wave of advances in turning “bad” behavior around in investors and in your employees. 4.41% 8.00% 4.00% There’s no one easy answer, because there’s no one “reason” that your employees may act in ways that could counteract their long term financial well-being. “Different approaches to plan design, new approaches to communication, options that take the guesswork out of investment decisions, such as lifecycle funds, all can play a role in helping these individuals make better decisions, long-term,” said Rick Mason, Head of Intermediary Markets Segments at ING. 8.36% 10.00% 6.10% Given the importance of defined contribution plans (401(k), 403(b), and 457 employer-sponsored plans) to building retirement income in an environment of dwindling and even disappearing defined benefit pension coverage, and changing Social Security, “fixing” these behaviors among your employees, in your plan, assumes a heightened importance. 6.00% 3.00% 4.00% 2.00% 2.00% 1.00% 0.00% 0.00% Lehman Aggregate Fixed Income Inflation S&P 500 Asset Allocation Lehman Aggregate SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 9 It is unique to all people. It is not a thumbprint. It is not DNA. It is not that quirky something that makes someone special. It is what the Employee Benefit Research Institute’s (EBRI) 2008 Retirement Confidence Survey® (RCS) says can change behavior in 44% of the people surveyed this year. Your Number ING calls it “Your Number.” It is a recently launched integrated marketing campaign that strives to help simplify the process of retirement planning for Americans. How? By encouraging them to identify and calculate the total amount of money they need to have saved by the time they retire. This “number” is unique to each individual or couple, and depends upon individual retirement goals. As proof of how daunting retirement planning can be, ING conducted a survey in conjunction with the new campaign. According to those polled, Americans view numbers relating to their sense of identity and their closest personal relationships as most important to them. The numbers frequently mentioned as significant are their own birthday (cited by 26% of respondents) or someone else’s birthday (22%). Other important numbers include a Social Security number (16%), a wedding anniversary (16%), a phone number (13%) and the number of children or siblings in one’s family (12%). Only a small fraction (5%) considers a financial number, such as their retirement nest egg, as being among those most important to them. “It’s ironic that birthdays top the list of most important numbers,” said Kathleen Murphy, CEO of U.S. Wealth Management for ING. “As people live longer and celebrate more birthdays, they also face a greater risk of outliving their retirement savings. We hope that identifying and working towards one’s retirement number will be as important as achieving each additional birthday.” The survey also revealed the following information on how people view their retirement number: • Two thirds of Americans (67%) say they think at least sometimes about how much they need to save and invest for retirement. • Nearly one in two (49%) say calculating that number is not easy and they wouldn’t know where to start. • While more than half agree they’ve calculated the money needed for retirement, over a third (36%) say all they could do is guess. 10 – IMPACT – SUMMER/FALL ‘08 • Four in 10 adults (42%) say they do not like thinking about their retirement number, and nearly as many (39%) say it’s boring. Boring is not a word that would be used to describe the television ads promoting the new “Your Number” campaign or the microsite where employees can get their actual number. In one of the new television spots, a series of people go about their normal lives, except they each have a large six- or seven-figure number with a dollar sign accompanying them. The characters are seen interacting with their numbers – at home, at work, shopping and traveling – as if these numbers are a natural extension of themselves and their lives. The narrator explains that everyone has their own retirement number, yet most don’t know what that number is, how to reach it, or what to do after they’ve reached it. The campaign positions ING as a resource for determining one’s retirement number, with the company’s familiar brand promise to help make the process “Easier.” A second spot uses the same concept, but suggests how the ING family of companies, through their array of products and services, can help consumers use their number to generate a steady income stream in retirement. The last scene in each ad showcases the ING Bench, and directs viewers to visit www.INGyournumber.com. This new microsite guides visitors through an interactive experience that helps calculate their number. The ads are also viewable on the microsite. “ING – with its new “Your Number” campaign – is in a great position to help Americans better understand their retirement needs,” Murphy said. “By visiting www.INGyournumber.com, they can work with a user-friendly tool to calculate their number, learn about ING’s products and services, and get connected to a qualified financial professional.” Plan sponsors will hear more in the coming months about how ING will help them raise awareness with their workforce on the simplicity of retirement planning. What’s Your Number? Commissioned by ING and conducted by Ipsos in January 2008, the ING Retirement Number Study included a representative randomly selected sample of 1,008 adult Americans. The margin of error for the overall sample is +/-3.1%. Data was weighted to ensure the sample's regional and age/sex composition reflects that of the actual American population according to Census data. For a complete overview of the ING Retirement Number Study, visit http://www.ipsos-na.com/news/pressrelease.cfm?id=3823 INGT UP E N W SH O A D AT T H E L AT E S T N E W S ON PLAN RULES Investing for participants who won’t More guidance has been issued to help 401(a), 401(k) and 403(b) plan sponsors invest contributions when participants don’t select investments. The proper use of lifecycle, target-date retirement, balanced and stable value funds as qualified default investment alternatives is the focus of Field Assistance Bulletin 2008-3. It was released by the Department of Labor’s Employee Benefits Security Administration to address questions and amend certain provisions after the final regulations on qualified default investment alternatives were published Oct. 24, 2007. These regulations are especially important for plans with automatic enrollment. They also cover other situations where no investment instructions are given by participants or beneficiaries, such as after a plan’s investment alternative is eliminated, a change in service provider occurs, or there is a rollover from another plan. Under the Pension Protection Act of 2006, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) was amended to provide a safe harbor for plan fiduciaries investing participant assets in default investment alternatives. According to the final regulations’ preamble, a sponsor could have fiduciary relief as long as the default investment alternative met the regulatory safe harbor, even though plan fiduciaries remain responsible for prudent investments under ERISA section 404(c). Here are highlights of conditions for fiduciary relief set by the final rules: 1. Assets must be invested in a qualified default investment alternative. 2. A qualified default investment alternative: • may be offered through variable annuity contracts or other pooled investment funds. • generally may not invest participant contributions in employer securities. • may be a stable value product or fund if: > it is designed to preserve principal, provide a rate of return generally consistent with that earned on intermediate investment grade bonds, and provide liquidity for withdrawals by participants and beneficiaries, including transfers to other investment alternatives. > no fees or surrender charges are imposed on a participant’s or beneficiary’s withdrawals. > it invests primarily in investment products backed by state or federally regulated financial institutions, or the principal and interest on the product or fund may be backed by contracts issued by such institutions. 3. Participants and beneficiaries must have been given an opportunity to provide investment direction, but failed to do so. Notice must be furnished at least 30 days in advance of: • the date they are eligible to participate in the plan, or • the first investment in a qualified default investment alternative, as long as the participant has the opportunity to make a withdrawal under automatic contribution rules. • each subsequent plan year. While the final regulation did not include a model notice, Field Assistance Bulletin 2008-03 describes what a notice must contain at http://www.dol.gov/ebsa/regs/fab2008-3.html 4. No restrictions, fees, or expenses (other than investment management fees and expenses) on the transfer or withdrawal of assets are allowed during the 90-day period after the assets first go into the qualified default investment alternative. Such charges may apply after the 90-day period ends. Changes in reporting by ERISA 403(b)s • must be a product that’s a mix of investments that takes into account the individual’s age or retirement date and the characteristics of the employee group as a whole. Expanded Form 5500 reporting requirements for ERISA 403(b) plans go into effect for plan years that begin on or after Jan. 1, 2009. • must be managed by an investment manager, plan trustee, plan sponsor or a committee of mostly employees. Currently, the Department of Labor receives only basic non-financial information on Form 5500 from ERISA 403(b) plans. Starting with the 2009 plan year, ERISA 403(b) plans must file financial information, applicable schedules, and depending upon the plan’s size, an independent qualified auditor’s report. These new requirements do not apply to 403(b) plans not subject to ERISA, such as plans of public schools, churches that don’t voluntarily elect into ERISA, and certain 501(c)(3) organizations that satisfy the Department of Labor safe harbor for non-ERISA status. The number of participants at the beginning of a plan year determines whether the plan will file as a large plan (100 participants or more) or small plan (99 or fewer.) A plan that would have filed as a small plan in 2008 whose participant count has gone up to 120 may still file as a small plan. Large plans must submit Form 5500 plus an independent qualified auditor’s report. Small plans are exempt from filing the auditor’s report if two criteria are met: 1. At least 95 percent of the plan’s assets are classified as qualifying plan assets. Since the Internal Revenue Code generally requires 403(b) plans to invest primarily in annuity contracts and custodial account mutual funds, it is anticipated that 403(b) plans will meet this requirement. If not, the plan assets that do not qualify must be covered by a bond. 2. The Summary Annual Report (SAR) must disclose the financial institutions holding the plan assets and any additional bonding requirements. A SAR, which is a summary of the financial information in Form 5500, must be supplied to plan participants and beneficiaries no later than 60 days after filing the annual Form 5500. basis, the salary amounts they deferred to the 12-month period would be considered taxable in the year of the deferral and subject to tax underpayment interest penalties and a 20 percent excise penalty tax. Most teachers will fall within the relief offered by Notice 2008-62. As a result, school districts offering their teachers the ability to be paid over a 12-month period will have few, if any, of those teachers considered as having a deferred compensation arrangement under Internal Revenue Code Section 409A. If not subject to Code 409A, employees do not need to make an election before the school year starts. The proposed Section 457(f) regulations and conforming modifications to the Code Section 409A regulations were pending as of the publication date. However, Notice 2008-62 can be relied upon beginning with the first taxable year that includes July 1, 2008, and Information Release 2007-142 no longer applies. Supreme Court backs participant A 401(k) plan participant whose account values were affected when the plan fiduciary did not follow his investing instructions has the right to sue, according to the Supreme Court. The lawsuit is significant for raising the issue of whether plan participants can bring claims seeking individual plan account recovery under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). Good news for educators In ruling on LaRue v. DeWolff, Boberg & Associates, Inc., the Supreme Court stated ERISA “does authorize recovery for fiduciary breaches that impair the value of plan assets in a participant’s account.” The decision cleared the way for LaRue to present his claim in trial court as he seeks to recover $150,000 in account losses. School districts and teachers saving for retirement will welcome a change announced by the Internal Revenue Service in Notice 2008-62. This material was created to provide accurate and reliable information on the subjects covered. Neither ING nor its affiliated companies or representatives provide tax or legal advice. Consult your legal counsel for guidance specific to your individual situation. A teacher’s decision to receive compensation over 12 months instead of the 10-month school year will no longer be viewed as a deferred compensation arrangement subject to Internal Revenue Code Section 409A or 457(f). Until this IRS announcement, teachers who elected the annual payment arrangement in lieu of payment over the school year needed to make this election before the school year began, as required by Code Section 409A. If teachers did not make this election on a timely SUMMER/FALL ‘08 – IMPACT – 11 I N G P L A N S P O N S O R S “By sponsoring the National Teacher of the Year program, we are able to honor teachers across the country who are “ING’s commitment to education extends beyond programs that recognize teachers,” said Rhonda Mims, president of the ING Foundation. “The ING Foundation focuses its giving on financial literacy, children’s education, and diversity. We partner with other organizations like Junior Achievement and Operation Hope through volunteer efforts, grants, and sponsorships to deliver sustainable programs to help close the gap in student achievement,” Mims said. ING also is making strides to combat childhood obesity among America’s schoolchildren through the ING Run for Something Better program, which has contributed $2 million dollars nationwide to fund school-based running programs. The National Teacher of the Year Program, which began in 1952, is the oldest and most prestigious national honors program that focuses public attention on excellence in teaching. ING congratulates Michael Geisen and all educators who innovate and inspire their students. 1 2 David Cook and Marion Cotillard, respectively Excerpted from the National Teacher of the Year Award Recognition Dinner Program PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID HARTFORD, CT PERMIT #1382 ING proudly sponsors the National Teacher of the Year Program, a project by the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO). This year marks the fourth consecutive year ING has sponsored the program. On April 30, 2008, ING executives joined the officials of the CCSSO at the White House as President Bush named Michael Geisen of Prineville, Oregon, as the 2008 National Teacher of the Year. All of the 2008 State Teachers of the Year were also on hand for the celebration. F O R Great teachers see the potential in their students, light a spark, and inspire them to excel. They not only are responsible for influencing the workforce of tomorrow, but also future leaders. While many gifted teachers do it with little fanfare or attention, some extraordinary educators were recognized recently in Washington. P U B L I C A T I O N It’s not hard to understand. Well-paid actresses and actors may thrill us on screen throughout their careers and we may anguish along with contestants on reality shows, but do they really have a profound impact on our lives? A Despite the hype, do you remember who won this year’s American Idol or who was the 2008 Best Actress Oscar winner?1 An easier question is sure to be, “Who was your favorite teacher?,” because that’s someone you never forget! In addition to the National Teacher of the Year sponsorship, ING honors excellence in education through the ING Unsung Heroes® grant program, which has awarded more than $3 million to fund innovative classroom projects nationwide. Each year, 100 educators receive grants that recognize and reward their innovative teaching methods, creative educational projects, and the ability to make a positive influence on the children they teach. WWW.ING.COM/US Michael Geisen, a science teacher at Crook County Middle School in Prineville, is the 58th National Teacher of the Year. His approach to teaching and learning is creative, collaborative, and student-centered and focuses on uniting his students with the community while connecting everyone to science.2 Geisen began his year as a full-time national and international spokesperson for education on June 1. > ING Closes Acquisition of CitiStreet PAGE 1 > Investors Behaving Badly? DALBAR Study Finds that “Average” Investors Under Perform Market Benchmarks PAGE 8 > ... and more! committed to helping our children excel,” said Brian Comer, head of Wealth Management Public Markets Distribution, ING Americas. “While ING’s primary goal is to empower educators to better manage their financial future by providing retirement programs and planning, we also understand the importance of being a responsible corporate citizen and are proud to recognize the hard work and devotion to improve education.” 150542 v0 MS M.S.PB.48 (10/08) ING Sponsors National Teacher of the Year Program