Wildman et al v. American Century Services, LLC et al
Filing
304
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW. Signed on 1/23/19 by District Judge Greg Kays. (Law clerk)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
WESTERN DISTRICT OF MISSOURI
WESTERN DIVISION
STEVE WILDMAN, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
AMERICAN CENTURY SERVICES, LLC,
et al.,
Defendants.
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No. 4:16-CV-00737-DGK
FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
This case involves claims for breach of fiduciary duty and prohibited transactions pursuant
to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”), 29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.
Plaintiffs Steve Wildman (“Wildman”) and Jon Borcherding (“Borcherding”), participants in the
American Century Retirement Plan (the “Plan”), brought this suit on their own behalf and on behalf
of a class of participants in the Plan, against Defendants American Century Services, LLC
(“ACS”), American Century Investment Management (“ACIM”), American Century Companies,
Inc. (“ACC”) (ACS, ACIM, and ACC collectively “American Century”), the American Century
Retirement Plan Retirement Committee (the “Committee”), and past and present members of the
Committee,1 seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief related to allegations that
Defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Plan.
1
The members named include Christopher Bouffard, Bradley C. Cloverdyke, John A. Leis, Tina S. Ussery-Franklin,
Margaret E. Van Wagoner, Gudrun S. Neumann, Julie A. Smith, Margie A. Morrison, Chat Cowherd, Diane Gallagher
(collectively “Committee Members”). All Committee members testified at trial except for Ms. Ussery-Franklin and
Ms. Neumann.
1
Plaintiffs tried three claims2 to the Court over eleven days, from September 4 to 20, 2018.3
All of Plaintiffs’ claims rest on Defendants committing a breach of fiduciary duty. After carefully
considering all of the evidence presented at trial, the Court finds Plaintiffs failed to prove
Defendants breached any fiduciary duty to the Plan participants. Accordingly, the Court finds in
Defendants’ favor on all counts and claims.
Findings of Fact
A.
The Parties
Wildman is a former employee of American Century. He began participating in the Plan
in 2005 and continues to participate, though he is in the process of removing his funds from the
Plan. Borcherding is also a former employee of American Century and participated in the Plan
from 1996 to 2012.
Defendant ACIM is a financial services company offering mutual funds and other
investments to retirement plans and other investors.
ACIM manages the American
Century-branded mutual funds within the Plan. During the relevant time, ACIM offered 106
mutual fund products to its customers, and as of year-end 2016, ACIM had approximately $11.7
billion in assets under its management.
Defendant ACS is the Plan sponsor,4 and is primarily responsible for administering the
Plan. Administration of the Plan includes controlling and managing the Plan’s operations by
The Complaint contains five counts. The Court granted Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffs’
prohibited transaction claims (Counts Three and Four), leaving Count One (breach of fiduciary duty), Count Two
(failure to monitor fiduciaries), and Count Five (equitable disgorgement of ill-gotten proceeds).
2
After the close of Plaintiffs’ evidence, the Defendants filed a Motion for Judgment on Partial Findings (Doc. 267).
The Court DENIES the motion, rendering its decision in light of all the evidence.
3
Plan sponsor is defined as: “the employer in the case of an employee benefit plan established or maintained by a
single employer.” 29 U.S.C. § 1002(16)(B).
4
2
selecting and monitoring investment options and third-party service providers. ACS outsources
this administration to the Committee, which is responsible for supervising, monitoring, and
evaluating the performance of the Plan. The Committee is composed of American Century
employees appointed by the American Century senior management team.
Mark Gilstrap, a senior management committee member, testified that members of the
senior management committee did not involve themselves with the inner workings of the
Committee and provided no oversight or review of the Committee’s decisions because the
Committee members had significant expertise in investment products, retirement plans, and
financial markets. In fact, three of the Committee members hold Chartered Financial Analyst
(CFA) designations, a designation which measures the competence and ethics of a financial
analyst. The other Committee members were familiar with the inner workings of American
Century and knew the product and services well. The Court finds the Committee members’
testimony credible.
B.
The Plan
The Plan is a defined-contribution “401(k)” plan, as defined by ERISA, 29 U.S.C.
§ 1002(2)(A), (34), that allows participants to contribute a percentage of their pre-tax earnings and
invest their contributions in one or more investment options. The Plan is open to all employees of
the American Century companies, and also former employees and their beneficiaries. The record
shows most chose to participate in the Plan. From 2011 to 2015, the participation rate in the Plan
ranged from 93.5 to 96.0 percent. During that same time period, the plans (approximately 1,900)
recordkept5 by Vanguard had average participation rates of between 74 and 78 percent. The Plan’s
participation rate was also higher than the average participation rate of other defined contribution
This is a term commonly used in the financial industry and denotes that the history of a fund’s financials is maintained
by a financial recordkeeper, like Vanguard.
5
3
plans with automatic enrollment recordkept by Vanguard, which was between 88 and 92 percent.
Since 2010, the Plan’s investment options were a selection of American Century mutual
funds, American Century collective investment trusts (“CIT”),6 American Century Companies Inc.
Class C common stock, and a self-directed brokerage account (“SDBA”).7 The SDBA includes
American Century and non-American Century investment options including index mutual funds,
exchange traded funds, and individual stocks and bonds.
The class period runs from June 30, 2010, to the present. At the beginning of the class
period, American Century offered Plan participants mostly institutional share class funds, but in
July 2013, American Century made the retirement share class (“R6”) available for twenty-three
funds in the Plan.8 Although there was some delay, the Committee converted all twenty-three
funds to the R6 share class in August 2014.
During the class period, the Plan offered between thirty-three and forty-six investment
options. Committee members testified they purposefully offered a large number of investment
options because the majority of American Century’s employees are sophisticated investors
(holding various financial advisor certifications and financial industry regulatory licenses), who
preferred the ability to invest their retirement savings more precisely. In fact, by the end of 2016,
404 out of the approximately 1,300 Plan participants were active employees of American Century
who had passed exams allowing them to buy and sell securities.
6
A CIT is a pooled investment product maintained by a bank or trust company and used exclusively for qualified
retirement plans.
7
A SDBA is an option offered in some qualified retirement plans that allows the participant to invest in a wider
selection of investments other than what is provided for within the Plan.
8
The only difference between these two share classes is the cost; the R6 share class has a lower cost than the
institutional share class.
4
Even though the Plan consisted of only American Century funds, it contained a diverse
array of asset classes and investment styles covering the entire risk/reward spectrum. For example,
the Plan offered funds from money market accounts on the low end of the spectrum to several
specialty funds and common stock funds at the higher end. The Plan also offered a significant
number of large cap equity funds, and many small and mid-cap equity funds as well. The Plan did
not offer a stable value fund, which consists of a bundle of high-quality, relatively conservative
securities that are wrapped by an insurance contract.
Up until 2013, the Plan included a sub-advised index fund (a passive fund), offered by
Barclays but branded American Century. When American Century decided to discontinue its
relationship with Barclays, the fund was removed from the Plan. The Committee discussed adding
index funds to the Plan on and off after 2010. On September 12, 2016, the Committee added five
Vanguard passively managed index funds to the Plan’s investment lineup.
The Committee members testified they preferred actively managed funds—the only type
of fund American Century offered—because they believed actively managed funds were more
responsive to market fluctuations. Active funds tend to have higher fees than passive funds, and
the fees for the funds within the Plan ranged from 4 to 158 basis points. While the Committee
members were aware of the fee differential between passively and actively managed funds, they
believed the benefits outweighed those costs. They also believed Plan participants preferred
actively managed funds, given the employees’ enthusiasm in American Century, their investment
in American Century products outside of the Plan, and the fact the Committee only once—after
this lawsuit—received a question about the lack of passive options in the Plan.
No other 401(k) plan offers exclusively American Century funds, but a report (“the Hewitt
Report”) presented to the Committee by Hewitt/Hewitt EnnisKnupp (“Hewitt Company”)
5
indicated that 41 percent of plans used an all-proprietary lineup. The Committee also preferred
American Century funds because the fund managers were readily accessible to the Committee. On
several occasions, the Committee heard reports from American Century fund managers about new
funds, strategies to combat changes in the market, or about management changes in funds suffering
from poor performance.
The Committee felt the closeness with the fund managers was
advantageous because the Committee (and participants) had an “insiders’ view” into the
inner-workings of the fund’s investment management team.
C.
Recordkeeping & Revenue Sharing
At the beginning of the class period, JPMorgan Retirement Plan Services, LLC,
(“JPMorgan RPS”) was the Plan’s recordkeeper, but in December 2013, JPMorgan RPS was
replaced by Schwab Retirement Plan Services (“Schwab RPS”). This switch was made after an
independent consultant conducted a request for proposal (“RFP”) to determine the recordkeeping
needs of the Plan and its participants. After the RFP, American Century considered three
recordkeepers but ultimately chose Schwab RPS. Throughout the class period, American Century,
not the Plan or Plan participants, paid the Plan’s recordkeeping costs regardless of the fee
arrangement or the recordkeeper.
In 2018, Schwab RPS told American Century that it was possible to rebate revenue sharing
back to the participants, and the Committee elected to do so. The Committee members testified
they were excited about this opportunity since it is uncommon for retirement plans to rebate
revenue sharing paid by fund managers to recordkeepers back to participants; only five to ten
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percent of retirements plans did so as of 2015. No evidence was presented that the Plan was able
to receive revenue sharing rebates prior to that time.
D.
Plan Process
Upon being appointed to the Committee, Committee members received training and
information about their fiduciary duties, including a “Fiduciary Toolkit,” which outlined their
duties as fiduciaries, as well as a summary plan document, and articles regarding fiduciary duties
in general. The materials also included a copy of the current Investment Policy Statement (“IPS”)
(the governing document for the Plan’s administration). The Committee members read these
materials and took their responsibilities as fiduciaries seriously.
The Committee met regularly three times a year. It also had special meetings if something
arose that needed to be discussed before the regularly scheduled meetings. The meetings were
productive and lasted as long as was needed to fully address each issue on the agenda. On average,
the meetings lasted an hour to an hour and a half.
In determining what funds should be included in the Plan, the Committee looked to the IPS
first. The IPS provides that the Plan invest in affiliated funds only “to the extent that mutual funds
and other investment products offered by American Century Investment Management and
American Century Global Investment Management[] meet the criteria for investment selection.”
Specifically, the selection criteria provided the following:
1. Performance should be equal to or greater than the median return for an
appropriate, style-specific benchmark or peer group over a specified time
period.
2. It should demonstrate adherence to the stated investment objective.
3. Fees should be competitive compared to similar investments.
4. The investment manager should be able to provide all performance, holding,
and other relevant information in a timely fashion, with specified frequency.
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5. It should have the potential to occupy a defined role within a well diversified
asset allocation plan. It should fill a need in giving participants the opportunity
to construct a suitable, well diversified investment portfolio with regard to
diverse asset class exposure, market capitalization, style orientation, growth,
income needs and risk management.
6. It should complement, not copy, existing Core Investment Options.
The Committee considered these criteria, along with the performance history of the fund, whether
the fund assisted in diversification efforts, whether the fund was redundant to the current offerings,
and the expense ratio of the fund each time it evaluated a fund’s inclusion in the Plan.
The Committee received this information from a set of meeting materials that were
assembled and distributed to Committee members. These materials were thorough and included a
copy of the IPS; a list of the funds on the Watch List; a performance report for the investment
options in the core lineup; a Plan update regarding the Plan’s assets, participation rates, and
deferral rates; and information about each fund’s fees.
From 2010 until 2013, the Committee received and reviewed a document titled “Expenses
by Investment Option” that compared each fund in the core lineup against the fees of funds within
its Lipper peer group. The Committee obtained similar material from Schwab starting in 2014;
the material reported each fund’s expense ratio and compared that expense ratio to mutual funds
in the same category. From 2017 on, the Committee received and studied Locksmart reports
prepared by Lockton Retirement Services (“Lockton”), which compared each fund’s expense ratio
to the median expense ratio of the funds within the fund’s Morningstar category.
Additionally, Committee members received a “Benchmark Summary,” which showed each
fund’s gross returns against a benchmark, as well as each fund’s information ratio. The Committee
also reviewed reports showing each fund’s net-of-fee performance. Throughout the class period,
the Committee received several charts that reflected each fund’s Morningstar rating, which is
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based in part on net-of-fee performance, along with the amount of Plan assets in the fund and the
fund’s asset style. Starting in 2014, the Committee received data from Schwab RPS, which
contained a comparison of the net-of-fees performance of each fund in the Plan to that of a similar
fund within its category. Finally, beginning in 2017, the Committee started receiving and
reviewing Locksmart reports, which score each fund in the core lineup based in part on its net-offees performance compared to funds in its Morningstar category.
From the beginning of the class period until 2013, Mr. Bouffard attended the Committee
meetings and made presentations regarding the investment options available under the Plan’s core
lineup and potential core investment options. After Mr. Bouffard left the Committee, David
Ledgerwood, a Portfolio Research Analyst, attended the meetings and made presentations on these
same issues. Ms. Morrison later took on this role after joining the Committee.
The Committee sometimes heard presentations at meetings from consultants who presented
findings from their research and lawyers providing information relevant to the Committee’s work.
The Committee also asked investment professionals to present information on a fund, especially
when a fund was underperforming.
The meeting materials also included information about underperforming funds, which were
and still are monitored by the use of a “Watch List,” as outlined in the IPS. During the class period,
the Watch List consisted of a list of funds whose performance met (or rather, did not meet) certain
criterion over a defined timeframe. At the beginning of the class period, the Committee placed an
investment option on the Watch List if its one and three-year performance rankings were in the
fourth quartile. For the majority of the class period, however, the Watch List criterion was driven
by a fund’s information ratio, which measures a fund’s risk adjusted return. To determine the
information ratio of a fund, the benchmark performance is subtracted from a fund’s overall
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performance; that sum is then divided by the standard deviation of the difference between the fund
and the benchmark. If a fund’s one-year and three-year information ratios were less than -0.5, a
fund was placed on the Watch List. To be removed from the Watch List, a fund needed to perform
better than the bottom quartile for two quarters in the one-year category.
The IPS guidelines did not require removal of a fund from the Plan for failure to attain
certain metrics. Instead, the guidelines provided the Committee with broad discretion, which
allowed them to use their investment expertise to determine whether a fund’s long-term
performance goals could still be achieved despite its underperformance over a specified period.
Committee members believed this was preferable because an IPS that mandated removal of
investments that underperformed their benchmarks would be undesirable in that it would always
require removing a fund at its low point, incurring a loss, and preventing participants from taking
advantage of any subsequent improved performance. For example, the American Century Equity
Income Fund (“Equity Income Fund”) remained on the Watch List for eight quarters between
September 2013 and September 2015, before significantly outperforming its benchmark index.
In 2011, the Committee removed American Century Veedot Fund from the Plan due to its
underperformance.
Similarly, the Committee considered “fund underperformance” when it
removed six funds from the Plan in 2017. No other funds were ever removed from the Plan for
underperformance, though some funds were removed because they were no longer offered at
American Century.
The Committee meetings were documented through a set of meeting minutes. The meeting
minutes were thorough, capturing the topic of discussion, who initiated questioning, and then the
outcome of the vote or the Committee’s ultimate decision.
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Lisa Lattan, an ERISA attorney since 1994, served as the Committee’s secretary from 2006
to 2012 and advised the Committee through the end of her tenure on the Committee. She testified
that the Committee’s processes were “very good” and amounted to a “best practice set of
procedures.” Kathleen Mann, Defendants’ expert on fiduciary processes, also testified that the
Committee members understood their fiduciary responsibilities and complied with their fiduciary
obligations. The Court finds this testimony persuasive and credible.
The Court gives no weight to the testimony of Plaintiffs’ process expert, Roger Levy.
Mr. Levy testified the Defendants failed to employ a prudent process when adding and retaining
funds in the Plan. For example, Mr. Levy opined a fund that remained on the Watch List for more
than five quarters should be removed absent a compelling, documented reason. Mr. Levy also
opined that the Committee members should have conducted a winnowing process for each fund in
the core lineup and should have taken more detailed minutes. By failing to do these things,
Mr. Levy testified the Committee failed to adhere to a set of standards he promotes for fiduciary
conduct. He acknowledged that his approach has not won wide acceptance in the retirement plan
industry, with only fourteen to sixteen retirement plans out of approximately 500,000 conforming
to these standards. While the Court agrees with Mr. Levy that fiduciaries should strive to attain
the standards he champions, they are not the standards ERISA requires.
The Court also gives no weight to Plaintiffs’ expert on damages, Steve Pomerantz, Ph.D.
Dr. Pomerantz is a mathematician with thirty years’ experience in the investment field including
working as a portfolio manager and providing investment management services to mutual funds
as both an investment advisor and as a sub-advisor. He has testified in numerous 401(k) cases in
federal court, primarily for plaintiffs.
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Dr. Pomerantz testified that the Committee’s process was fraudulent and resulted in a
breach of fiduciary duty. The Court finds that Dr. Pomerantz’s testimony regarding the propriety
of the Committee’s process not credible. Many of Dr. Pomerantz’s opinions were not tethered to
the law, and Dr. Pomerantz, a mathematician, has never had a role with respect to a 401(k) plan at
any of his places of employment, has never been hired as a consultant to design a 401(k) plan, has
never been hired to draft or review plan documents for a 401(k) plan, and has never been hired to
design a watch list procedure for a 401(k) plan. The Court details its rejection of Dr. Pomerantz’s
damages models in section F below.
E.
The Hewitt Report
In 2010, the Committee hired Hewitt Company to prepare a report for the Committee
regarding the Plan’s core lineup and recordkeeping fees. Hewitt Company presented its findings
to the Committee on November 1, 2010. The Hewitt Report advised that the Plan “offers more
proprietary funds than many of its peers,” and that there is a “shift away from utilizing exclusively
proprietary funds for a majority of financial service organizations.”
It recommended the
Committee “[i]nvestigate potential usage of lower cost investment vehicles,” “[c]onsider adding
passive investment options” where they are not currently offered, and “[c]onsider eliminating
underutilized funds.” It also provided a risk/reward spectrum of the Plan, which showed the Plan
had at least one fund in each broad investment category. It compared the Plan to other 401(k)
plans that Hewitt Company surveyed, revealing that the Plan was consistent with other 401(k)
plans, except that 26 percent of other plans had a stable value fund, while the Plan had no stable
value fund, and only 1 percent of plans had specialty bond funds, while the Plan had several
specialty bond funds.
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Following the Hewitt Report presentation, the Committee convened a special meeting that
lasted an hour and a half. The meeting was dedicated to discussing the Hewitt Report’s findings
and recommendations, and the members engaged in substantive discussions regarding the Hewitt
Report’s findings and recommendations.
The Committee discussed specifically whether to add a stable value fund and whether to
continue offering specialty bond funds, though it decided against both initiatives. The Committee
did decide, however, to reduce the investment options in the Plan. Initially, the Committee
proposed removing eleven funds but ultimately removed only five funds and added a new fund,
the Strategic Inflation Opportunities Fund (“the SIOP Fund”). Of the five funds removed, one
fund was one of the ten large cap equity funds and one fund was from the Watch List. The
Committee also replaced three mutual funds9 with six American Century CITs, which have lower
expense ratios than mutual funds.
In light of the testimony and the meeting minutes, the Court finds the Committee gave the
Hewitt Report thorough consideration.
F.
Damages
Dr. Pomerantz also provided opinions as to loss and damages resulting from Defendants’
alleged breaches of fiduciary duties. He developed four models of damages resulting from the
Plan’s lineup. For each of the first three models, Dr. Pomerantz conducted one analysis replacing
the money market funds with a stable value fund and another without replacing the money market
funds. He also calculated damages resulting from the delay in converting to R6 share class and
from the Committee’s failure to rebate revenue sharing fees back to the Plan.
9
The three mutual funds included American Century U.S. Large Cap Growth Equity Fund, American Century U.S.
Value Yield Equity Fund, and American Century U.S. Mid Cap Value Equity Fund.
13
In Model One, Dr. Pomerantz compared the net investment returns of each of the Plan’s
investments to an index fund in the same Morningstar category or, where no index fund was
available, to a benchmark index subject to a ten basis point reduction to account for fees. This
model’s purpose was to address what Dr. Pomerantz’s called losses due to imprudent fund
selection and monitoring but not due to imprudent asset class choices. Dr. Pomerantz estimates
that the damages to the Plan are $12,405,143 million. When he replaced the money market funds
with stable value index funds, the loss increased to $16,397,959.
In Model Two, Dr. Pomerantz compared the net investment returns of the Plan’s funds to
a streamlined menu of Vanguard index funds modeled on the United States Government’s Thrift
Savings Plan (“TSP”). The TSP, and therefore Dr. Pomerantz’s Model Two, consists of a large
cap equity fund, small/mid cap equity fund, international equity fund, a bond fund, a capital
preservation option, and a set of target date funds. This model, according to Dr. Pomerantz,
included losses due to imprudent fund selection/monitoring and imprudent asset class choice.
Based on Model Two, Dr. Pomerantz estimated a total loss of $27,755,215. When he replaced the
money market funds with a stable value fund, he calculated the losses at $31,748,030.
In Model Three, Dr. Pomerantz compared the net investment returns of each fund in the
Plan to the most popular investment in the same Morningstar category among fiduciaries of
similarly sized plans. In order to choose his comparators, Dr. Pomerantz first identified the five
most widely utilized funds among fiduciaries of similarly sized plans and then identified which of
those fives funds had the most assets under management. This model included actively managed
funds as comparators.
Similar to Model One, Model Three addressed issues of fund
selection/monitoring only and did not address asset class issues. This model showed the Plan
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suffered $11,736,759 in losses, and $15,989,786 in losses if the Plan’s money market funds were
compared to a stable value index fund.
Finally, Model Four compared the net investment returns of each of the investments in the
Plan to a modified menu designed to address what Dr. Pomerantz believed were the considerations
and recommendations of the Hewitt Report. Model Four included index funds and a stable value
fund, eliminated specialty funds and funds Dr. Pomerantz thought were duplicative, and retained
some existing funds in the Plan. Model Four, therefore, addressed what Dr. Pomerantz believed
to be issues with both fund selection and asset allocation. According to this model, the Plan
suffered $29,338,215 in losses from failure to implement all of Hewitt’s recommendations.
On cross-examination, Dr. Pomerantz testified that some of the selections in Model Four
were not based on “recommendations” made in the Hewitt Report, but rather were
“considerations.” These included removing a money market fund, removing American Century
Global Gold Fund (“Global Gold”), and adding a stable value fund. Additionally, Dr. Pomerantz
testified he could not state whether either Model Three or Four resulted in a prudent plan lineup.
Dr. Pomerantz did not testify that any of his four models would have been utilized as a result of a
prudent process. In fact, Dr. Pomerantz conceded that the purpose and performance of a fund are
important factors in evaluating the prudence of a plan, yet his analysis did not consider the
purposes for which the Committee added the funds to the Plan.
Defendants’ expert on damages, Bruce Strombom, Ph.D., is an economist who spends
about 80 percent of his consulting evaluating damages and economic loss. He has testified at trial
or arbitration about thirty-five times and been deposed approximately eighty-five times. He has
testified for defendants in 60 percent of cases and plaintiffs 40 percent of the time.
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Dr. Strombom described in detail several flaws in Dr. Pomerantz’s models.
First,
Dr. Strombom found Dr. Pomerantz did not perform the standard statistical tests necessary to rule
out the fact that any of the differences in returns were caused by chance.
According to
Dr. Strombom, sound economic practice requires treating any apparent difference in returns that
are not statistically significant as nonexistent because it may have resulted from chance.
Dr. Strombom opined that 90 percent of the differences in returns found by Dr. Pomerantz were
not statistically significant.
Of the other 10 percent which were statistically significant, Dr. Strombom testified that
Dr. Pomerantz did not establish the following: the loss was attributable to misconduct; the
comparator utilized in his models was appropriate; or the attributes of the fund were taken into
account. He also opined that the inconsistencies in the models rendered them invalid. For
example, Dr. Strombom found that there was a statistically significant difference between the
money market funds and the stable value fund, but nevertheless concluded they were not accurate
comparators because these two funds are in different Morningstar categories.
Dr. Strombom also testified that Model Four was inappropriate because there was little
connection between the model and Hewitt’s recommendations. He also criticized the fact that in
each of Dr. Pomerantz’s models, Dr. Pomerantz assumed all of the money invested in the at-issue
fund would have been invested in his chosen comparator.
Dr. Strombrom stated that a single
but-for alternative fund is inappropriate to measure loss and damages; instead, a range of options
should be utilized. When Dr. Strombom conducted such an analysis using Dr. Pomerantz’s
comparators from each of the first three models to define a range of returns, he found no economic
harm.10
In conducting his analysis using Dr. Pomerantz’s comparators, Dr. Strombom ignored all of the other flaws he
believed were inherent within Dr. Pomerantz’s analysis.
10
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While Plaintiffs quibble that Dr. Strombom used the low-end returns of the range of options
and not the average to find there was no loss, Dr. Strombom articulated many reasons why using
the average does not appropriately show loss: there is no guarantee of median performance across
a range of options; the set of alternatives utilized was restrictive; and it is unreasonable to assume
that damages occurred just because a fund performed below the mean of a restrictive group of
comparators.
Dr. Strombom’s testimony also expressed concern regarding the inconsistent results across
Dr. Pomerantz’s different models. For many funds, there were large damages fluctuations from
one model to the next, including swings from positive to negative damage calculations. The
fluctuations resulted in arbitrary damages calculations between models. Dr. Strombom also
criticized Dr. Pomerantz’s failure to consider the different risk profiles of the funds, the
non-performance attributes of the funds, and the lack of concern for participant choice.
Dr. Strombom opined that the models were arbitrary because Dr. Pomerantz failed to
isolate and address each of the alleged breaches, which resulted in fundamental flaws in his
analysis. Dr. Pomerantz presented no calculation of loss caused by design of the Watch List,
placement of a fund on the Watch List, or failure to remove a fund on the Watch List.
Dr. Strombom also testified that if Dr. Pomerantz’s models were imprudent, this was a
“terminating flaw” in his damages calculations. Put simply, there was no basis for Dr. Pomerantz’s
assumption that the Plan would have resembled any of his models.
After carefully considering all of the evidence and testimony, the Court finds
Dr. Strombrom credible and finds Dr. Pomerantz’s four models not credible and assigns them no
weight. The Court finds Dr. Pomerantz’s models are the result of speculation and are untethered
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to the facts of this case. Therefore, his four models cannot be relied on to determine what, if any,
damages could have flowed from Defendants’ alleged breaching conduct.
Aside from his four models, Dr. Pomerantz made some specific findings directly pertaining
to certain breaches. First, Dr. Pomerantz calculated that offering a money market fund instead of
a stable value fund resulted in $4.3 to $5 million in damages. This calculation was conducted in
conjunction with his four models and thus suffers from the same deficiencies discussed above.
That said, not all of Dr. Pomerantz’s calculations are flawed. He testified that delaying the
conversion to a lower share class resulted in $472,193 in excess fees ($101,563 from the failure to
convert the Short-Term Government Bond Fund and $370,630 in losses associated with the R6
share class). Dr. Strombom did not dispute this calculation. Dr. Pomerantz also calculated losses
related to the lack of revenue sharing in the amount of $2.4 million. Dr. Strombom offered no
critique of this methodology but opined the rebates might not have been passed back to
participants. The Court finds these calculations credible.
Conclusions of Law
Plaintiffs pursued three counts at trial: (1) breach of fiduciary duty, in violation of 29
U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A)-(B), (2) failure to monitor fiduciaries, and (3) equitable disgorgement of
ill-gotten profits, pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(3). All three claims fail.
Plaintiffs did not establish Defendants’ conduct breached any fiduciary duty.
I.
A.
Fiduciary duties under ERISA generally.
Section 1104 defines fiduciary duties under ERISA:
(1) a fiduciary shall discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely
in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries and-(A) for the exclusive purpose of:
(i) providing benefits to participants and their
beneficiaries; and
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(ii) defraying reasonable expenses of administering
the plan;
(B) with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the
circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a
like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the
conduct of an enterprise of a like character and with like
aims.
29 U.S.C. § 1104 (emphasis added). Part (A) is known as the “Duty of Loyalty” and part (B) is
known as the “Duty of Prudence.” Tussey v. ABB, Inc., 746 F.3d 327, 335 (8th Cir. 2014)
(“Tussey I”) (ERISA imposes the duties of loyalty and prudence on fiduciaries); Braden v.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., 588 F.3d 585, 598 (8th Cir. 2009).
In the Eighth Circuit, a plaintiff bears the burden of showing the defendant breached its
fiduciary duties, which results in a prima facie case of loss to the plan. Pegram v. Herdrich, 530
U.S. 211, 225–26 (2000); Roth v. Sawyer–Cleator Lumber Co., 16 F.3d 915, 917 (8th Cir. 1994)
(“Roth I”). “Once the plaintiff has satisfied these burdens, ‘the burden of persuasion shifts to the
fiduciary to prove that the loss was not caused by . . . the breach of duty.’” Roth I, 16 F.3d at 917
(quoting Martin v. Feilen, 965 F.2d 660, 671 (8th Cir. 1992)). In other words, the burden shifts to
the defendant to show a prudent fiduciary would have made the same decision. Id. at 919 (“Even
if a trustee failed to conduct an investigation before making a decision, he is insulated from liability
if a hypothetical prudent fiduciary would have made the same decision anyway.”).
Accordingly, Plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of evidence that: (1) the defendant
is a fiduciary; (2) the defendant breached its fiduciary duty; and (3) that breach caused a loss to
the Plan. It is undisputed Defendants are fiduciaries. At issue is whether Plaintiffs have proven
Defendants breached their fiduciary duties, resulting in a loss and damages to the Plan.
19
B.
Plaintiffs failed to establish a breach of the duty of loyalty.
Plaintiffs first argue Defendants breached their duty of loyalty by creating a plan with only
American Century affiliated funds, a decision allegedly motivated by their desire to drive revenues
and profits to American Century.
The duty of loyalty requires fiduciaries to act “solely in the interest of the participants and
beneficiaries” and “for the exclusive purpose of … providing benefits to participants and their
beneficiaries.” 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A). The duty of loyalty is analyzed under a subjective
standard where “what matters is why the defendant acted as he did.” In re: Wells Fargo ERISA
401(k) Litig., No. 16-CV-3405 (PJS/BRT), 2018 WL 3475485, at *4 (D. Minn. July 19, 2018).
The test focuses on “the reason” a fiduciary took the challenged action, and whether it was
motivated by “subjective good faith.” Id. at *5 (emphasis in original). In other words, Plaintiffs’
burden is to point to Defendants’ subjective motivation behind specific disloyal conduct. Plaintiffs
have not met their burden here, as they failed to establish a single instance in which the Committee
members placed American Century’s interests over those of the Plan participants.
Plaintiffs argue that the Committee members operated under a conflict of interest because
they served as both employees of American Century and as Plan fiduciaries, and so the Court
should infer impropriety. But ERISA does not prohibit an employer’s corporate officer or
employee from serving as a plan fiduciary. 29 U.S.C. § 1108(c)(3). It merely requires the officer
“wear the fiduciary hat when making fiduciary decisions.” Pegram, 530 U.S. at 225. Certainly,
“a conflict of interest alone is not a per se breach: ‘nowhere in the statute does ERISA explicitly
prohibit a trustee from holding positions of dual loyalties.’” Tibble v. Edison Int’l, No. CV 075359SVW(AGRX), 2010 WL 2757153, at *18 (C.D. Cal. July 8, 2010), aff’d, 711 F.3d 1061 (9th
Cir. 2013), and aff’d, 729 F.3d 1110 (9th Cir. 2013), and aff’d, 820 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 2016), and
20
vacated and remanded on other grounds, 843 F.3d 1187 (9th Cir. 2016) (quoting Friend v. Sanwa
Bank of Cal., 35 F.3d 466, 468–69 (9th Cir. 1994)). Although the Committee members wore two
“hats,” the evidence at trial did not show Defendants’ decisions were motivated by a desire to place
American Century’s interests over those of Plan participants.
Plaintiffs repeatedly emphasize that Defendants only considered American Century funds
in the Plan, which they argue evidences a motivation to benefit American Century. But it is not
disloyal as a matter of law to offer only proprietary funds. Brotherston v. Putnam Investments,
LLC, No. CV 15-13825-WGY, 2017 WL 2634361, at *8 (D. Mass. June 19, 2017), aff’d in part,
vacated in part, remanded, 907 F.3d 17 (1st Cir. 2018). In fact, it is common for financial service
companies to offer their own investment funds in their retirement plans. Dupree v. Prudential Ins.
Co. of Am., No. 99-8337, 2007 WL 2263892, at *45 (S.D. Fla. Aug. 7, 2007). And there is no
duty to offer more than one investment company’s funds. Hecker v. Deere & Co., 556 F.3d 575,
586-87 (7th Cir. 2009) (holding that limiting plan to funds from one management company did
not violate ERISA; finding no statute or regulation prohibiting a fiduciary from selecting funds
from one management company).
In support of their argument, Plaintiffs cite Tussey v. ABB, Inc., 850 F.3d 951, 957 (8th Cir.
2017) (“Tussey II”) and Martin, 965 F.2d at 671, but neither decision holds that considering only
proprietary funds is per se a breach of the duty of loyalty, and each case is distinguishable. In
Martin, the court noted the importance of considering whether “fiduciaries investigated alternative
actions and relied on outside advisors” in the context of an employee stock ownership plan
(“ESOP”). 956 F.2d 670-71. But Martin dealt with reprehensible self-dealing in the ESOP context
and fiduciaries who believed they were exempt from ERISA’s fiduciary requirements
altogether – facts unlike those here.
Tussey II held that the failure to consider alternative
21
investments could properly be considered as additional evidence of disloyalty where there was
already “direct evidence of meetings about ‘price implications’” and evidence the fiduciaries
replaced a fund “not because they thought it was best for the plans, but because they wanted to get
a better deal for themselves.” 850 F.3d at 957.
Here, however, the record and testimony demonstrates Committee members made careful
investigations of investment decisions and acted in the best interests of the Plan participants.
Plaintiffs presented no emails, documents, or testimony suggesting that Committee members
placed American Century’s interests before Plan participants’. Not only did the Committee
members truly believe in the quality of American Century’s funds, but the Committee members
believed having American Century funds was more beneficial to Plan participants because the
participants were familiar with the funds offered by American Century, had the ability to more
closely monitor their investments, and received direct access to fund managers for consultation.
Plan participants also continuously requested different American Century funds to be
added to the lineup,11 but the Committee did not act to add proprietary funds at every opportunity,
something they would have done if they were motivated by acting in American Century’s interests
and not the Plan participants’. Instead, the Committee undertook a deliberate approach to adding
and removing funds to the Plan and did so only when the Committee believed it was in the Plan
participants’ best interests.
Further, the Committee had no particular incentive to “push” American Century’s funds
since the Plan’s investments in American Century funds are only 0.35 percent of all American
The Committee members’ belief that Plan participants preferred actively managed funds is supported by the fact
that as of December 2015, participants who invested in mutual funds through the SBDA invested $11.9 million in
actively managed funds and just $1.6 million in passively managed funds. Moreover, 27.5 percent of the amount
invested in actively managed funds were invested in American Century mutual funds, making American Century the
most popular actively managed fund asset manager in the SBDA.
11
22
Century’s assets under management, a drop in the ocean of assets under American Century’s
management. Plaintiffs also presented no evidence that any of the Committee members benefited
in their role as American Century employees based on the Plan’s lineup or performance.
Accordingly, the Court finds the Committee believed that American Century funds would
most benefit Plan participants. While, with the benefit of hindsight, such belief may or may not
be unfounded, it cannot be said to be disloyal. See In re: Wells Fargo ERISA 401(k) Litig., 2018
WL 3475485, at *5 (“Because the first fiduciary acted in subjective good faith, he could not be
found to have breached the duty of loyalty. But because the second fiduciary did not act in
subjective good faith, he could be found to have breached the duty of loyalty.”).
Given that
Plaintiffs “point to no action of [Defendants] that can be explained only by a disloyal motivation,”
their duty of loyalty claim fails. Brotherston, 907 F.3d at 41 (emphasis added).
C.
Plaintiffs did not establish breach of the duty of prudence.
Plaintiffs also allege Defendants breached their fiduciary duties in a myriad of ways, each
discussed in detail below. The duty of prudence is an ongoing duty, which includes an initial “duty
to exercise prudence in selecting investments” and a “continuing duty to monitor [those]
investments and remove imprudent ones.” Tibble v. Edison, 135 S. Ct. 1823, 1928-29 (2015).
ERISA’s prudence requirements “are satisfied if the fiduciary: (i)[h]as given appropriate
consideration to those facts and circumstances that, given the scope of such fiduciary’s investment
duties, the fiduciary knows or should know are relevant to the particular investment or investment
course of action involved,” and “(ii) [h]as acted accordingly.” 29 C.F.R. § 2550.404a–1(b)(1). In
Braden, the Eighth Circuit outlined the duty of prudence:
The statute’s “prudent person standard is an objective standard ... that focuses on
the fiduciary’s conduct preceding the challenged decision.” In evaluating whether
a fiduciary has acted prudently, we therefore focus on the process by which it makes
its decisions rather than the results of those decisions.
23
588 F.3d at 595 (internal citations omitted).
The duty of prudence inquiry is context specific. Fifth Third Bancorp v. Dudenhoeffer,
––– U.S. ––––, 134 S.Ct. 2459, 2471 (2014) (quoting 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(B)) (Because “the
content of the duty of prudence turns on ‘the circumstances ... prevailing’ at the time the fiduciary
acts, the appropriate inquiry will necessarily be context specific.”). Therefore, in looking at
whether a fiduciary has breached its duty, “we examine the totality of the circumstances, including,
but not limited to: the plan structure and aims, the disclosures made to participants regarding the
general and specific risks associated with investment in company stock, and the nature and extent
of challenges facing the company that would have an effect on stock price and viability.” DiFelice
v. U.S. Airways, Inc., 497 F.3d 410, 418 (4th Cir. 2007). The crucial question is “whether the
defendants took into account all relevant information in performing its fiduciary duty under
ERISA.” Bunch v. W.R. Grace & Co., 532 F. Supp. 2d 283, 288 (D. Mass. 2008). “[A]lthough
the duty of procedural prudence requires more than a pure heart and an empty head, courts have
readily determined that fiduciaries who act reasonably – i.e., who appropriately investigate the
merits of an investment decision prior to acting – easily clear this bar.” Tatum v. RJR Pension Inv.
Comm., 761 F.3d 346, 358 (4th Cir. 2014) (internal quotations and citation omitted). But “[e]ven
if a [fiduciary] failed to conduct an investigation before making a decision, he is insulated from
liability if a hypothetical prudent fiduciary would have made the same decision anyway.” Roth I,
16 F.3d at 919 (citing Fink v. Nat’l Sav. & Tr. Co., 772 F.2d 951, 962 (D.C. Cir. 1985)).
1. The Committee did not act imprudently by only considering American Century
funds.
First, Plaintiffs argue the Committee’s process was flawed because up until September
2016, it considered only American Century funds. Under the facts presented here, the Court does
24
not find it was imprudent to do so.
In determining if a breach of fiduciary duty has occurred, the Court looks to what a prudent
investor under similar circumstances would have done. Hecker, 556 F.3d at 586; Whitfield v.
Cohen, 682 F. Supp. 188, 194 (S.D.N.Y. 1988) (quoting Marshall v. Snyder, 1 Empl. Ben. Cases
(BNA) 1878, 1886 (E.D.N.Y.1979)) (“ERISA’s prudence standard ‘is not that of a prudent lay
person but rather that of a prudent fiduciary with experience dealing with a similar enterprise.’”).
A fiduciary of a plan sponsored by an asset manager is not required to consider
competitors’ funds if the proprietary funds chosen in the Plan are prudent options. Hecker, 556
F.3d at 586. There was significant evidence that other investment management companies
administering retirement plans have lineups consisting solely of proprietary funds. The Hewitt
Report showed that 41 percent of plans used an all-proprietary lineup. Ms. Mann also credibly
testified it was common for investment management companies to consider only affiliated funds
in their retirement plans and that it was not imprudent to do so if the lineup consists of prudent,
diversified funds, as the Plan did. Although Mr. Levy testified that a prudent process would be to
consider all funds from every investment manager and then winnow the funds down to the very
best-performing one, the Court finds Mr. Levy’s standard goes beyond what the law requires.
The Plan’s core lineup included a wide variety of investment options across different asset
classes, resulting in a diverse set of investment options within each asset class but with varying
investment strategies.
Moreover, before and at each meeting, the Committee thoroughly
monitored the independent merits of each fund in relation to funds from other asset management
companies to determine whether it was a prudent investment and should remain in the lineup.
Given the totality of the circumstances, the Court cannot say that limiting the selection of funds to
only American Century funds was imprudent.
25
2. Defendants did not imprudently fail to offer certain funds in the Plan.
Plaintiffs also allege Defendants acted imprudently by failing to offer passive options (i.e.
index funds) and stable value funds in the Plan. This argument is unavailing.
ERISA does not require a retirement plan to offer an index fund or a stable value fund, and
the failure to include either in the Plan, standing alone, does not violate the duty of prudence. See
Hecker, 556 F.3d at 586 (“[N]othing in [ERISA] requires plan fiduciaries to include any particular
mix of investment vehicles in their plan.”). Rather, the issue is whether the Defendants considered
these options and came to a reasoned decision for omitting them from the Plan. The evidence
shows the Committee did so.
The record shows the Committee considered adding a stable value fund after the Hewitt
Report but ultimately decided against it given the economic environment at the time. Mr. Bouffard
testified that stable value funds are reliable, like money markets, but are more risky and also less
liquid given the insurance wrapper. He emphasized that a stable value fund was not needed in the
Plan and would have led to duplication. Hence, the money market funds, along with the other
investment options in the Plan’s core lineup, covered the entire risk/return spectrum and allowed
a participant looking for a stable value fund to imitate that fund with another fund or mix of funds.
Mr. Leis echoed Mr. Bouffard’s testimony regarding adding a stable value option to the
Plan. He testified that after the Hewitt Report, the Committee discussed stable value options but
decided against them, largely because after the financial crisis, no one wanted risk of any level.
Mr. Leis also testified money market funds were favored because they have more transparency
and fewer restrictions when they need to be transferred to another fund. He stated the Committee
believed that Plan participants could replicate the underlying positions in the stable value fund
with other funds in the Plan. Other Committee members testified similarly.
26
The Committee also appropriately considered adding passive options to the Plan after the
Hewitt Report but ultimately decided against it due to the instability in the marketplace. The
Committee preferred active management coming out of the financial crisis because financial
experts in an actively managed fund could review the actual prospects of the securities being held,
and therefore, had a greater ability to manage risk and lessen the effect of downturns in the market.
The Committee also believed that active management’s added costs were justified by its
performance, and the human element of active management provided value to the Plan’s funds. In
this case, the Committee monitored the expense ratios of each fund and verified whether their
expenses were justified based on performance. While Plaintiffs’ complain about the metrics used
to make such determinations, as discussed further below, such metrics were not improper.
The record also shows that far from being diametrically opposed to passively managed
funds, the Committee had constant conversations about adding passive options to the Plan. In
2016, the Committee decided to add Vanguard index funds to the Plan.
The evidence overwhelmingly shows that the Committee gave “appropriate consideration”
to adding stable value funds and index funds, taking into account the benefits and detriments of
adding these funds, before ultimately deciding not to do so. 29 C.F.R. § 2550.404a–1(b)(1). The
Plan contained numerous funds along the risk/reward continuum, and Defendants cannot be said
to have acted imprudently by thoroughly deliberating but then choosing not to add a stable value
fund or an index fund (prior to 2016) to the Plan. See Loomis v. Exelon, 658 F.3d 667, 673-74 (7th
Cir. 2011) (finding no claim where Defendants “offered participants a menu that includes
high-expense, high-risk, and potentially high-return funds, together with low-expense, low-risk,
modest-return bond funds”). Although one could argue the benefits of including a stable value
27
funds in the Plan and adding passive funds earlier, the Court cannot find the Committee was
imprudent in failing to offer those options. The decision was made after careful consideration.
3. Defendants did not act imprudently by including funds used to hedge inflation.
Plaintiffs also complain about the inclusion of two funds, Global Gold and the Strategic
Inflation Opportunities Fund (“the SIOP Fund”), in the Plan. First, Plaintiffs argue the inclusion
of Global Gold, a sector fund, in the Plan’s core lineup was imprudent because sector funds are
not diversified across multiple industries in the same asset class. But merely because sector funds
carry with them an inherent risk does not mean that offering them in the lineup was imprudent.
See Tibble, 639 F. Supp. 2d at 1117 (C.D. Cal. 2009) (holding the inclusion of sector funds is not
per se imprudent). The Committee discussed the Plan’s use of sector funds and determined that
offering those funds served Plan participants’ best interests. Mr. Bouffard credibly testified the
Committee and participants were concerned that the flood of liquidity by all major banks across
the globe would cause inflation. Gold, however, is often used to hedge against inflation; it stores
value by serving as an alternative to fight or mitigate monetary debasement, so the Committee
decided to include the fund as an option. Given the totality of the circumstances, the Committee’s
decision to include sector funds in the Plan was not imprudent.
Second, Plaintiffs allege Defendants imprudently added the SIOP Fund, which consisted
of three American Century funds, to the Plan without an established record of performance.
Plaintiffs’ cite no authority holding that the implementation of a fund without a long performance
history is per se imprudent. Nevertheless, as Ms. Mann testified, this information would have been
available to the Committee because the SIOP Fund consisted of three funds, two of which had
been in the lineup for some time and one which the same portfolio manager as the Gold Fund
managed. Therefore, the information on the standalone strategies would have been available for
28
the Committee to look at in their meeting materials before deciding to add the fund. The meeting
minutes show that the Committee had “extended discussions” about adding the SIOP fund,
specifically with regard to the unique niche the fund fills within the Plan. Hecker, 556 F.3d at 586;
Loomis, 658 F.3d at 673-74. Thus, the Court cannot find the Committee acted imprudently by
adding the SIOP fund to the Plan.
4. Defendants did not imprudently maintain too many options in the Plan.
Plaintiffs’ allegation that the Committee imprudently retained too many funds in the Plan,
resulting in duplication of funds, is also without merit. The evidence shows the Committee
thoroughly discussed the composition of the Plan’s lineup to ensure it covered the entire
risk/reward spectrum without duplication. While the Plan offered a large number of investment
options to participants, it was certainly not imprudent to do so given the sophisticated investor
base of the Plan participants. Ms. Morrison convincingly testified that while a lay person might
believe certain funds belonged to the same asset class or style box, the funds within each of those
categories were actually very different.
For example, although three of the Plan’s funds were listed in the domestic equity large
value style box, each fund had a different investment strategy. All three funds were managed by
different investment teams. Two of the funds had fundamentally driven strategies, while the third
fund had quantitatively driven strategy.12 Even the two funds utilizing the same strategy had
differences regarding what types of securities the fund invested in. Ms. Morrison credibly testified
she could perform this same analysis with each fund in the Plan’s lineup.
12
A fundamentally driven strategy is a method of analyzing a security to measure its intrinsic value; it uses qualitative
and quantitative information of a company’s financial and economic position to determine whether a security is
overvalued or undervalued. In contrast, a quantitatively driven investment strategy relies on mathematical and
statistical measures to value a security.
29
It is clear that the number of options in the Plan did not result in confusion or lead to
non-participation in the Plan. Not only was the participation rate of the Plan much higher than
other plans, but the Committee regularly received and considered information regarding the rate
at which its employees were participating in the Plan to make sure that the number of options in
the Plan was not causing confusion among its participants. Just as Defendants cannot shield
themselves from liability by simply offering a large number of investment options through the
SDBA, so too Defendants cannot be held liable simply because of their decision to include a large
variety of funds in the Plan. Hecker, 556 F.3d at 581. Defendants provided reasonable options
and then left the “choice to the people who have the most interest in the outcome.” Loomis, 658
F.3d at 673-74. They cannot be faulted for doing so.
5. The Committee prudently monitored funds on the Watch List.
Plaintiffs also complain that certain funds remained on the Watch List for many quarters
despite their poor performance compared to similar funds. But a fund’s rate of return is only
relevant in so far as it suggests the Committee’s decision-making process was flawed. See Meiners
v. Wells Fargo & Co., No. 16-CV-3981(DSD/FLN), 2017 WL 2303968, at *2 (D. Minn. May 25,
2017) (finding plaintiff failed to state a claim when it alleged the defendants acted imprudently in
composing the plan’s lineup because Wells Fargo funds consistently underperformed Vanguard
funds).
The evidence shows the Committee followed a prudent process in monitoring and retaining
funds in the Plan. Committee members explained that removing funds from the Plan was very
disruptive to Plan participants, and the Committee was hesitant to remove a fund simply because
it had not performed well in the short term. “Indeed, a fiduciary may – and often does – retain
investments through a period of underperformance as part of a long-range investment strategy.”
30
White v. Chevron Corp., No. 16-CV-0793-PJH, 2016 WL 4502808, at *17 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 29,
2016).
Were the Committee to adopt a strategy of removing funds based on short-term
underperformance, Plan participants would be forced to sell their shares at a lower price and miss
out on any subsequent improved performance. Therefore, in deciding whether an underperforming
fund should remain in the Plan, the Committee members received and reviewed numerous pages
of analysis on funds which had been placed on the Watch List, including the funds’ rolling
performance and information ratio data.
Mr. Bouffard, and later Mr. Ledgerwood and
Ms. Morrison, walked the Committee through the funds on the Watch List to discuss whether there
were reasons inherent in a fund’s strategy that would explain its underperformance. Oftentimes,
portfolio managers of Watch List funds would present to the Committee about the
underperforming fund’s strategy and the prospects for future performance.
Although this long-range strategy worked in some instances, it did not work for every fund.
It worked for the American Century Equity Fund, which remained on the Watch List for eight
quarters but then went on to outperform its benchmark index for the next year, obtaining a 23.25
percent annualized returned compared to a 16.38 percent annualized return for the benchmark
index. Granted, this strategy did not prove as effective for the American Century Vista Fund,
American Century Growth CIT, and International Bond Fund. But this Court does not review the
Committee’s decisions in hindsight, Roth I, 16 F.3d at 917–18, and the record shows the
Committee continually monitored the funds on the Watch List and came to a reasoned decision to
allow them to remain in the Plan. Viewing the decision in light of the information and reports the
Committee reviewed, thorough discussions of each fund, macroeconomic environment at the time,
and long-term investment strategy utilized, the Court finds the decision to not remove certain funds
from the Plan was not imprudent.
31
Plaintiffs’ related argument that measuring a fund’s performance by its gross return was
improper is unpersuasive. Using gross performance gives a better comparison of a fund relative
to the fund’s benchmark because a benchmark does not have fees. Also, the testimony was that
gross performance was the industry standard metric. That said, the Committee did consider net
performance. Ms. Morrison testified the Committee obtained this information from Morningstar,
which in part charted the net returns of the Plan’s funds, and the Committee reviewed other
performance rankings on a net basis. In light of the totality of the circumstances, Plaintiffs failed
to prove Defendants imprudently monitored or failed to remove funds on the Watch List.
6. Defendants did not fail to prudently monitor or control costs.
Further, Plaintiffs aver that Defendants acted imprudently by retaining funds with
excessive fees in the Plan. But “[f]ees, like performance, cannot be analyzed in a vacuum.”
Meiners, 2017 WL 2303968, at *3 (citing Dudenhoeffer, 134 S. Ct. at 2471). As an initial matter,
the Plan’s fees ranged from 4 to 158 basis points, similar to those approved of by other courts,13
which suggests the fees were not excessive. The diverse selection of funds available to Plan
participants also contradicts Plaintiffs’ claim that Defendants acted imprudently simply because
cheaper funds were available. See Renfro v. Unisys Corp., 671 F.3d 314, 327 (3d Cir. 2011) (“[W]e
hold the range of investment options and the characteristics of those included options—including
the risk profiles, investment strategies, and associated fees—are highly relevant and readily
ascertainable facts against which the plausibility of claims challenging the overall composition of
a plan’s mix and range of investment options should be measured”). This is because, like a fund’s
rate of return, a fund’s fee is only relevant in so far as it demonstrates the Committee’s
13
Tibble, 729 F.3d at 1135 (rejecting excessive fee arguments where expense ratios varied from .03 percent to 2.00
percent); Renfro, 671 F.3d at 327-28 (rejecting excessive fee claims where expense ratios ranged from 1 to 121 basis
points).
32
decision-making process was imprudent. Meiners, 2017 WL 2303968, at *2.
Here, the Committee reviewed relevant information to ensure the fees were reasonable in
light of the fund’s performance and level of risk. From the beginning of the class period until
2013, the Committee received a report listing each fund’s expense ratio alongside the percentile
ranking for the expense ratio in the fund’s peer group. A majority of the time, the expense ratios
for the funds were below the 50th percentile of the funds in their peer groups. Many had expense
ratios much lower than that. From 2014 on, the Committee received and reviewed a report
containing each fund’s expense ratio compared to mutual funds in the same category. From 2017
on, the Committee also received and reviewed information regarding the funds in the Plan with
the median expense ratio of fund within the same Morningstar category. None of this demonstrates
an imprudent process.
Again, Plaintiffs try to discredit the Committee’s process by arguing the metric used to
review the funds’ fees was flawed because the peer group contained every share class for a
particular mutual fund. But the reports reviewed by the Committee were standard reports provided
by JPMorgan RPS and Schwab RPS to their recordkeeping clients, and Plaintiffs submitted no
evidence that any fiduciary obtains customized reporting that compares the fees of a plan’s funds
to that of funds within the same share class. In fact, Ms. VanWagoner testified it is common
practice for retirement committees to look at multiple share classes for different mutual funds as a
comparison to a peer group, and Ms. Mann credibly testified the use of this data was consistent
with the Committee’s duty to monitor the fees. In short, the Court finds Plaintiffs’ claims that the
Committee imprudently monitored fees and that the fees were excessive are without merit.
33
7. The delayed conversion to low-cost shares was not imprudent.
Plaintiffs also complain about a year delay in converting twenty-three funds to a lower
share class. But the record shows that the Committee converted the shares as soon as practicable.
The Committee members testified that at the time the R6 shares became available, they were
juggling multiple items, including changing the recordkeeper from JPMorgan to Schwab. They
wanted to make all changes to the Plan – including changing recordkeepers, switching share
classes, and adding new funds – at the same time so as to minimize the disruption to participants.
Mr. Leis testified that changing recordkeepers was a significant change for the participants, and
the Committee believed that making the change as seamless as possible, without creating
disruption or confusion, was paramount. Further, Julie Smith testified she did not believe
JPMorgan would have done the conversion because around the same time the R6 share classes
became available in July 2013, JPMorgan told American Century it no longer wanted to be its
recordkeeper.
The Court also notes the change of the recordkeeper and the change to different share
classes is not something that occurs instantaneously. Ms. Smith testified JPMorgan had already
started deconversion of the Plan, which was required to switch recordkeepers, and Schwab
estimated this deconversion to take approximately four months. It takes about ninety days to put
a fund on the Schwab platform, and it takes around seventy-five to ninety days to integrate the new
share class into the Plan. There is also a thirty-day required notice to participants, and American
Century would not make changes to the Plan without a communication campaign to participants,
which required an additional sixty days. American Century also conducted site visits, which
required additional time.
34
It is clear the Committee thoroughly discussed when the change to the R6 shares would
occur and took into account all reasonable information, including the other changes to the Plan at
the time. Based on the totality of circumstances, the Court holds the delay in converting the funds
to R6 shares did not breach the duty of prudence.
Plaintiffs also complain that the Committee imprudently failed to convert the Short-Term
Government Bond Fund from the investor share class to the institutional share class. But Plaintiffs
produced no evidence that the institutional share class was available to the Plan in 2010.14
Accordingly, Plaintiffs failed to meet their burden of proving the Committee imprudently failed to
convert the fund to the institutional share class.
8. Defendants were not imprudent in failing to gain revenue sharing rebates.
Finally, Plaintiffs complain that the Plan did not offer revenue sharing rebates15 that were
provided to other Plans with American Century funds. Plaintiffs argue Tussey v. ABB, Inc., No.
2:06-CV-04305-NKL, 2012 WL 1113291, at *13-15 (W.D. Mo. Mar. 31, 2012), makes it
imprudent per se to fail to negotiate a rebate back to the Plan participants. That is not so. In this
case, American Century paid the recordkeeping costs, and Plaintiffs produced no evidence that
such rebates were available and would have been offered to the Plan prior to 2018.
D. Plaintiffs failed to prove a loss to the Plan.
The Court need not reach the issue of loss given its holding that there was no breach of
fiduciary duty, but the Court will do so to aid in any appellate review. In sum, the Court holds
The only evidence presented at trial on this issue was Dr. Pomerantz’s testimony that such shares were available to
the Plan. But he provided no basis for so finding. And Plaintiffs’ cite to a single document in the record only proves
that the institutional share class was generally available at American Century, not to the Plan. No Committee member
testified the institutional share class was available for the Short-Term Government Bond Fund, and Ms. Mann also
testified she was unaware that the institutional share class was available.
14
15
Revenue sharing involves a tripartite agreement between a mutual fund company, recordkeeper, and retirement plan
whereby a portion of the investment management fee paid to the mutual fund company is refunded to the recordkeeper
in exchange for the services provided by the recordkeeper.
35
Dr. Pomerantz’s four models of loss and damages did not prove that any alleged breach resulted
in a prima facie loss to the Plan.
“Any person who is a fiduciary with respect to a plan who breaches any of the
responsibilities, obligations, or duties imposed upon fiduciaries by this subchapter shall be
personally liable to make good to such plan any losses to the plan resulting from each such
breach.” 29 U.S.C. § 1109 (emphasis added). The plaintiff bears the burden of establishing a
prima facie loss to the Plan. Roth I, 16 F.3d at 921 (noting that “the plaintiffs must establish a
prima facie case of loss to the plan to prevail”). A prima facie loss may be demonstrated “by
comparing the [Plan’s] actual profit to potential profit that could have been realized in the absence
of breach.” Roth v. Sawyer-Cleater Lumber Co., 61 F.3d 599, 604 (8th Cir. 1995) (“Roth II”).
Plaintiffs argue they have met their burden of proving loss through Dr. Pomerantz’s
testimony. Plaintiffs cite another case where he testified, Brotherston, 907 F.3d at 31-34, for
support. In that case, Dr. Pomerantz conducted an identical analysis to the one in this case,
comparing “the total return for each Putnam fund to the total return for … a Vanguard index fund
that belonged to the same Morningstar category as the Putnam fund … for every quarter from the
beginning of the class period through [the end of the analysis period], and then adding together
each quarterly differential.” Id. at 32. The First Circuit found the district court erroneously
concluded this evidence was insufficient to make out a prima facie case of loss as a matter of law,
noting one possible “comparator” for challenged funds may be “return rates of one or more …
suitable index mutual funds or market indexes (with such adjustments as may be appropriate). Id.
at 33. The court cautioned, however, that its holding did not mean “that Pomerantz necessarily
picked suitable benchmarks, or calculated the returns correctly, or focused on the correct time
period” because each were questions of fact to be decided by the district court. Id. at 34.
36
That is where Plaintiffs’ claim of suffering a loss unravels. Unlike the court in Brotherston,
this Court has heard Dr. Pomerantz’s testimony and the Defendants’ cross-examination, along with
the Defendants’ expert testimony, all which were contrary and undermined Dr. Pomerantz’s
models. After hearing the evidence, the Court finds Dr. Pomerantz’s models did not use suitable
benchmarks and relied on unfounded assumptions. In this case, where the Plan’s philosophy and
investment strategy was so dissimilar to the indexes Dr. Pomerantz chose, his choice of indexes is
fatal to his analysis, and by extension, Plaintiffs’ prima facie case of loss. Moreover, nothing in
Brotherston supports that a loss may be shown by comparing alleged imprudent investments to
funds that cannot be said to be prudent. Id. at 34 (citing Evans v. Akers, 534 F.3d 65, 74 (1st Cir.
2008) (“Losses to a plan from breaches of the duty of prudence may be ascertained, with the help
of expert analysis, by comparing the performance of the imprudent investments with the
performance of a prudently invested portfolio.”)) (emphasis added). Finally, Brotherston did not
concern a scenario where the defendants argued that different models reached inconsistent results
on a fund-by-fund basis, as is the case here.
Accordingly, the Court finds Plaintiffs have failed to prove a prima facie case of loss based
on Dr. Pomerantz’s models.
The Court discredits these models because not only did
Dr. Pomerantz perform only a one-to-one, rather than a range, comparison of funds, he also failed
to isolate the effect of the alleged breach; failed to account for statistical significance between the
performance of the at-issue fund and the alternative; failed to opine on the prudence of any of the
alternatives that he used; mis-mapped risk profiles between the at-issue fund and the alternative;
ignored the nonperformance attributes of funds; and ignored Plan participants’ preferences. Thus,
Plaintiffs’ have failed to meet their burden of proving a prima facie case of loss for the alleged
breaches as calculated by Dr. Pomerantz’s four models.
37
II.
The duty to monitor claim fails because it is derivative of the breach of fiduciary duty
claim.
The Court now turns to Plaintiffs’ second claim presented at trial: that ACS breached its
duty to monitor fiduciaries. Plaintiffs allege that ACS breached its duty to appropriately monitor
its appointed fiduciaries, including the members of the Committee and the Plan Administrator.
“[T]he power to appoint and remove plan fiduciaries implies the duty to monitor appointees to
ensure that their performance is in compliance with the terms of the plan and statutory standards.”
Krueger v. Ameriprise Fin., Inc., 2012 WL 5873825, at *18 (D. Minn. Nov. 20, 2012). To prove
a breach of the duty to monitor, the Plaintiff had to prove that ACS “had knowledge of or
participated in [underlying] fiduciary breaches.” Crocker v. KV Pharm. Co., 782 F. Supp. 2d 760,
787 (E.D. Mo. 2010) (citation omitted). Accordingly, the duty to monitor is wholly derivative of
Count One, and a “derivative claim, such as a claim alleging a breach of the duty to monitor
[fiduciaries], cannot survive without . . . an underlying breach.” Roe v. Arch Coal, Inc., No. 4:15CV-910 (CEJ), 2017 WL 3333928, at *5 (E.D. Mo. Aug. 4, 2017) (citing Brown v. Medtronic,
Inc., 628 F.3d 451, 461 (8th Cir. 2010)). Because the Court found no breach of fiduciary duty, the
Court finds Defendants are not liable under Count Two.
III.
Plaintiffs’ equitable disgorgement claim fails because it requires an underlying
breach of fiduciary duty.
Finally, the Court turns to Plaintiffs’ third claim. Plaintiffs seek any ill-gotten profits
resulting from Defendants’ breaching conduct. Plaintiffs claim that any profits Defendants earned
from their alleged breaches must be returned to the Plan. Under 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a), a breaching
fiduciary must not only “make good … any losses to the plan,” but it also must “restore to such
plan any profits of such fiduciary which have been made through use of assets of the plan by the
fiduciary.” “The plaintiffs cannot prevail unless the breach of fiduciary duty either imposed a loss
38
on the plan or generated a profit for [Defendants].” Wsol v. Fiduciary Mgmt. Assocs., Inc., 266
F.3d 654, 656 (7th Cir. 2001) (citing 29 U.S.C. § 1109(a)) (emphasis added); see also Felber v.
Estate of Regan, 117 F.3d 1084, 1087 (8th Cir. 1997).
Like Plaintiffs’ duty to monitor claim, this claim is contingent on the Court finding
Defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Plan. Because the Court finds Defendants did
not breach any fiduciary duty, Defendants also prevail on Count Three.
Conclusion
The Court finds Plaintiffs have not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that
Defendants breached their fiduciary duties to the Plan. The Court finds in favor of Defendants on
all remaining counts.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Date: January 23, 2019
/s/ Greg Kays
GREG KAYS, CHIEF JUDGE
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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