By Christopher B. Tobe, CFA, CAIA
Annuities should not be allowed in 401(k)s. ERISA created the concept of Prohibited Transactions to prohibit any investments with clear Conflicts of Interest. I testified to the ERISA Advisory Council – US Department of Labor in July of 2024 on the danger of allowing annuities to be hidden inside of Target Date Funds. [i] I have co-written a paper with Economics Professor Tom Lambert on the excessive risks of annuities.[ii]
Perhaps with the exception of Crypto and Private Equity no investment better describes what should be a prohibited transaction more than annuity contracts.
Annuities are a Fiduciary Breach for 4 basic reasons.[iii]
- Single Entity Credit Risk
- Single Entity Liquidity Risk
- Hidden fees spread and expenses
- Structure -weak cherry-picked state regulated contracts, not securities and useless reserves
So why do we still see annuities in 401k plans? The reason is intense lobbying by the insurance industry, that has blocked any transparency or oversight.
Annuity providers claim to be barely legal by relying on an Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE 84-4) a “get out of jail free card” obtained by $millions of lobbying by the insurance industry.
Biden Fiduciary Rule
The new Biden Fiduciary rule would provide transparency that would further expose these annuity products’ conflicts of interests. The insurance industry has forue shopped in Texas in the Fifth Circuit for judges who agree with blocking transparency to block it for now.
At the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Connections Conference in Washington October 2024, DOL officials called out annuities as prohibited transactions. [iv] Ali Khawar, principal deputy assistant secretary for the Employee Benefits Security Administration, laid out the reasons why the Biden Labor Department continues to fight for a fiduciary rule ““To me it continues to be kind of nonsensical that you’re expecting any of your clients to walk into someone’s office and have in their head: ‘I’m dealing with this person who’s going to sell insurance to me, this person is relying on [Prohibited Transaction Exemption] PTE 84-24, not [PTE] 2020-02. Those things shouldn’t mean anything to the average American. And we shouldn’t expect them to.”
broker-dealer space transformed what it means to be in the advice market,” Khawar said. “When we looked at the insurance market, though, we didn’t quite see the same thing.”
Under the National Association of Insurance Commissioners’ model rule, for example, “compensation is not considered a conflict of interest,” Khawar said. “So there are pretty stark differences between what you see in the CFP standard, the Reg BI standard, and what has now been adopted by almost every state, one notable exception of New York, which has adopted a standard that is significantly tougher than the NAIC model rule.” [v] That process is “the CFP standard, the DOL standard, it’s the SEC standard for investment advisors and it’s Reg BI,” Reish continued. What it’s not? “The NAIC model rule,” Reish said.
“The NAIC model rule does not require the comparative analysis[vi]
Khawar added: “It’s not going to matter whether you’re providing advice about an annuity, a variable annuity, fixed income annuity, indexed annuity, security or not.” The goal with the 2024 rule, Khawar added, is to “have a common standard across the retirement landscape so that all retirement investors would be able to make sure that when someone is marketing up front best-interest advice, that that’s the standard they’d be held to by the regulator and the customer.”
Under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, “being a fiduciary is critical to the central question of whether or not the law or consumer protections have fully kicked in or not,” Khawar added.
The Government Accounting Office wrote a piece in August in support of the Biden Fiduciary rule. They saw the problem as so severe that they suggested that IRS step in to help the DOL Better Oversee Conflicts of Interest Between Fiduciaries and Investors especially in the Insurance Annuity Area. [vii] Senator Elizabeth Warren in defense of the Biden Fiduciary rule prepared a report on the numerous conflicts of interest in annuity commissions and kickbacks. [viii]
Annuities days of hiding behind PTE 84-4 are over
Prohibited transaction exemptions are subject to meeting certain requirements. They include
- The Impartial Conduct Standards.
- Written Disclosures.
- Policies and Procedures
- Annual Retrospective Review and Report
The Impartial Conduct Standards have 4 major obligations.
A. Care Obligation
B. Loyalty Obligation
C. Reasonable compensation limitation
D. No materially misleading statements (including by omission)
Care Obligation
This obligation reflects the care, skill, prudence, and diligence – similar to Prudent Person Fiduciary standard. Diversification is one of the most basic fiduciary duties. Fixed annuities flunk this with single entity credit and liquidity risk. Diligence is nearly impossible with misleading nontransparent contracts, and the lack of plan/participant ownership of securities. The Federal Reserve in 1992 exposed the weak state regulatory and reserve claims.[ix]
Loyalty Obligation
Annuity contracts are designed to avoid all fiduciary obligation with no loyalty to participants. Secret kickback and commissions place the financial interests of the Insurers and their affiliates over those of retirement investors.[x]
The exemption requires the advisor to show their loyalty with a “Fiduciary Acknowledgement Disclosure.” Annuity contracts avoid any fiduciary language or responsibility.
Reasonable compensation limitation
Annuities have a total lack of disclosure of profits, fees and compensation. They have secret kickback commissions.
A number of lawsuits have settled with claims of excessive secret fees and spreads. An Insurance executive bragged at a conference of fees over 200 basis points (2%) in 2013. [xi]
No materially misleading statements (including by omission)
Annuities have numerous material misleading statements, including the total lack of disclosure of spread/fees. They claim principal protection, but some fixed annuity contracts recently have broken the buck and violated their contracts. The written disclosures under weak state regulations omit critical information on risks and fees.
Most plans with annuities do not have Investment policy statements, since most fixed annuities would flunk them on diversity and transparency and not be allowed. Annuities cannot provide the transparency to follow CFA Institute Global Performance Standards (GIPS) so they do not comply.[xii] Most 401(k) committees with insurance products do not review such annuity products, since they clueless on what they are. Consultants for plans with annuities do not review the annuities most of the time since they are conflicted and they themselves receive kickbacks from annuity providers.
Annuities as a Prohibited Transaction
Annuities hide most of their compensation. They are typically secret no bid contracts with no transparency and numerous conflicts of interest. They are subject to weak state regulations (sometimes categorized as NAIC guidelines). Many times they are a party of interest and shift profits from annuities to make other fees appear smaller.
Annuities are clearly prohibited transactions, but have used their lobbying power in Washington and in states to exempt themselves from all accountability.
[i] https://commonsense401kproject.com/2024/07/31/chris-tobe-dol-testimony/
[ii] https://commonsense401kproject.com/2024/03/26/just-how-safe-are-safe-annuity-retirement-products-new-paper-shows-annuity-risks-are-too-high-for-any-fiduciary/
[iii] https://commonsense401kproject.com/2022/05/11/annuities-are-a-fiduciary-breach/
[iv] https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2024/10/07/top-dol-official-sees-a-nonsensical-reality-at-heart-of-fiduciary-fight/
[v] https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2024/10/07/top-dol-official-sees-a-nonsensical-reality-at-heart-of-fiduciary-fight/
[vi] https://www.thinkadvisor.com/2024/10/07/top-dol-official-sees-a-nonsensical-reality-at-heart-of-fiduciary-fight/
[vii] GAOJuly24 Retirement Investments: Agencies Can Better Oversee Conflicts of Interest Between Fiduciaries and Investors
[viii] Warren Study – Annuity kickbacks
Secret kickback commissions https://consumerfed.org/annuity-industry-kickbacks-cost-retirement-savers-billions/
[ix] Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Summer 1992 Todd, Wallace SPDA’s and GIC’s http://www.minneapolisfed.org/research/QR/QR1631.pdf
[x] https://consumerfed.org/annuity-industry-kickbacks-cost-retirement-savers-billions/
[xi] https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2013-03-06/prudential-says-annuity-fees-would-make-bankers-dance?embedded-checkout=true
[xii] https://commonsense401kproject.com/2023/02/01/401k-plan-sponsors-should-look-to-cfa-code-for-investment-governance/









