Nestle sued over its 401(k)

Nestle sued over its 401(k)
A class-action lawsuit alleges excessive record-keeping and managed account fees
OCT 14, 2020

A new 401(k) lawsuit filed last Friday against Nestle USA targets the administrative and managed accounts fees the plan's participants have paid since 2014.

Unlike most other excessive fee claims filed amid this year's enormous surge in 401(k) litigation, investment management costs are not at issue in the case. Rather, the plaintiffs in the class-action lawsuit cite record-keeping and administrative costs that were allegedly more than twice as expensive as what the nearly $4.3 billion plan could have negotiated.

The managed accounts service, which were also provided by Voya, the record keeper, also had higher fees than similar services available from firms such as Betterment, Vanguard and Charles Schwab, the plaintiffs wrote in the complaint.

“With 39,472 participants in the year 2018, the plan had more participants than 99.97% of the defined contribution plans in the United States,” the complaint read.

“The plan had substantial bargaining power regarding the fees and expenses that were charged against participants’ investments,” the lawsuit stated. “Defendants, however, did not sufficiently attempt to reduce the plan’s expenses or exercise appropriate judgment to monitor each investment option to ensure it was a prudent choice.”

The average per-participant record-keeping and administration fee was $60 per year in the Nestle Plan between 2014 and 2018, according to the lawsuit. Meanwhile, comparably sized 401(k)s have fees of about $28 or less, the plaintiffs stated.

Nestle USA did not respond to a request for comment by deadline.

The law firm representing the plaintiffs and the proposed class, Walcheske & Luzi, filed the claim in U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Wisconsin Green Bay Division.

The case is one of many that have been filed this year against retirement plan sponsors, with plaintiffs’ law firms seeking to cash in on the success achieved during years of prior litigation by firms such as Schlichter Bogard & Denton.

Although mutual fund fees are a common theme in many of the recently filed suits, administrative costs are also frequently cited, and other lawsuits have similarly focused on managed accounts services.

In the Nestle plan’s case, managed account fees were tiered, at 50 basis points on the first $100,000, 40 bps on the next $150,000 and 25 bps on assets in excess of $250,000, according to figures cited in the lawsuit. The plaintiffs point to fees paid in similarly sized 401(k) plans that are significantly lower, as well as overall fees from some providers that range from 25 bps to 30 bps on all managed account assets.

Voya, which is not named as a defendant, has been retained as the Nestle plan’s managed account provider since 2010, according to the complaint.

The plaintiffs brought several claims under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, including alleged breaches of loyalty and prudence for both administrative and managed accounts fees, failure to monitor fiduciaries and prohibited transactions for administrative fees Nestle received from the plan.

Latest News

Robinhood brings AI-powered Cortex to RIAs on TradePMR
Robinhood brings AI-powered Cortex to RIAs on TradePMR

Robinhood is adding Cortex for Advisors across TradePMR, bringing AI-powered portfolio analysis and tax insights to advisors, while executives say regulatory constraints still prevent AI from directly managing client assets.

The real challenge in retirement isn’t saving — it’s spending
The real challenge in retirement isn’t saving — it’s spending

As Americans transition from saving for retirement to spending in retirement, new research suggests sustainable income matters more than account balances.

Wellington Management strikes acquisition deal with Hartford Funds in $1.9B wealth push
Wellington Management strikes acquisition deal with Hartford Funds in $1.9B wealth push

The agreement marks the end of a four-decade sub-advisory partnership while giving Wellington a scaled distribution platform for financial advisors.

How Dispatch's new software soothes the pain of advisor transitions
How Dispatch's new software soothes the pain of advisor transitions

CEO Rob Nance says the industry's first purpose-built transitions platform can compress months-long moves into days, effectively removing a key barrier to independence.

LPL takes big swing at mainstream with PGA marketing deal
LPL takes big swing at mainstream with PGA marketing deal

LPL recently has softened its antipathy to mainstream marketing.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.