No. 2 at EBSA moves to lead stable value at Prudential

NOV 18, 2012
Michael L. Davis, second-in-command at the Labor Department's Employee Benefits Security Administration, has become the head of Prudential Financial Inc.'s stable-value business — sparking chatter that the insurer is gearing up for potential regulatory developments. Mr. Davis started his new job Nov. 12. Based in Woodbridge, N.J., the insurer's hub for stable-value operations, he reports to Jamie Kalamarides, senior vice president and head of Prudential Retirement's institutional investment solutions. In a statement, Mr. Kalamarides cited Mr. Davis' “strong experience in the financial services industry and regulatory environment” as keys to helping the firm expand the stable-value business.

"TWO WAYS FOR THIS TO GO'

But retirement industry insiders speculated that Mr. Davis' hiring indicates that Prudential is preparing for stable value to become a focal point of the Labor Department's retirement policy. Marcia Wagner, managing director at The Wagner Law Group, wondered whether Mr. Davis believed that the department could be convinced that stable-value funds could be a qualified default investment alternative for retirement plans. “There are two ways for this to go: It could be better for stable value and end up back on the QDIA shortlist,” Ms. Wagner said. “Or it could get worse. Stable value will be more regulated and more scrutinized. It could be either one; it's unclear.” Jason C. Roberts, chief executive of the Pension Resource Institute LLC, said that there has been buzz among service providers that the Labor Department could turn its attention toward advisers and plan sponsors' due diligence in selecting stable value.

"BRING INSIGHT'

Mr. Davis' expertise may contribute to what Prudential can do to educate distributors as well as plan sponsors. “How do you get the plan sponsor comfortable in terms of documentation, prudent review and selection of the product?” Mr. Roberts said. Mr. Davis “can bring insight to both sides and facilitate adoption from the distribution's perspective, and he can also help through communication with the plan sponsor,” he said. Dawn Kelly, spokeswoman at Prudential, declined to comment on the speculation; DOL spokesman Jason Surbey also declined to comment. Experts agree that bringing Mr. Davis on board was a major coup for Prudential. An alumnus of J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Mr. Davis was seen as understanding the needs of service providers as the DOL produced a volley of disclosure regulations and proposed a rule redefining “fiduciary.” He “was always a very pragmatic regulator in terms of being accessible to the service provider community and receptive to comments,” Mr. Roberts said. “He wasn't going to tell you what you wanted to hear, but he would listen.” “He was a regulator; he knows how the EBSA thinks,” Ms. Wagner said. [email protected] Twitter: @darla_mercado

Latest News

More than a quarter of moms are planning to opt out of Trump accounts, survey finds
More than a quarter of moms are planning to opt out of Trump accounts, survey finds

"I just feel like I can get a lot further [by] opening a 529 account," said one respondent to the BabyCenter survey on Trump accounts.

US household wealth grows more liquid than global peers
US household wealth grows more liquid than global peers

UBS data show American net worth is shifting from property to cash and funds faster than in seven other wealthy nations.

UHY's Hudson Valley deal boosts wealth practice to $1.5B
UHY's Hudson Valley deal boosts wealth practice to $1.5B

RBT CPAs combination lifts assets at UHY's fledgling RIA unit more than tenfold in the firm's first year.

House passes bipartisan bill to shield seniors from investment fraud
House passes bipartisan bill to shield seniors from investment fraud

Financial services trade groups back new authority letting mutual funds pause suspicious redemptions from vulnerable investors

Texas man says SEC and fund could make him pay twice
Texas man says SEC and fund could make him pay twice

A $141M judgment and a federal asset freeze collide over one shrinking pool

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.