Jump to content

TaxLawyer1978

Inactive
  • Posts

    33
  • Joined

  • Last visited

About TaxLawyer1978

  • Birthday 05/16/1978

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

  1. Luke Bailey, what do you mean by adopt a plan? What kind of a plan do you have in mind? When I think of a plan, I'm thinking the 403b/DC plan.
  2. ESOP guy, this is a very large account, not a 401k plan, but DC and TDA plans. Current trustee/recordkeeper is MetLife. Moving over to Prudential, with Prudential Bank & Trust Company being the new record keepr and FSB being the new Trustee. I assume that will require resolutions, based on what you're saying. That appears to be what Prudential said to the client but I haven't spoken to them yet. Where would I find info on the appropriate notices that need to go out to the participants? Thanks
  3. Thanks. This is even though we're moving funds from one trust to another?
  4. My client is replacing their current plan Recordkeeper and Trustee (MetLIfe) and switching to another company. What documents do I need to prepare to effectuate that? Is it just resolutions regarding the plan? Do all participants have to approve this reconversion? Never done this before. Thanks
  5. DOL has issued guidance that 2 or more plans of the same plan sponsor are not a party in interest; therefore not a 406(a)(1) issue. It's a fiduciary issue under 406(b)(2), and since there is no provision parallel to 406(b)(2) in 4975, the incline is no excise tax.
  6. I have a 406(b)(2) transaction (payment of plan expenses out of the wrong plan). Instructions for filing the VFCP indicate that you can be exempt from the excise tax if you fall under the PTE 2002-51, which we don't (2002-51 says exemption applies for payment of settlor expenses; our expenses are administrative non-settlor expenses). We will file the 5500 Schedule G. Do we need to file the 5330 and are we subject to excise tax under 4975? 4975 does not list a provision parallel to 406(b)(2) as a prohibited transaction subject to the excise tax. Is it possible to file the VFCP and report the transaction on the 5500 but not be subject to the excise tax and not have to file the 5330? Note instructions for the 5330 under prohibited transactions do not list the transaction listed under 406(b)(2). Any help appreciated. Thanks.
  7. The 403(b) plan is a non-ERISA plan. The question is whether signing a form advising if the employee has any loans in the plan invalidates the safe harbor for non-ERISA plans
  8. Invoices were for legal fees related to the plans (tax qualification issues). Paid out of the DC plan but approximately half of the legal fees related to the DB and TDA plans. All plans covered same employers (multiple entities) of which employees can be participants in the plans. Prohibited transactions include: use of assets by or for the benefit of a disqualified person. And "disqualified person" includes "an employer, any of those employees are covered by the plan."
  9. Client had a non-ERISA TDA (403(b)) plan. The plan did not/does not offer loans. The client converted the plan to an ERISA plan in 2009. An employee who is a participant in the plan applied for a loan with MetLife. MetLife sent the client a form to sign as the plan administrator. The form relates to the private loan (outside the plan), which MetLife says it will not approve for the employee if she has a loan in a current plan with the client because she is still employed with them. Can client sign the form as the plan administrator of the current TDA plan and say the employee does not have loans? OR will this invalidate the MOA non-ERISA status?
  10. Client has 3 plans - a DC plan, DB plan and a TDA plan. They paid out legal invoices related to all three plans out of one of the plans' unallocated account. All plans cover same employees. Is this a prohibited transaction?
  11. An employer currently charges its employees 25% of the health premiums, and pays the other 75%. Going forward, the employer wants to charge any new incoming employees 50% for health premiums, but have the existing employees continue paying the 25%. That would result in the existing employees getting 75% of premiums as employer contribution, while new employees would only be getting 50%. Is this permissible? Or is it discrimination?
  12. Are there any restrictions on what types of investments can a money purchase plan invest in? Can you loan money out of the plan if it's for investment purposes and not for extraordinary circumstances? Thanks
  13. What if the partner is simply "on the books" but getting no compensation? Do we err on the cautious side and consider him "retired"? I'd say yes but getting push back
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Terms of Use