Tinman Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago Would love an opinion on an issue with a panicky plan sponsor: 😄 Recordkeeper paid advisory fees to a financial services company for the first three quarters of 2025. The financial services company paid the advisor fee to the advisor for the plan. Advisor left the service of the financial services company in Q4 of 2025 and moved to financial services company #2. Plan Sponsor and financial svcs company have a dispute and financial services company agrees to refund advisory fees for Q1-Q3 2025 ($6500) Here's the issue - financial service company made check out to the plan sponsor's company, not to the plan. Plan sponsor then deposited the check into their corporate bank account. Do we have a prohibited transaction situation? Or can the money just get pulled from the corp bank acct, put back into the plan (participant accounts) and document what occurred in the plan records and move on?
Bill Presson Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago Have the plan sponsor return the money to the advisory firm and have them reissue a check (or ACH) to the plan. William C. Presson, ERPA, QPA, QKA bill.presson@gmail.com C 205.994.4070
Peter Gulia Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago A plan fiduciary might be reluctant to send money back to the investment-advisory firm because that firm might change its mind about the adjustment it provided. For that or another reason, a plan fiduciary might prefer getting the money from the plan-sponsor company. The company might add to the mistakenly deposited amount an amount that follows a good-faith estimate of interest or the time value of money for the use of the money that did not belong to the company. If the company and the plan fiduciaries are agreed on a correction, they might do one write-up to document the correction. If there is a nonexempt prohibited transaction, a disqualified person, never the plan, owes the excise tax. So, the company might decide whether it files or omits an excise tax return. This is not advice to anyone. Bill Presson 1 Peter Gulia PC Fiduciary Guidance Counsel Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 215-732-1552 Peter@FiduciaryGuidanceCounsel.com
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