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Posted

 

We have a plan that has moved from a group variable annuity to a mutual fund based investment arrangement.  Do I need to file a schedule D if the plan only has mutual funds? As from our knowledge it does not meet the 4 required entities to file a schedule D.

Posted

If the plan invested in mutual funds at all times throughout the plan year, then you do not need a Schedule D.  If the plan invested at any time during the plan year in any of the investment types CCT, PSA, MTIA, 103-12 IE, then you will need to a Schedule D for that plan year.

Posted

Beyond Paul I’s caution about whether there was a direct-filing entity investment any time in the reported-on year, consider also:

Some people (less detail-oriented than FishOn) use the lingo “mutual fund” without distinguishing between SEC-registered shares of a company or trust registered with the SEC under the Investment Company Act of 1940

and an investment fund of some other kind, including a bank’s or trust company’s collective investment trust fund or another arrangement that might be a direct-filing entity.

A plan’s administrator should distinguish, for each investment fund, exactly which kind of fund the plan invests in. Not all reports show the classifications.

Peter Gulia PC

Fiduciary Guidance Counsel

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

215-732-1552

Peter@FiduciaryGuidanceCounsel.com

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