youngbenefitslawyer Posted February 6 Posted February 6 Company A sponsors a 401(k) plan and there are two participating employers who are currently a part of the same controlled group with Company A. Buyer is purchasing Company A only. The participating employers are not being purchased and Buyer / Seller do not want to create a multiple employer plan by allowing the employers to continue participation post-closing. Can the current plan be spun off into two plans and if so, are there any concerns that the assets are and will continue to be comingled post-closing considering that the participating employers will no longer be a part of Company A's controlled group?
Bri Posted February 6 Posted February 6 As long as Company A employees are made ineligible, to prevent any new benefits from arising for them, their assets should be allowed to linger behind (as a bunch of ex-employees from the ongoing plan sponsors, right?) until the spinoff is executed.
Paul I Posted February 6 Posted February 6 If I understand the situation correctly, we can look at as Companies A, B and C are in a controlled group. Company A sponsors a plan and Companies B and C are participating employers in Company A's plan. There is a Buyer who wants to buy Company A, and does not want to buy Companies B and C. You do not say if the acquisition of Company A by the Buyer is an asset sale or a stock sale. If it is an asset sale, the employees of Company A will be considered to have terminated employment from Company A and been hired as new employees of the Buyer. Company A will continue to exist until it goes out of business. A scenario under these circumstances may be to have either Company B or Company C assume sponsorship of Company A's plan. After the acquisition, the former employees of Company A could take a distribution the former Company A plan (now the B or C plan) including making a rollover their balances into the Buyer's plan. If it is a stock sale, the employees of Company A will not be considered to have terminated employment from Company A. If the goal is not to have a multiple employer plan, then action will need to be taken before closing on the sale. A scenario under these circumstances may be to have either Company B or Company C assume sponsorship of Company A's plan, and to make Company A's employees ineligible to participate in the plan as Bri commented. After the acquisition, the Buyer could arrange a trust-to-trust transfer of the Company A participants' accounts in the former Company A plan (now the B or C plan), into the Buyer's plan. These are just two scenarios out of many. Some key points to keep in mind are: there are more scenarios available before closing than are available after closing. treatment of plans in asset sales generally are simpler that in stock sales. in the chosen path forward for the plan(s), be mindful of the need to coordinate the structure of the associated trust or trusts .
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