The Right Combination for Your Retirement Plan
July 2015 Newsletter
Although not a new design, there has been renewed
interest in the "combo plan" as a way for higher income business owners to
turbocharge their retirement savings. The term "combo plan" generally refers to
the combination of a defined contribution plan (usually a 401(k) profit sharing
plan) and a defined benefit plan (usually a cash balance plan). The combined
benefits in both plans are tested together to allow certain owners or key
individuals to receive significantly larger amounts without breaking the bank in
contributions to the employees.
Sounds great, right? Sure, but there are several factors that are important
to consider in determining whether the combo plan arrangement is right for you.
Some of the concepts can be a little tricky, so we will take a look at them
using an example.
Setting the Stage
Drs. Suffering, Pain, Agony and Misery have a medical practice—SPAM, PC. In
addition to themselves, they have six employees and currently sponsor a
cross-tested, safe harbor 401(k) profit sharing plan. Each of the doctors
maximizes his or her deferrals. In addition to the 3% safe harbor contribution,
the practice makes profit sharing contributions of 2% of pay to the employees
(bringing the total to 5%) and enough for each of the doctors to reach the
defined contribution plan maximum limit ($53,000 for 2015).
The SPAM doctors decide that they would like to contribute an additional
$100,000 per year each, so they call their TPA/actuary to find out if that is
possible. Enter the combo plan as the possible solution.
The Defined Benefit Component
As noted above, the defined benefit part of the equation is usually what is
called a cash balance plan. It is important to remember that a cash balance plan
is a defined benefit plan in every way. That means it is subject to all the
regular defined benefit rules, including annual funding requirements, actuarial
valuations, etc.
The key difference is in the way the benefit is expressed—in the form of a
guaranteed "hypothetical account" rather than what can be perceived as an
esoteric formula based on years of service and average compensation. The
hypothetical account is adjusted annually for guaranteed contribution credits
and interest credits, both of which must be specified in the plan document.
Another reason cash balance plans have become the go-to is that they provide
"age-neutral" benefits which reduces volatility. Older employees do not require
higher contributions than younger employees which is one of the disadvantages of
a traditional defined benefit plan.
Based on this information, our friends at SPAM decide to go with a cash
balance plan. In addition to how the assets are invested, there are several
critical decisions the doctors must make that will determine the levels of
overall contributions:
- Who is eligible for/who will be covered by the plan?
- How will interest be credited to participants' hypothetical accounts?
- What benefit levels are desired and/or required to pass all the
nondiscrimination tests?
Eligibility
All defined benefit plans are subject to a minimum participation test, which
requires at least 40% of the eligible participants receive a "meaningful"
benefit. There are two exceptions: no more than 50 participants have to
receive it; and if there are at least two eligible participants, they both must
receive it. Let's look at several examples:
- SPAM has 10 eligibles: At least 4 must receive meaningful
benefits.
- Company B has 200 eligibles: At least 50 must receive meaningful
benefits from the defined benefit or cash balance plan.
- Company C has 2 eligibles: Both employees must receive meaningful
benefits.
Sometimes the cash balance plan is designed with various job classes
excluded. For example, if SPAM excludes all job classes other than doctors, the
plan would cover 40% of their eligible employees and pass the minimum
participation test.
The challenge is that this can create volatility in small companies. Let's
say the SPAM cash balance plan covers only the doctors, which obviously appeals
to them. In year two, they increase their staff to 11 or 12, which means one
additional employee must be brought into the cash balance plan. Now, one of the
main selling features for the plan, that it only covers the doctors, has already
fallen apart. It can also be difficult to explain to employees why some of them
are covered in a second plan while others are not.
OK, by now you must be asking yourself, "So what's a meaningful benefit?"
There is no formal guidance on this, but the IRS takes the position it is
meaningful if it provides a benefit at retirement of at least 0.5% of
compensation.
In a cash balance plan this does not mean a current contribution credit of
0.5% of compensation is meaningful! Rather, it must be accumulated to
retirement and converted to a benefit for this test, so the amount it takes to
be meaningful depends on the age and salary of the employee. For a young,
lower-paid employee, a credit of $750 may be meaningful but for an older, very
highly-paid employee it might take $10,000.
Crediting Interest
You will need to decide what interest crediting rate to select for the plan,
which is an issue that warrants an entire article all on its own. In the
interest of brevity, suffice it to say that it should tie into the trustees'
investment policy, tolerance for volatility and losses and understanding of some
of the more advanced options available. Often in small combo plans like that of
SPAM's, a low flat crediting rate of 3%–5% is used, and the trustees will invest
the funds fairly conservatively to avoid the possibility of large losses.
Contributions
The SPAM doctors have decided the cash balance contribution credits will be
$100,000 for each doctor and $1,000 to each of the other six participants.
Sounds simple…what else is there to discuss? Lots, actually.
One of the first things to understand is that the cash balance plan will
never be able to satisfy the nondiscrimination requirements on its own. It is
part of a combo plan design, after all, so it will have to rely on contributions
for the six employees in the profit sharing plan to pass.
The TPA/actuary accumulates the cash balance credits and the profit sharing
allocations to retirement, converts them to benefits, compares them to salaries
and tests them to confirm they are not discriminatory. That means those profit
sharing contributions for the staff become required as long as the cash balance
plan exists.
There is also a special "gateway" requirement that requires the staff to
receive a minimum combined contribution of between 5%–7.5% of salary. In the
typical combo plan the gateway usually translates to a required profit sharing
contribution for the staff of about 6%–7% of pay. This only works if the staff,
on average, is younger than the principals who are receiving the higher amounts.
Top Heavy Minimums
In most cases a combo plan for a small group will be top heavy (meaning that
more than 60% of the combined benefits are for the owners and officers), and
that triggers certain minimum contribution requirements. It is always best to
provide this minimum in the profit sharing plan, which amounts to 5% of pay.
Since the gateway amount already exceeds 5%, using this approach is a no-brainer
as they say.
Limits on Tax Deductions
Another government agency, the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, oversees
certain aspects of defined benefit plans; however, plans sponsored by
professional organizations like SPAM, who have fewer than 25 employees, are
generally not subject to that oversight.
Plans covered by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation do not have any
additional limits on the tax deductions they can take for plan contributions,
but those not covered are subject to a special combo plan deduction limit. It
can get a bit complicated, but here is the gist:
- If the aggregate profit sharing contribution exceeds 6% of pay, then the
combined cash balance and profit sharing contribution the company can deduct
cannot exceed 31% of pay.
- If the profit sharing does not exceed 6%, there is no combined limit.
Back to SPAM. Given the size of the cash balance credits being provided to
the four doctors, the design cannot work if constrained by the 31% deduction
limit. That means the total profit sharing contribution cannot exceed 6% of pay.
However, since the profit sharing contribution to the staff may be 7% of pay or
more, the doctors must receive less than 6% in order to keep the aggregate
amount at the overall 6% limit.
Because of this dynamic a combo plan design can only work if the profit
sharing plan allows for different levels of allocations by group or by
individual participant.
Flexibility
There are a couple of defined benefit myths that need to be dispelled:
- Once the plan is set up the contribution amount can't be changed.
- The plan must exist for at least five years or could be disqualified.
Both of these statements are incorrect. A defined benefit plan can be amended
at any time (even in year two) to decrease or freeze the benefit. But as with
any defined benefit plan, this amendment can only be made prospectively, before
the credit has already been accrued for the year.
One of the requirements for any qualified plan is that the intention has to
be that the plan is permanent at the time it is established. This does not mean
a plan cannot be terminated within a few years if the business is sold, the
principals get sick, the economy goes into recession, etc. It just means that
when the plan is set up, the sponsor should intend for it to be permanent. This
is why you will hear the mantra that the plan should exist for five years.
Funding Requirements
While there is flexibility to amend a defined benefit plan prospectively, you
do not have discretion as to whether you make a contribution in a given year
like you do with a stand-alone profit sharing plan. There will be a minimum
amount that must be contributed each year. The actuary will calculate this
amount, and failure to make the contribution timely results in some potentially
expensive excise taxes payable to the IRS.
Conclusion
There are many different ways to design combo plans and not every client will
be as straightforward as our friends at SPAM, PC. The important thing is to
always convey your specific objectives to your TPA and then for them to design
the simplest, most stable plan that meets those objectives.
This newsletter is intended to provide general
information on matters of interest in the area of qualified retirement plans and
is distributed with the understanding that the publisher and distributor are not
rendering legal, tax or other professional advice. Readers should not act or
rely on any information in this newsletter without first seeking the advice of
an independent tax advisor such as an attorney or CPA.
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