What Is A Cash
Balance Plan
A cash balance plan
is a type of defined benefit plan that operates much differently
than other types of retirement plans. This page will provide you
with some general information about how the cash balance plans we
design operate, and the advantages of using a cash balance plan
to help meet your retirement savings objectives.
Most of the cash
balance plans we design are established for the primary benefit
of the owners or executives of a company. Therefore, the contributions
for owners and executives are typically very large with a smaller
contribution provided to staff to meet IRS requirements. During
the plan design, the sponsoring company selects the amount of contribution
for each owner and executive, up to the maximum amount permitted
by law.
Only businesses can
sponsor a cash balance plan, but any business entity may do so.
We provide services for sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs,
nonprofits, and corporations. You don't even need to have any employees
other than yourself.
The number of companies
sponsoring cash balance plans is growing rapidly. Among the reasons
for such rapid growth are:
- Higher anticipated tax rates for
small business owners and professionals
- The increased number of small business
owners who are getting closer to retirement age
- The government's desire to have privately
funded pension plans help fund the retirement of America's workers
- The need for larger retirement contributions
due to market losses in existing retirement accounts that can't
be deducted in defined contribution plans
- The emergence of Cash Balance Plans
as an accepted way of controlling Defined Benefit Plan employee
cost while still maximizing deductions for the owners.
Before setting up
a Cash Balance Plan, you should have a good idea of how they operate
since it works differently than a 401(k) Profit Sharing Plan or
a Traditional Defined Benefit Pension Plan. This is why you may
hear Cash Balance Plans referred to as "Hybrid" Plans.
It generally offers the best of both worlds; the high contribution
limits of a defined benefit plans with the ease of understanding
of a defined contribution plan.
HOW DOES A CASH
BALANCE PLAN WORK?
Under a cash balance plan, a "Hypothetical
Account" is established for each participant. This is not an
account within the plan's trust account. Instead, the plan administrator
maintains the accounts; thus, they are referred to as Hypothetical
Accounts. Contributions are credited to these accounts each year
in accordance with formulas in the plan document. The accounts are
also credited with interest each year based on a rate selected by
the plan sponsor. Typically this rate is a flat percentage between
4% and 5% or it is based on the yield of an index such as the 30
year treasury yield.
When a participant terminates employment, he
or she will be eligible to receive the vested portion of their hypothetical
account balance. A Participant's vested percentage is determined
by the plan document and can be 0% for up to 3 years of service
and then must be 100% upon completion of 3 years.
Changes in Participant
Contributions
The amounts which
can be contributed from year-to-year are subject to complex discrimination
testing. That is, we must be sure that contributions made for highly
compensated individuals bear a reasonable relationship to the amounts
contributed on behalf of individuals who are not highly compensated.
In performing the discrimination test, we are permitted to combine
the cash balance contributions with the contributions the company
is providing in other retirement plans. The amount of the required
contribution depends on employee demographics. Therefore, the contributions
can fluctuate from year to year, but we do our best to minimize
those fluctuations and provide a projection of upcoming contributions
free of charge to our clients so you can make a change if the contributions
for the year are not meeting your company goals.
Restrictions on Changing
Participant Contributions
Once a participant has worked 1,000 hours during
a plan year, the employer must make a contribution on his or her
behalf and cannot amend the plan to lower the amount of the contribution.
This is true even if the participant subsequently terminates employment
during the year. For most full time employees, 1,000 hours will
be reached for a calendar plan year in June.
Plan Amendments to
Change Employee Benefit Accruals
The plan can be amended periodically to permit
different contribution levels, but there are some restrictions on
this. For example:
- Contributions cannot be changed to an amount
that would cause the discrimination test to fail.
- The plan can be amended to increase contributions
but this must be done prior to the end of the year for Highly
Compensated Employees. Non-Highly Compensated Employees can be
increased at any time.
- Plan amendments decreasing contributions
must be made 15 days before any affected participants complete
1,000 hours of service in a plan year.
- The plan is intended to be permanent
defined benefit plan and not a deferral plan, so amending the
plan to increase and decrease contributions every year is not
allowed. A general rule of thumb is that an amendment should be
committed to for at least 3 years, but there are exceptions for
certain unforeseeable business circumstances.
Plan Investments
Individual participants are not able to direct
the investment of their account -- plan assets will be pooled and
invested by the trustee (usually the company owner or owners). The
hypothetical accounts of the participants will be credited with
interest at a rate guaranteed by the plan document. If the actual
trust earnings exceed the guaranteed rate, the excess will be used
to reduce future employer contributions. This will not affect the
amount credited to the participants' accounts. That is, the account
will increase according to the plan's schedule and the increase
will be funded partially from employer contributions and partially
from the excess earnings.
Employer Contribution
and the Contributions to Participant Accounts
Typically, the employer contribution will be
different from the amounts added to the accounts. This is primarily
due to differences between the interest that is credited to the
accounts and the return on the plan's investments, but can also
be due to vesting or changes in IRS required assumptions.
Payment of Hypothetical
Accounts
In general, the hypothetical account in a cash
balance plan can be paid as a lump-sum distribution to a participant
upon death, disability, retirement, or termination of service. If
the value of the account exceeds $5,000, the participant must also
be given the option to elect payment of an annuity in lieu of a
lump-sum. Payment of a lump-sum distribution may be restricted if
plan assets are not sufficient. For this purpose, the accounts are
valued using rates of interest and mortality prescribed by the Internal
Revenue Service. If assets are not sufficient, the employee may
be restricted to receiving only the annuity form of payment or waiting
until assets are sufficient to take a lump sum. If the contribution
we recommend each year is deposited, such restrictions rarely occur.
PBGC Insurance Premiums
In general, the benefits in cash balance plans
are insured by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation ("PBGC");
however, if the company is a professional service firm with fewer
than 26 active participants, the plan is not covered by PBGC. Plans
that are covered by PBGC insurance must pay a premium to the PBGC
each year ($35 per participant in 2010). If plan investments do
not perform adequately or the plan sponsor chooses to make less
than the recommended contribution, the plan could have unfunded
benefit liabilities. Unfunded benefit liabilities will increase
the amount of premium that must be paid.
Tax Deductions and
Allocation of Plan Contributions
How the tax deduction for the contributions
to a Cash Balance Plan is taken depends on the entity of the plan
sponsor.
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