Exnyer. Do you know who and what a 401k plan sponsor is?
No? It is an employer who offers the 401k plan to its employees. In a real clear manner let me explain this yet again.
The plan sponsor (employer) is responsible for choosing the plan, the plan administrator / manager, AND for deciding which investments will be offered through or removed from the plan. In most cases if a fund option is removed it's replaced with a suitable well performing option.
Originally Posted by Zanzibar789
Douchbag, who and what a plan sponsor is is a separate issue from fiduciary responsibility.
FYI, I am an owner of a business and have set up the 401K plan for our company. So, I KNOW what i am talking about.
An employer (i.e., plan sponsor) nearly always hires a third party administrator (TPA) to operate the 401K plan and manage the portfolio. Failure to hire a competent TPS leaves the employer open to a lawsuit if anything goes wrong. I don't know of any company (especially small and midsized) that tries to manage the 401K portfolio itself. The liability is too great.
However, whether the employer hires a TPA or tries to do it itself, the employer cannot exclude stocks for its OWN benefit, even if, as you try to say, it substitutes equally good stocks.
First off, I don't know how you can determine another stock is equally good, especially over the long-run.
Pharma stocks have historically done well and, as our population ages, will continue to do well for years to come. How are you going to find a equal substitute for that?
If an employee wants to invest 30% of her 401k fund in pharma stocks because she expects Pfizer, Merck, and all the rest will do well over the next 20 years, but the employer has excluded pharma stocks because of the employer's religious beliefs, the employer BREACHES ITS FIDUCIARY DUTY.
Why?
Because the employer is acting for its own (religious-based) benefit, rather than operating EXCLUSIVELY for the benefit of the employee.
And that is why NOBODY does what you are saying HL should have done.
HL employees can invest their 401k money in pharma stock because HL does not dare breach it fiduciary responsibility by excluding such stock from the plan.
You are so desperate to prove that HL is hypocritical for refusing to use its own money to provide abortion pills as part of the health care plan while "allowing" employees to use their own money to invest in pharma stocks that you completely ignore the reason way HL cannot legally do that.
Now, if you reply, post some FACTUAL links that indicate that HL could have excluded pharma stocks without breaching its fiduciary responsibility.