Insperity recently replaced some investment options in the 401(k) with seemingly better funds. Since we're in the Stocks forum I'll only talk about one fund: BNY Mellon S&P 500 Index Fund. It has replaced Fidelity Spartan 500 Index Fund (FUSEX) as the only index fund in the plan. Sure, with ER of 0.05% the fund looks like a slightly better option than FUSEX (ER 0.1%). However, the fund only looks like a mutual fund - it is set up as a Collective Investment Trust. I did some reading about CITs and in a nutshell low ER is the only positive thing with these funds. The expenses are low, but for all the bad reasons:
1. CITs are not publicly traded, don’t have ticker symbols, and hence are harder to research
2. CITs are not regulated by SEC
3. CITs are fairly new and don’t have the sufficient track record to assess their suitability
4. Because of #1 CITs cannot be rolled over in-kind to an IRA or to another 401(k) – one would ave to liquidate their CIT positions and rollover cash.
The above points are surely alarming, but it got even more interesting when I looked at the information sheet for the fund (I don't think it has a prospectus):
A. Investment Policy: The objective of the Fund is to track the performance of the S&P 500® Index. In meeting this objective, the Fund may invest in securities and a combination of other collective funds that together are designed to track the performance of the S&P 500 Index.
The Fund may also invest in the EB Temporary Investment Fund.
To the extent a portion of the Fund is invested in another collective fund, the terms of that collective fund will be incorporated by reference.
Long and short positions in financial futures may be used to obtain exposure, to provide liquidity for cash flows, to hedge dividend accruals or for other purposes that facilitate meeting the Fund’s objective.
Cash investments or assets used as collateral underlying the derivatives positions may be comprised of other collective funds and short to medium-term debt of investment grade that may include, without limitation, Treasury bills and notes, corporate obligations, commercial paper (including paper issued or resold under Section 3(a)(3), Section 4(2) and Rule 144A of the Securities Act of 1933), repurchase agreements, and obligations of government sponsored enterprises.
The Fund may utilize short settling.
The Fund will not participate in The Bank of New York Mellon’s securities lending programs.
I'm not an expert in CITs, but to me this beast doesn't really look like an "index fund". The only consolation is they won't lend the securities (thank you very much for that, BNY). I can do nothing about my existing 401(k) balance since no rollover to IRA was allowed. I may have to keep some %% of the balance in this fund and put the rest into PTRAX (PIMCO Total Return) and a TIPS fund (everything else is actively-managed high-espense crap from American Funds and the likes). But I really don't see a point in adding any new money to this plan. I am maxing out our Roth IRAs and my HSA account (with a brokerage window at TD Ameritrade).
I am thinking about putting additional money into my taxable account instead of 401(k), although I would be missing on the tax-free growth opportunity in this case. Another solution could be investing in stocks in an IRA and use PTRAX in 401(k) as a combined bond+cash bucket (not a good LTT replacement, but...)
What would you folks do?
