The Light at the End of the Tunnel: the IFDA/Merrill Lynch Settlement

For the past three and half years, many Illinois funeral homes teetered on the brink of financial crisis when the IFDA master trust was forced to write down the value of preneed accounts invested in a special tax exempt fund. As reported last week by the NFDA’s Memorial Business Journal*, the “new” IFDA has negotiated settlements that could restore a significant portion of the write down of the tax-exempt fund. Credit is due to those funeral directors who made a commitment to change the leadership at the association.

The settlement of a class action suit must be approved before funds can be distributed. A hearing on the settlement has been scheduled for June 12th.

The larger of the two settlement funds will be distributed pursuant to Paragraph 4 of the Consent Order (page 13) approved by Illinois Secretary of State. The Consent Order defines “Eligible Pre-Need Contracts” as a contract that was not only subject to the value write-down, but also outstanding as of July 31, 2010. This definition will exclude preneed contracts that were written down in value, but serviced prior to July 31, 2010. In contrast to the settlement administered last year by the Illinois Secretary of State, these settlements will be paid to the trustee instead of the funeral homes.

The terms of the class action lawsuit settlement agreement will govern how that fund is to be distributed.

*"Reprinted with permission from the February 23, 2012 issue of the Memorial Business Journal. To subscribe please call 609-815-8145."
 

Preneed Fund Manager: Is your O&E coverage current?

Many state preneed regulators share the point of view that the payments made toward a preneed contract belong to the consumer until the prearranged funeral is provided. This perspective was adopted by the California Attorney General in its Eighth Cause of Action brought against the California Funeral Directors Association and its Master Trust. The AG criticizes the CFDA for investment decisions that are fairly representative of those taken by the industry as a whole.

Early on, the CMT relied upon bond funds that specialized in zero coupon government bonds. The AG points out that U.S. Treasury Bonds and similar bond funds outperformed the CMT at less risk and with lower fees.

When the bond market crashed in 2001, the CMT experienced substantial investment losses and changed investment course. The CMT began diversifying, and purchasing mortgaged back securities, foreign bonds and notes, corporate asset-backed securities and other types of securities. The AG criticizes these investments by stating “these types of investments are not insured bank accounts, are not bonds that are legal investments for commercial bank (sections 1001 et seq. of the Financial Code lists certain legal investments for commercial banks), are not government bonds, and do not comply with the Uniform Prudent Investor Act (as discussed below).”

The AG goes on to argue that the investment policies of the CMT should be set by the risk and return objectives of the preneed contract beneficiaries, and faults the defendants for having set investment policies based on their own needs.

Other states’ preneed regulators (and cemetery regulators) share the California AG’s point of view. It is common to hear a regulator characterize the preneed trust as a depository account or to express the belief the industry would be better off if preneed funding were left to the insurance companies. These regulators need to take the blinders off.

The CMT, like so many preneed trusts, went into tax exempt investments after 1988 because of Revenue Rul. 87-127. The Internal Revenue Service pushed for an income reporting method that proved impractical and burdensome. To compound the situation, the IRS applied the ruling retroactively to certain states. California was one of those states. Prior to the ruling, funeral homes had no reason to require the consumer’s social security number when selling a preneed contract. Consequently, many California trustees could not comply with the ruling with regard to existing contracts.

The ruling required grantor statements to be sent to consumers, and the consumers complained. So, funeral homes instructed their preneed fiduciaries to go into anything that didn’t require a grantor statement. While the CMT went to zero coupon bonds, the IFDA went into the poorly conceived key man insurance. Other trusts went into annuities. Various approaches were taken because the IRS could not provide reporting guidance once it changed the rules.

In stating that the preneed funds must be invested pursuant to the contract beneficiary’s objectives, the California AG has ignored the fact that a majority of these preneed contracts are probably guaranteed. Under that arrangement, the funeral home has assumed the investment risk. From a practical approach, how would the investment advisor determine the objectives of the thousands of preneed beneficiaries? In a prior post, this blog reported about an Illinois contract beneficiary’s complaint about the IFDA Master Trust. In contrast to the losses suffered by the member funeral homes, the beneficiary experienced a modest return on her non-guaranteed contract. Her complaint was that the return was not enough to keep up with rising funeral costs.

The California AG argument that the CMT must comply with the Prudent Investor Rule in a way that does not expose trust principal to risk is the equivalent to handcuffing both of the investment advisor’s hands behind his back.

Of the investment complaints made by the California AG, the one which would seem to merit the most attention would be the relationship between the former investment advisor and a CFDA board member. That CFDA board member also served as a trustee for one of the advisor’s funds, for which he received compensation. That relationship warrants an inquiry whether the relationship was disclosed and the compensation appropriate and reasonable.

The AG’s argument that the investment advisor must be independent from the seller is one shared by Missouri regulators. The Missouri regulators are quick to point to the abuses committed by NPS and its investment management firm. (See our post titled “The Zeal for Independence”). Those abuses were so bad that the Missouri legislature passed a provision prohibiting a relationship between the seller and the fund manager. This author thought the provision went too far. (See our post titled “Regulating Out of Context”). With the passage of SB 325, the Missouri Funeral Directors Association has convinced the Missouri legislature that it did go too far.

Regardless of whether the fund manager is a fiduciary employee or an independent investment advisor, that fund manager should appropriately look to the preneed seller for input about investment objectives. For the larger trust, the fiduciary and fund manager should adopt a written investment policy that, among other factors, considers the trust’s mix of guaranteed and non-guaranteed contracts. If the fund manager is an independent investment advisor, the relationship should be documented with an agreement that discloses all forms of compensation. Consistent with the SEC efforts to reform mutual funds, the disclosure should address any 12b-1 fees. The agreement with the fiduciary should also disclose all relationships the investment advisor has with the preneed seller.

To the extent the preneed contract is guaranteed, the regulator needs to recognize the seller’s economic interest in the trust’s performance. But, fiduciaries and sellers need to consider the growing number of non-guaranteed contracts and the possibility that the guaranteed contract may be serviced by a different funeral home. While the seller may have the prevailing economic interest, not all of the trust may be considered his for investment purposes.

 

Early Audit Warning: Fees and Assessments

It seems paradoxical to see preneed regulators ramping up audit programs while state budgets are being slashed to the bone. Yet, several I-70 corridor states will soon implement new preneed audit programs.

Missouri’s preneed funeral audits will be funded out of a combination of license fees and preneed contract fees. Missouri’s new cemetery law did not provide for any additional fees to offset the expense of a new reporting system and audits, and so, one most anticipate the state will look to recover from its expenses from non-compliant cemeteries.

Colorado had a modest, but significant, law change: the preneed regulator was granted authority to assess fees against preneed sellers to fund examinations. With a source for funding, new audit procedures have been submitted for approval.

With regard to cemeteries, Kansas quietly promulgated a regulation authorizing a $20 per preneed contract fee. Kansas would like to use a portion of those fees to implement a preneed contract database that would provide data that would be used in cemetery audits.

Nebraska also has plans to implement a new preneed database for auditing master trusts. In the absence of funding legislation, the Department of Insurance must use a carrot and stick approach with the state’s larger preneed sellers. Similar to the Illinois approach, the Nebraska stick would be the assessment of audit expenses against the non-compliant preneed seller. Illinois’ recent preneed law change (SB1682) raised the possible assessment from $7,500 to $20,000. For the preneed seller found to have issues of material non-compliance, the costs of a full audit could cost tens of thousands of dollars. And then there’s the issue of funding up deficiencies. As the Illinois law spells out, the audit penalty cannot be paid out of the preneed trust.

For preneed sellers from Illinois to Colorado, it isn’t a matter of whether there will be exams or audits, but when. For some states, those exams will come sooner than others. Missouri is currently training new examiners, and could well release them on those sellers who miss the October 31st renewal deadline.
 

Non-guaranteed preneed: time to review the duties

The financial fallout from the failures of NPS and IFDA regarding compliance with state and federal laws has accelerated the decision of many funeral directors to switch to the non-guaranteed preneed contract. That non-guaranteed contract represents a fundamental change in the relationship that is established between the consumer, the funeral home and the preneed fiduciary.

The trust-funded preneed contract establishes a fiduciary account that has two beneficiaries: the funeral home and the consumer. It is quite common for fiduciaries to administer trusts with beneficiaries with competing interests. With competing beneficiary interests, the fiduciary must look to the trust provisions, and applicable state law, to determine who may exercise discretionary authorities regarding the trust.

State preneed laws are written in response to existing practices, and historically, the guaranteed contract defined preneed practices. When the funeral home sells a guaranteed contract it is the funeral home that assumes the risk of the trust’s investment performance. With that risk, preneed statutes typically vest in the funeral home the authority to establish the trust, to hire and replace the fiduciary, and to participate in decisions such as investments. State preneed laws have generally been vague or silent about administrative and accounting issues, and fiduciaries have turned to the funeral home for instructions regarding accounting and income reporting.

With the non-guaranteed contract, the funeral home has both deferred the sale of the funeral (until death) and transferred the risk of investment performance to the consumer. Appropriately, the consumer may have questions to put to the funeral home, the fiduciary and the preneed regulator:

  • Must the fiduciary follow a different investment policy with regard to funds held for guaranteed contracts versus non-guaranteed contracts?
  • How is trust asset value allocated to the contracts?
  • How is income and expenses allocated among the types of contracts?
  • How will income and expenses be reported?

For many funeral homes, the latter issue (the reporting of trust income) drove both investment policies and accounting procedures. No one likes to get a tax statement on a preneed contract, and so many funeral homes went to tax exempt bonds in belief this relieved the trust from reporting income to the consumer. But, the IRS requires tax-exempt income to be reported because it impacts the taxability of social security benefits. If the consumer hasn’t received an accurate statement of income and expenses, his account has exposure for a $50 penalty if the trust isn’t being reported pursuant to a Form 1041QFT. (This accuracy reporting penalty more than likely led the IFDA corporate fiduciary to effect a Section 685 election for all master trust accounts.)
 

For the upcoming wave of non-guaranteed contracts, there are only two permissible methods of reporting income: grantor statements to the consumer or a Section 1041qft. Regardless of which income reporting method is used, the funeral home and fiduciary can not simply park the consumer’s funds in a tax-exempt fund. The preneed trust’s allocation of income and expenses for tax reporting will be similar for both approaches, thus making the trust’s tax return a tool for regulators when evaluating the fiduciary’s administration and accounting.
 

Illinois: the initial insurance premium is coming due

The Comptroller’s Office mailed out letters to funeral homes last week advising how to report the first contribution to the Pre-Need Funeral Consumer Protection Fund. The letter tracks the first few paragraphs of the “Senate Bill 1682 Information” page from the Comptroller’s website.

The funeral home letter includes two documents: a Fee Payment Record and a Bank Confirmation Form. For each contract sold, the funeral home must deposit $5 to the Consumer Protection Fund. The $5 may be funded out of the consumer’s payments. The Fee Payment Record will be used to record each pre-need contract for which the funeral home has made a deposit.

The Bank Confirmation Form is intended to establish an audit trail for the mass exodus of preneed funds from self trusted accounts, and from the IFDA master trust. This form serves to put funeral home’s pre-need trustee on notice that it will be required to provide records to the Comptroller’s Office.  

The Comptroller’s letter to funeral homes omits information that the website page provides consumers. Fiduciaries that are accepting Illinois pre-need trusts should take note of the Comptroller’s consumer information:

Notice to Consumers --- Your independent trustee must provide an annual notice to all consumers of the status of their funds including an explanation of any fees charged by the trustee, an explanation of the purchaser’s right to a refund and identification of the primary regulator of the trust or insurance company under state or federal law. Here are some suggestions for ensuring compliance with the new provisions:

· Be sure the corporate fiduciary or insurance company that you use is aware of this requirement.
· Be sure the corporate fiduciary or insurance company provides you with a copy of the annual notice.
· Retain a copy of this annual notice in your file.

Historically, preneed fiduciaries have defined their duties by treating the death care operator as the trust beneficiary, and the trust as a single account. The Comptroller’s trustee requirements reflect a trend that forces the fiduciary to factor the consumer into the beneficiary equation, and to provide an accounting on an individual contract basis.

The Quest for Knowledge: Nebraska preneed reporting

For more than 20 years, Nebraska preneed sellers have filed an annual report that accounts for the aggregate contributions and distributions from their trust funds. The annual report form also computes the amount of income that must be accrued to the account if the seller elects to withdraw excess income from the trust. In its quest to determine whether preneed trusts are adequately funded, the Department of Insurance has made a request for individual contract data that supports the annual report.

Nebraska’s request for individual contract data reflects a trend developing with other Midwest death care regulators.

Individual contract data reporting was a priority in failed legislation by Kansas regulators.

Missouri’s State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors has acknowledged the need to determine whether existing preneed trusts are adequately funded, and that objective requires some detail about what comprises the trusts established under the prior law.

Missouri cemeteries are about to embark on preneed sales under a new law, and regulators have already expressed a need to know about those sales.

While many death care operators may challenge the individual account data request as burdensome or intrusive, operators harmed by NPS or the IFDA insurance debacle, have reason to be providing such information.

The degree an NPS provider suffers ‘damage” by honoring a preneed contract depends on several factors: the age of the contract, the casket, the funeral home’s current atneed prices, to name a few. To challenge that more than the guaranty association payout is needed, the industry must be willing to provide hard facts based on actual contract data. If the active NPS contracts are included in a state’s annual reporting, a basis has been established for a database for tracking the NPS consequence to the industry.

The same is true for Illinois funeral directors seeking to recover for the IFDA asset meltdown. Recovery has to be based on contract data.
 

Investment Restrictions: who's guaranty?

The Springfield Journal-Register recently reported that Illinois' Cemetery Oversight Task Force made a recommendation to restrict preneed trusts to investing in government-backed securities.   While its difficult to actually find that recommendation in the Task Force's report, it is not a bad idea for the consumers who purchased a non-guaranteed preneed contract.  However, that type of restriction would hinder funeral homes that offer guaranteed contracts.

The safety provided by government-backed securities comes at a premium: a lower investment return.  Funeral homes and cemeteries are encountering cost increases that recently have outpaced the returns seen from insurance and trusts.  With regard to preneed trusts, investment return has often lagged behind cost increases because tax issues have been allowed to dictate investment policies.  

In the case of the IFDA, the trust resorted to insurance.  It is also very common to find preneed trusts invested exclusively in tax exempt bonds.  

If funeral homes and cemeteries are to offer guaranteed preneed contracts, applicable law should require trusts to adhere to the prudent investor rule.  While these trusts will always favor an asset allocation heavy with fixed income securities, a diversification is needed to provide protection and reasonable returns.  

 

  

Consumers: Reading the Bold Print

A recent news report titled “Broken Trust” served to fan the emotions of Illinois residents who purchased a preneed contract from the Illinois Funeral Directors Association. The facts involve a 103 year old lady who purchased the contract 16 years ago, and experienced a 32% drop in the contract’s value in one year. The news report quotes from the funeral home’s website:

“By locking in today’s funeral costs and ensuring that the necessary funds are set aside, you help relieve yourself of unnecessary future worry and your survivors of an unexpected expense.”

The news report then adds: “For the Graces and thousands of other families in Illinois, it did not work that way.”

The news report goes on to add commentary for consumer advocates advising against the purchase of preneed. However, the news report is very misleading and serves to confuse consumers because of an important fact: Mrs. Grace purchased a non-guaranteed contract.

Contrary to what the article suggests, the Grace family did not lock in the 1994 purchase prices of the funeral home’s goods and services. They have every right to be upset about the recent drop in value, but so do hundreds of Illinois funeral homes.

Over the course of 16 years, Mrs. Grace’s preneed contract has realized an increase of 1.66%. Not a great return. The goods and services selected in 1994 to have gone up at a rate of 4.2%.

While a difference of $4,500 may exist between the value of Mrs. Grace’s contract and the current cost of the 1994 goods and services, the Grace family is not obligated to purchase that same funeral.  The family may choose less expensive goods and services.

The Illinois Comptroller has published various consumer guidelines regarding preneed contracts. All have an explanation of the differences of guaranteed and non-guaranteed.

To avoid unnecessary distress, consumers should read available disclosures closely, review the preneed contracts, ask questions of the funeral director, and involve other family members in the process.

For Illinois families who own a non-guaranteed preneed contract with diminished values, if you demonstrate flexibility over the casket selection, most funeral homes will reciprocate with regard to their services.
 

March Madness: Kansas cemetery legislation

With two of the nation’s top ten college basketball teams, Kansans are exhibiting clear symptoms of March Madness. With Topeka located between Lawrence and Manhattan, bipartisanship may be tested as tensions mount this week with the Big 12 tournament and the NCAA seedings announcement on Sunday. When Kansas legislators resume their meetings the week of March 15th, they may hear from a third constituency that has a different ‘madness’ in mind: the Secretary of State’s cemetery legislation.

When the Secretary of State’s staff began holding hearings last June, HB 2712 and HB 2713 may not have been what they had in mind. With the intent to encourage industry input, the Secretary of State formed a committee of cemetery operators and state representatives that was to meet for an afternoon every two weeks. With an aggressive agenda in hand, the first meeting included a handful of ‘spectators’. After that initial meeting, attendance dropped and fewer cemetery operators participated in the process.

Undaunted, the Secretary of State staff held its meetings over the course of the summer and fall of 2009, and outlined the problems with enforcing Kansas’ cemetery laws: funding for audits, wholesale trusting requirements, ambivalent and uninformed fiduciaries, and underfunded cemetery trusts. At the conclusion of the committee meetings, the Secretary of State requested assistance from Kansas’ cemetery industry. When nothing concrete was offered by the industry, the Secretary of State offered options between a state-mandated trust or revisions to fix the current law. That portion of the cemetery industry that attended the meeting choose a fix of the current law.

Among the changes proposed by the legislation, the following may prove the most controversial to some cemetery operators:

  • The filing of monthly reports to the Secretary of State
  • A new fee based on the reported transactions
  • A switch of preneed merchandise trusting from wholesale costs to 50% of retail
  • A new fiduciary definition that will limit the institutions that may serve as trustee
  • An expansion of the fiduciary’s duties

While these bills do not reflect what the Kansas Secretary of State had hoped to accomplish when the process began last summer, the legislation reflects the realities of the current environment: growing political pressure to provide consumers greater protections and a fragmented and diverse cemetery industry.   Despite how some operators may respond, the Secretary of State could have gone much further (and may in future years).
 

The First Week Under SB1

The first week under the new preneed law was a confusing one for the Missouri funeral industry. SB1 has many drafting conflicts and ambiguities, and that has give rise to different interpretations from the Attorney General’s Office, the State Board of Embalmers and Funeral Directors, and the death care industry.

The State Board and the Attorney General’s Office have been criticized for the NPS debacle. While some of that criticism may be justified, NPS exploited the weaknesses of Chapter 436 (and the Board’s enforcement budget), and kept the regulators at bay for years. With SB1, the regulators have been given the keys to a new vehicle for preneed oversight and enforcement, but they are not in total agreement about the map to follow.

The State Board’s immediate agenda are the emergency rules that will keep the preneed industry functioning for the next 3 to 9 months. Consequently, debate over interpretations must be brief and concessions must be made. In some respects, the resulting emergency rules will be overly burdensome. But, these emergency rules will be the law until regulations are promulgated pursuant to the normal rulemaking process. Funeral homes that disregard the emergency rules, do so at substantial risks. It is crucial that funeral directors also understand that the emergency rules will impact the preneed contracts sold prior to August 28th.