Law & Policy
Law and Policy
Health, wealth and global news, views and analysis, written by Mercer legislative, regulatory and policy pros with practical insights for employers and benefit…
The 1st US Circuit Court of Appeals recently upheld the dismissal of a class action lawsuit against Fidelity over “infrastructure fees” charged to third-party mutual funds on the company’s FundsNetwork investment platform. Fidelity describes the fee as compensation for the costs of maintaining the platform. But the plaintiffs alleged the fee is a “pay-to-play” charge for access to Fidelity’s retirement plan investors that violates Fidelity’s ERISA fiduciary duties. The threshold question in the case concerned whether Fidelity was a functional fiduciary when negotiating the fee. If not, no fiduciary breach could have occurred.
The appellate court, like the lower court, rejected all of the plaintiffs’ theories for fiduciary status: