Thursday, June 25, 2009

Non- Qualified Defined Pensions

When Nortel declared Chapter 11 in January 2009, I was very upset that they would take that step and put thousands of people through a living hell. I was a bit relieved when my Canadian pension check arrived in January, but that turned to anger when my US pension check failed to arrive in February and subsequent months.

I called Mercer, the company that manages pension payments for Nortel, and although the people were polite they basically told me I was out of luck and all non-qualified pension payments were stopped. They were kind enough to give me the telephone number of Epiq Systems, a company that was keeping the records for the bankruptcy court. When I called them, they told me the same thing and advised me to go to their website and fill in a proof of claim form and submit it so that the money owed to me could be officially registered. They also told me that I would be considered an unsecured creditor along with many thousands of others and that we would all be treated the same. In other words, defined pension commitments would not have any priority.

I also called the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation, and they were very sympathetic but said they couldn’t help since my NQ pension was not covered by the insurance they provided. They told me that this was a familiar story with a number of bankrupt companies including the Delta pilots. I checked with ERISA and using the FreeErisa website I found Nortel’s pension plan clearly registered there as a defined plan. Nowhere was there discussion of the non qualified portion.

Then I dug out the old pension plan documents. I had obtained a copy when I retired, and in fact I had a copy of the detailed plan as well as the summary. I couldn’t find any mention of non-qualified anywhere in the plan document. I did find an obscure reference to payments being subject to an IRS limit but it wasn’t made clear up front in any of the documents. The calculation sheet that I received when I applied for pension did show that a portion would be treated as non-qualified, but there was little explanation attached.

Since then I have learned that the IRS imposes a limit on the salary that can be used to calculate the commuted value of a pension. The salary limit when I retired was $160K and since then it has gone up to $200K. Any pension payment that is calculated from salary over and above that limit is considered non-qualified and has to be paid by the company out of general funds as opposed to the pension trust fund. This seems like a reasonable approach if the company is healthy and the approach protects the pension trust fund from being diluted. Of course it also means that the company is not obligated to put those monies aside in the trust fund, and so they are basically gambling with people’s pensions.

Some honorable companies establish third party annuities to make sure that the non-qualified pensions continue even if the company goes away. I think this is pretty rare however, and Nortel did not establish any protection to cover these pensions.

In my case I tried to withdraw my entire commuted US pension as a lump sum, but I was not allowed to do so by Nortel, and in fact they required that I take the non-qualified portion over a 15 year period as a monthly pension. I had no say in that matter whatsoever.

So beware the defined pension plan trap when your service and position in the company may mean your salary exceeds the limit. It’s clear that this form of control needs to be modified and companies should be required to purchase annuities for their retirees so that there is stability and clarity of income for pensioners.

2 comments:

  1. Excellent information, Keep up the good work!

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  2. Unlock Pension are not regulated by the financial services authority and do not offer pension, loan, mortgage or any other finance related advice.

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