The use of the âSegal Blendâ interest assumption to calculate a withdrawing companyâs multiemployer pension liability was a âmistakeâ and unsupported by the record, according to the decision in , No. 1:17-cv-06178-RWS (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 26, 2018). This decision may have broad consequences for multiemployer pension plans and contributing employers, because the Segal Blend method is used by many of the largest multiemployer plans in the United States. It will most likely be appealed to the Second Circuit federal court of appeals.
The Segal Company is a well-known and distinguished actuarial firm that provides services to multiemployer plans. The Segal Blend method is a proprietary method of valuing a planâs unfunded vested benefits to calculate withdrawal liability by blending the planâs investment-return interest rate assumption with the lower risk-free rates published by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC).
Use of the Segal Blend method currently may result in a greater withdrawal liability number for the pension plan to collect, because the blending of the two rates (the investment-rate of return with the PBGC rate) results in a lower interest rate for calculating withdrawal liability. A lower interest rate assumption in calculating withdrawal liability will result in higher withdrawal liability calculations.
Background
The case involved a series of alleged partial withdrawals by The New York Times Company (NYT) from the Newspapers and Mail Deliverersâ Publishers Pension Fund. The Fund assessed withdrawal liability in excess of $33 million, which was calculated using the Segal Blend.
An arbitrator generally upheld the Fundâs assessment of partial withdrawal liability. The Fund and the NYT each brought action in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York to enforce and vacate the arbitratorâs award, respectively. The parties then cross-moved for summary judgment.
Segal Blend Method was Impermissible Because it was not the Actuaryâs âBest Estimate.â
The NYT argued that the Segal Blend method was impermissible as a matter of law, relying upon the U.S. Supreme Court precedent 508 U.S. 602 (1993) and the requirements of the § 4213(a) of ERISA. The district court rejected this argument, finding that ERISA §4213(a)âs requirement that a withdrawal liability actuarial assumption be reasonable âin the aggregateâ means that a different assumption may possibly be used for determining withdrawal liability.
Section 4213(a) of ERISA also requires, however, that the actuarial assumption used to calculate withdrawal liability âoffer the actuaryâs best estimate of anticipated experience under the plan.â The evidence established that the Segal Blend was not the actuaryâs âbest estimateâ for withdrawal liability, because the actuary stated in her testimony that the investment-return assumption of 7.5% was her âbest estimate of how the Pension Fundâs assets . . . will on average perform over the long term.â This contradicted the use of the lower Segal Blend 6.5% rate derived by blending the 7.5% âbest estimateâ assumption with the lower, no-risk PBGC bond rates.
The district court found that âthe actuaryâs testimony, combined with the untethered composition of the Segal BlendâŚcreate âa definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been madeâ in accepting the Segal BlendâŚâ The district court reversed the Arbitratorâs decision, and indicated the withdrawal liability should be recalculated using the 7.5% assumption, unless additional evidence established a more appropriate rate.
Other Holdings of Note in the Decision
The decision has other holdings of note that are beyond the scope of this comment, but are noted briefly here.
There is construction of the collective bargaining agreement to establish the proper definition of âContribution Base Unitâ for purposes of calculating withdrawal liability. (The court adopted the Fundâs position. The Contribution Base Unit was a shift-period, as opposed to wages.)
The calculation of successive partial withdrawals is also discussed. The NYTâs arguments were adopted, resulting in a larger offset in successive partial withdrawals.
Case Impact
For pension funds that use the Segal Blend method for calculating withdrawal liability â or any method with rates that differ from investment-return rate, such as using PBGC rates â an examination as to whether this approach is the actuaryâs âbest estimateâ may be in order. If the assumptions and rates are not the actuaryâs âbest estimate,â the investment-return rate may govern.
This case also provides guidance in calculating partial withdrawal liability and in construing CBAs for determination of âcontribution base unitâ standards.
Editorâs Note: This article was written by , a partner in the law firm Felhaber Larson in Minneapolis, MN.
Additional information about withdrawal liability is available in 51ˇçÁ÷âs library under the main category âWages and Benefitsâ and subcategory âMultiemployer/Taft-Hartley Benefit Plans & Trust Funds.â You must log in as an 51ˇçÁ÷ member to view all resources.