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Swiss RE Group U.S. Employees' Savings Plan
The plan was established to provide retirement benefits to U.S. employees of Swiss Re America Holding Corporation, the American operating arm of the...
Swiss RE Group U.S. Employees' Savings Plan
The plan was established to provide retirement benefits to U.S. employees of Swiss Re America Holding Corporation, the American operating arm of the Zurich-headquartered Swiss Re Group. Swiss Re itself traces its origins to 1863, making it one of the oldest continuously operating reinsurance platforms globally. The U.S. savings plan is overseen by a governance architecture that includes the Board of Directors of Swiss Re America Holding Corporation as the plan sponsor and appointing fiduciary, plus an Employee Pension Plan Committee that sets valuation policies and monitors investment advisors. The plan’s investment mandate spans buyout, distressed debt, growth equity, mezzanine, natural resources, secondaries and special-situations strategies, accessed primarily through a curated roster of external funds. The Investment Committee — a separate fiduciary body — is responsible for selecting and monitoring the investment options offered to participants. The committee’s work is supplemented by a Self-Directed Brokerage Account (SDBA) feature, which lets eligible employees trade individual securities and funds beyond the core lineup. Geographic exposure defaults to the United States, consistent with the plan’s domestic workforce and regulatory framework. Total plan assets are not publicly disclosed by the plan or its sponsor; Altss estimates the figure at approximately $1,512 million based on available regulatory and industry data. The plan’s design earned recognition from PLANSPONSOR as a 'Best in Class' 401(k) plan in 2018, though no subsequent award has been noted. Swiss Re’s broader institutional footprint includes the Swiss Re Foundation, a philanthropic entity focused on community resilience, though the foundation operates independently of the employees' savings plan. The plan’s architecture as a corporate 401(k) for a single employer group separates it from public pension funds and pooled multi-employer arrangements. Its structural differentiator lies in the tension between Swiss Re’s sophisticated institutional investing capabilities and the plan’s participant-directed design — the Investment Committee curates the menu, but individual account holders retain ultimate asset-allocation control. That tension, plus the optional self-directed brokerage window, means the plan can function as a hybrid of guided architecture and open-architecture brokerage for its employee base.
General information
Firm type
Pension Fund
Year founded
1863
AUM
$1.5B (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Armonk
Corporate office
Armonk, NY, United States
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who makes investment decisions for the plan?
An Investment Committee, distinct from the Employee Pension Plan Committee, selects and monitors all investment funds offered to participants. The Board of Directors of Swiss Re America Holding Corporation appoints both committees and retains ultimate fiduciary authority over the plan.
Does the plan invest in private equity or only public securities?
The plan's fund menu includes private-market strategies: buyout, growth equity, mezzanine, distressed debt, secondaries, and special situations. Participants gain exposure through commingled fund vehicles, not direct co-investments.
What is the Self-Directed Brokerage Account (SDBA) option?
The plan offers an SDBA, allowing participants to invest in individual stocks, bonds, and exchange-traded funds beyond the curated fund menu. This expands participant choice but shifts security-selection risk to the individual account holder.
How is the plan related to the Swiss Re Foundation?
The Swiss Re Foundation is a separate philanthropic entity funded by the parent company, focusing on disaster resilience and community health. Its endowment is managed independently from the U.S. Employees' Savings Plan and does not influence the plan's investment committee decisions.
What is the plan's governance structure?
The Board of Directors of Swiss Re America Holding Corporation acts as plan sponsor and appointing fiduciary. An Employee Pension Plan Committee determines valuation policies and monitors advisors, while a separate Investment Committee selects and monitors all investment funds offered to participants.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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