JOHN DEERE TAX DEFERRED SAVINGS PLAN FOR
wage EMPLOYEES
NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AS OF OCTOBER 31, 2024 AND 2023
AND FOR THE YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 31, 2024
The following is a general description of the John Deere Tax Deferred Savings Plan for Wage Employees (the “Plan”). This description applies to each of the years for which financial statements are presented and provides only general information. For a more complete description of the Plan’s provisions, participants should refer to the Plan document.
Deere & Company (the “Company”) maintains two defined contribution plans in the U.S. for the benefit of its employees. The investment assets of these plans are commingled and held in the John Deere Savings Plans Master Trust (the “Master Trust”). These plans are the John Deere Savings and Investment Plan and the John Deere Tax Deferred Savings Plan for Wage Employees. Each of the participating plans has an interest in the net assets of the Master Trust and changes therein.
Presentation of Amounts
All amounts are presented in thousands of dollars, unless otherwise specified.
General
The Plan was established September 1, 1987 by the Company for certain eligible employees of the Company and its subsidiaries. The purpose of the Plan is to provide employees with a tax advantaged method of savings and investment. The Plan is subject to the provisions of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (“ERISA”). The Deere & Company 401(k) Benefits Committee is the administrator of the Plan (“Administrator”). Fidelity Management Trust Company, Boston, Massachusetts, is the Plan trustee (“Trustee”), and Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, Inc., an affiliate of the Trustee, is the recordkeeper (collectively, “Fidelity”).
Eligibility
Employees are eligible to participate in the Plan immediately upon hire if they are hourly employees on the U.S. payroll of the Company or its participating subsidiaries. Certain non-bargained hourly employees on the U.S. payroll are participants in the John Deere Savings and Investment Plan.
Contributions
An eligible employee may elect to become a participant in the Plan by contacting Fidelity to authorize the Company to withhold contributions from his or her compensation during the period of participation. Participant contributions and investment elections are processed through Fidelity using a voice-response system, online through NetBenefits, or through a Fidelity representative. Participant contributions can range from one percent to 75 percent of compensation, as elected by the participant, as limited by the Internal Revenue Code (“IRC”). Participants may amend or revoke their elections as of the next occurring payroll period. The Plan accepts Roth elective contributions, as well as Roth catch-up contributions, made on behalf of eligible participants, which are allocated to a separate account source. Participants can rollover balances from conduit individual retirement accounts and qualified plans of former employers. All contributions are considered tax deferred under section 401(a) of the IRC, with the exception of Roth elective deferrals, which are made on an after-tax basis.