Wealth Management

(New York)

Goldman Sachs is in the middle of beefing up its wealth management business. It is adding advisors and trying to boost AUM. The division is very small compared to competitors, but its advisors have very high average revenue ($4.5m vs $1.1m at Morgan Stanley). Now, it is also boosting its securities-based lending offering. Through a program called GS Select, the firm aggregates other wealth managers and makes loans of between $75k to $25m to their clients, all backed by the securities held in the portfolio of the borrower. The program was just joined by LPL, which is now one of 40 firms participating in GS Select.


FINSUM: Aggregating other wealth managers to provide lending sounds very profitable. Evidently GS is also allowing much smaller managers onto the platform.

(Washington)
Advisors should breath a sigh of relief today. Following the fiduciary rule’s resounding court defeat last week, the DOL has done what the industry has been hoping it would—accept the decision. Following the ruling, the DOL now says it will not enforce the fiduciary rule in any way. A DOL agency spokesman said clearly “Pending further review, the [Labor Department] will not be enforcing the 2016 fiduciary rule”. The DOL will also very likely not challenge the court’s ruling.


FINSUM: Given that this is an entirely new DOL versus the one that drafted the rule under Obama, their behavior makes total sense. The way is finally nearly cleared for a new rule.

(Washington)

The ruling against the DOL’s fiduciary rule last week threw a monkey wrench into everyone’s assessment of the future of the rule. While the DOL looked less likely to ultimately implement it, the big worry was that the ruling might dissuade the SEC from getting involved in the space. Well, it appears there is no immediate reason for concern, as SEC head Jay Clayton went on the record yesterday to clarify his agency’s position. Clayton said the ruling “hasn’t affected the way I’m approaching this … I haven’t had any discussions with DOL about what it means from a broader perspective of administrative law. But, as far as I’m concerned, we’re moving forward”. Speaking about the timing of issuing a new rule, Clayton said “the sooner the better”.


FINSUM: This is good news. Whether or not you want any fiduciary rule, one needs to be happy the SEC is stepping in because it lowers the likelihood that each state creates its own rule.

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