Wealth Management

(Washington)

The fiduciary rule saga has been long and confusing. Firs the DOL Rule fell flat, then the SEC proposed its own rule, only to face harsh criticism from everyone but the brokerage industry. Now there is a new piece of news that we find encouraging: the SEC is apparently working directly with states as part of an effort to craft a new framework that will eliminate any conflicts with state-level fiduciary rules. The SEC is consulting with states like Maryland, Connecticut, Nevada, and New Jersey to make sure there aren’t grey areas or loopholes that create nightmares for advisors and their clients.


FINSUM: There are two positive developments here. On the one hand, it is great that the SEC is trying to iron out any conflicts with state-level rules, but on the other, it is even better that this consultation might actually lead to the dissolution of those state rules.

(Washington)

A lot of brokers have been feeling good about the SEC’s best interest rule. While that may be misguided, the perception is that the rule is significantly less stringent than the DOL rule, and thus offers a better operating paradigm. However, developments with the rule are not looking favorable to those hoping for a loose regulatory structure. In House hearings recently, four out of five witnesses called to testify on the rule said that having no new rule would be better than having the BI proposal implemented. One top compliance firm thinks the SEC is moving towards a much more strict DOL-type rule, saying “We predict that the SEC is going to re-propose [Regulation Best Interest] to make it closer to a fiduciary standard because the states have come out [with their own initiatives]”.


FINSUM: We have said for some time that we do not believe the SEC rule will be implemented in anything near its current form. That is reality is looking ever more likely.

(Washington)

There seems to be a big misconception is the industry. That misconception is that the SEC’s best interest rule is somehow a less stringent standard than the DOL’s fiduciary rule. The core reason this is believed is that advisors understand it to be somewhere between the suitability standard and fiduciary standard in rigor. However, a new article by Benefits Pro is arguing that it is anything but. Just because the rule intentionally does not define “best interest”, the entire package is drafted in a way that makes very clear it is a fiduciary standard. SEC’s chief Jay Clayton sees it this way, saying “we’ve called it the best interest standard, but I want to be clear — for broker dealers there are core fiduciary principles embodied in that best interest standard. In fact, those fiduciary principles are, I believe, the same as fiduciary principles that are embodied in the investment adviser standard”.


FINSUM: The SEC rule seems to work by creating situations in which one is compelled to act as a fiduciary rather than defaulting to terminology that dictates so. That may be a difference in conception, but in practice it could be very similar to a fiduciary rule.

Contact Us

Newsletter

Subscribe

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

Top