Wealth Management

(Washington)

The Trump administration may be on the verge of a large regulatory pullback in wealth management products. In particular, Trump is considering dropping the rule which limits variable annuities. The products have widely been considered too complicated for retail investors and have been limited alongside the DOL rule. Sales of variable annuities fell to $98 bn last year, the lowest figure in two decades.


FINSUM: These products only seem likely to rise again if any fiduciary-type rule disappear. As one advisor put it best, saying “If you are required to put clients’ interests first, they [VAs] almost never make sense”.

(Washington)
The DOL rule is on the way out and the SEC best interest rule is on the way in, but that did not keep the SEC from taking a parting shot at the DOL. Outgoing SEC commissioner Michael Piwowar, long a critic of the fiduciary rule, said yesterday “I think it was a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad rule … It set up an unworkable, impossible set of standards for people to comply with. The Department of Labor couldn’t have cared what we thought and what you all thought, didn’t listen to Finra, didn’t listen to state regulators or the insurance regulators, and went forward with a rule that proved to be unworkable”. Piwowar is expected to leave the SEC on July 7th following his resignation.


FINSUM: We could not think of a more comprehensive critique of the DOL rule. We think the SEC really “gets” it.

(Washington)

Advisors all over the country are wondering about a simple question—why the SEC did not use the word “fiduciary” in its new best interest rule. The answer to the question had remained obscure until this week, when SEC chairman Clayton answered it at a conference following a question by FINRA CEO Robert Cook. Clayton said that the new rule is “definitely a fiduciary principle, just like the fiduciary duty in the investment advisor space is a fiduciary principle”, but continuing that calling standards for both brokers and advisors “fiduciary” and “then defining them would not make it clear that the relationship models were different”.


FINSUM: So basically the SEC avoided using the word so as not to muddle the difference between the relationships of brokers to clients vis-a-vis advisors to clients.

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