Wealth Management

(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.

(Washington)

In an eye-opening claim, both RIA and broker advocates are claiming that state level fiduciary rules may be illegal under federal law. Both the Investment Adviser Association (IAA) and SIFMA say that at least for RIAs, Nevada and other states’ fiduciary rules are illegal because of the 1996 National Securities Markets Improvement Act, which prohibits states from imposing additional rules on SEC-regulated advisors. The IAA said “For more than 20 years, federal law has prohibited states from adopting any rules, interpretations, or guidance that would have the effect of substantively regulating SEC-registered advisors. The IAA will engage with policymakers in any state that appears to be moving in that direction”.


FINSUM: A lot of the states’ fiduciary rules don’t just stop at brokers and extend to RIAs and insurance agents. This IAA argument seems like pretty strong grounds for a lawsuit to block any/all of these.

(New York)

Morgan Stanley just put a big threat on the table, and they are not alone. The bank says that it may withdraw wealth management services entirely from states considering new fiduciary rules, such as Nevada. Wells Fargo issued a similar threat. A number of states, including Nevada, New York, New Jersey, and Maryland, are considering making their own fiduciary rules. Such rules would be a major headache to the brokerage industry as they would create patchwork rules across the country. Morgan Stanley said bluntly “Absent substantial changes to the [state] proposal, Morgan Stanley will be unable to provide brokerage services to residents of the state of Nevada”. Edward Jones, TDA, and Charles Schwab also said they would need to at least pair back offerings.


FINSUM: This is a strong move by the brokerage industry but we do not think it will work. The political mood in the states mean lawmakers would rather say “good riddance” than back off, but time will tell.

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