Senator
Warren seeks investigation of insurers over retirement rule
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[April 01, 2016]
By Lisa Lambert
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senator Elizabeth
Warren, a Massachusetts Democrat who advocates for strong financial
regulation, asked U.S. securities regulators on Thursday to investigate
comments made by major insurance companies about a forthcoming federal
rule on retirement advice.
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Last month, Warren criticized Lincoln National, Jackson National
Life Insurance Company, Prudential Financial and Transamerica, a
unit of Aegon NV , for publicly stating that the rule requiring
retirement advisers to put their clients' interests ahead of their
own would hurt business while privately telling investors it would
not create a major hurdle.
On Thursday, she went one step further and requested the Securities
and Exchange Commission to formally look into whether the statements
were contradictory and ran afoul of securities laws.
"Both sets of industry claims - that the proposed rule will harm
them and their business model, and that the proposed rule will not
harm them and their business model - cannot possibly be true. And if
one these public statements is materially false, it would appear to
violate long-standing interpretations of our securities laws," she
wrote to SEC Chair Mary Jo White.
The White House will soon publicly release the latest version of the
rule, drafted by the Labor Department.
The 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform law called for holding
brokers who give retirement advice to a strong fiduciary standard,
meaning they must act in their clients' best interest, as a way to
protect retirees from buying unnecessary products that line brokers'
pockets.
The Labor Department had to withdraw its initial version of the rule
in 2011 after complaints from members of both political parties and
the financial services industry.
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Warren says that financial and insurance companies have warned in
public that the proposed rule could drive up costs and stop them
from offering retirement services such as annuities to middle- and
lower-income people.
But in earnings calls they have reassured investors that they will
come up with new products or approaches that will minimize threats
to their businesses.
Responding to Warren's critique last month, most of the insurers
said their public warnings did not contradict reassurances to
investors that they could withstand regulatory changes. They said
their companies could navigate potential disruptions but they were
still concerned about the consequences for consumers seeking
retirement advice.
(Reporting by Lisa Lambert; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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