U.S. states eye protections for investors if federal
regulation falters
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[April 14, 2018]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Do you live in a
fiduciary state?
The question could become important if the financial services industry
wins its high-stakes legal and political battles to dismantle the
federal fiduciary rule governing advice to retirement investors.
The U.S. Department of Labor (DoL) rule requires financial advisers to
act in the best interest of clients when advising on investments in
retirement accounts. The rule pushes the market toward investor-friendly
solutions such as low-cost index funds and unbiased fee-only advice. It
discourages under-performing, high-cost products such as actively
managed mutual funds and variable annuities.
But the future of the rule is uncertain. President Donald Trump ordered
DoL to conduct a new analysis of the rule aimed at revising or repealing
it. In March, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in New
Orleans voted to overturn the DoL rule, and some experts expect its
future could be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, The U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission is moving forward on a fiduciary rule
affecting broker-dealers, and it is expected to be unveiled as early as
this summer.
The turmoil is prompting some states controlled by Democrats to enact
fiduciary rules of their own. Nevada lawmakers approved a law last July
that extends an existing fiduciary law to include not only financial
planners but stockbrokers and other commission-based investment
representatives. Advisers also must disclose profits or commissions they
earn on client investments.
Legislation also has been adopted in Connecticut; New York state and New
Jersey are considering legislation. And the Maryland Senate recently
approved legislation instructing its consumer protection agency to
determine whether the state should enact a fiduciary law. Meanwhile, the
National Association of Insurance Commissioners is considering ways that
state regulators could use language contained in the DoL rule to
regulate annuity sales.
Courts in four states - California, Missouri, South Carolina and South
Dakota - have imposed fiduciary standards on broker-dealers. But courts
in 14 other states have found that there is no fiduciary duty between
brokers and clients.
Expect more state-level initiatives if Democrats succeed in taking over
more statehouses and governorships this November, said James Watkins, a
Georgia-based attorney who is an expert in fiduciary law and securities
compliance. “If the mid-term elections lead to change in statehouses, we
could see more of these bills,” he said.
Watkins notes that federal law does not supersede state powers. The
Supreme Court has held that a state rule governs so long as it does not
interfere with a retirement plan governed by the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act (ERISA), he said.
“So long as states enact fiduciary laws that don’t impact a pension plan
like a 401(k), they have every right to act,” he said.
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A specialist trader works at his post on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange, (NYSE) in New York, U.S., March 22, 2018.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
HIGH-STAKES BATTLE
Opponents of the DoL rule have long said they support a national
best-interest standard, but argue that regulation should come from the
SEC - an agency that dragged its feet on the issue for years. The
Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), a major
trade group representing broker-dealers, banks and asset managers, often
points to the fiduciary standards spelled out by the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, the self-regulatory body, as the best model. Those
rules apply a “suitability” standard, which is much weaker than the DoL
“best interest” standard.
The financial services industry already is stepping up to fight any
state-level initiatives. “Obviously, we would strongly prefer for states
to defer to federal regulation,” said Kim Chamberlain, managing director
and associate general counsel at SIFMA. “State legislation would be
hugely problematic - it would be very difficult to train and supervise
people if the rules differ from state to state on such a complex topic.”
Notably, SIFMA and other trade groups seem to concede that ERISA does
not preclude states from taking action. They prefer to cite the National
Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996 (NSMIA), arguing that it
limits the ability of states to create new record keeping obligations
for broker-dealers and may contain other barriers to state action.
The battle over fiduciary standards is high-stakes. The DoL rule
requires anyone advising clients on their retirement accounts to act in
the client’s best interest and earn only “reasonable” compensation – and
disclose information to clients about fees and conflicts. Investors can
sue advisers who fail to meet those standards. An Obama administration
study found that middle-class families are ripped off to the tune of $17
billion annually due to backdoor payments and hidden fees.
But the regulatory and legal melee continues. And depending on how the
federal regulatory and court battles are settled, the quality of
retirement investment advice available to you could well come down to
where you live. So let me repeat the advice I always give to investors:
protect yourself.
There is no reason not to insist that any adviser you work with accepts
fiduciary responsibility.
An easy way to determine any adviser’s fiduciary commitment is to ask
her to sign the Committee on the Fiduciary Standard fiduciary oath, a
legally enforceable contract that commits advisers to put your interests
first.
(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for
Reuters)
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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