Interested in taking the plunge and becoming securities licensed? Those who've chosen to take a proactive stance in light of SEC 151A may profit from earning their Series 65, but as an industry lawyer suggests in the following opinion piece, make sure you make the decision for the right reason.
Those who know me know that I usually am fairly supportive of regulators. My attitude has always been "the facts are what they are" and "the regulations are what they are," and no amount of arguing or pounding on the table will change either. But those who know me also know that one thing I do not countenance is those in a position of authority using their "office" in subjective, punitive ways. As was once quoted, "Leadership is based on inspiration, not domination; cooperation, not intimidation." FINRA has somehow forgotten this.
Let's begin our conversation addressing what is out there, palatable and painful–the free-floating anxiety that sales agents of equity indexed annuities are feeling, in part because of SEC 151A bringing the topic of "regulation" of an insurance product to the forefront.
Insurance-licensed agents are divisible into two groups–those with a securities license and those without. Those with a securities license are governed by the regulations of FINRA and/or the SEC. While those with no securities license may avoid the jurisdiction of FINRA, they still fall under the auspices of the state regulators. This is actually a simple concept to understand: You need a securities license to discuss securities. If you have a securities license FINRA or the SEC will police you in this regard, and if you don't, the states will be watching to make sure you don't mention securities. Therefore, not having a securities license does not "save" you from being under a regulators' scrutiny. It just puts you in a different regulator's queue.
What's best for you?
As an insurance-licensed agent, in order to maneuver through the decision matrix of what is "best for you," the first thing to think about is not what the regulators want but what you need to grow your business, to sell your annuity. The question that you need to answer honestly is whether as an EIA salesman you necessarily need to be able to discuss "securities" or "investments." Think about it. In my mind, it is na?ve to think that a prospective client is not going to want to discuss the relative safety of the EIA vis-a-vis where their money may now be. What are you to do? When a client asks if you think their money would be safer in an EIA or the stock market, it is absurd to think you can say, "Oh, sorry. I can't talk about that," and still make a sale.
So probably, you need a license. Not because of 151A but because it is more advantageous to be able to discuss securities, regardless of whether the EIA becomes redefined as a security. You need to discuss securities and investments now.
The next thought that most insurance-licensed agents have, erroneous though it is, is that the only way to accomplish this goal is to take their Series 7 and drop their securities license with a broker-dealer. While that event will negate the risk of uttering the word "securities" without the necessary license, it throws you under the intense scrutiny of the very regulators who want to regulate an insurance product as if it were a security.
Don't let 151A twist your arm
Please do not think with 151A looming out there, that you have no choice or that if 151A passes you will not have sufficient notice for what you may need to do. There is no reasonable basis for either of these thoughts.