The SEC's Study on Investment Advisers and Broker-Dealers, which was released to Congress Friday night, has brought reaction or comment from some industry groups that, so far, are lining up in fairly predictable ways.
Often referred to as the Fiduciary Study, it recommended that broker-dealers, "when providing personalized investment advice about securities to retail customers, a fiduciary standard no less stringent than currently applied to investment advisers" under the Investment Adviser Act of 1940. This echoes the language called for in the Dodd-Frank Act.
Political Elements
Politics will undoubtedly play a part in the implementation of rules that are put forth by the SEC following the study's recommendations. In an unusual move, SEC Commissioners, Kathleen Casey and Troy Paredes, both Republicans, issued a joint dissent statement about the Fiduciary Study's findings and recommendations.
While there is a great deal of work ahead for the SEC in proposing, receiving comments on and then finalizing the rules that would put the Fiduciary Study's recommendations into practice, the lines are already being drawn for intense lobbying of the SEC as it acts. Advocates for investors are already starting to square off against pro-business advocates; the pro-consumer lobby against the pro-business lobby.
"Some of the issues are controversial," says David Tittsworth (left), executive director of the Investment Adviser Association, an advocacy group for registered investment advisors (RIAs). "The ball's in the SEC's court; they've got the authority" to make rules on recommendations in the Fiduciary Study. "There's still a lot of work," Tittsworth told AdvisorOne.com, "It's very likely there will be rulemaking on a fiduciary standard of care but there are a lot of open questions: principal trading; disclosure," and others.
Political Timing of SEC Commissioners' Terms
Some of the wildcards already being discussed concern when each of the SEC's five Commissioners is slated to step down, and whether, if rules can be delayed long enough, will that be enough to stem what some see as an SEC investor-protection stance. Would the appointment of another Republican Commissioner make a difference in seeing which Fiduciary Study rules become final?
Timing is very much an issue. Although protecting investors is one of the SEC's original mandates, it has not always seemed to be a top priority. To that end, the Commissioners' terms all end on June 5 over a staggered period of years. Comm. Luis Aguilar's term ended in 2010; Comm.
Kathleen Casey's in 2011; Comm. Elisse Walter's in 2012; Comm. Troy Paredes' in 2013; and Chairman Mary Schapiro's in 2014, according to SEC spokesman John Nester. But, he told AdvisorOne.com, they can continue to "serve a year-and-a-half after their terms ends until they are reappointed or replaced." So the timing is more flexible than it might appear at first glance.
SEC Funding
Funding is another issue, one which Walter (right) pointed out in stark relief in her dissent after the release of a separate SEC Study on Jan. 14 on Enhancing Investment Adviser Examinations. The SEC's funding is an annual appropriation from Congress that is a fraction of what the SEC raises each year in fees. At issue is the adequacy of that funding to enable the SEC to fulfill the tasks that the Dodd-Frank Act mandated in action items and then ongoing funding to carry out new, much larger oversight burdens. For more see, "In Unusual Move, SEC Commissioner Elisse Walter Dissents on SRO Study."
SIFMA, which advocates for the wirehouse banks and insurance broker-dealers (BDs), praised the Fiduciary Study—with reservations. SIFMA's general counsel Ira Hammerman said in a statement on Monday, "It is especially important that the SEC recognized that any fiduciary standard should not pick business model winners and losers, and that the Commission will need to issue interpretive guidance to allow firms to operationalize this new standard."
The Financial Services Institute, an advocacy group for independent broker-dealers, released a statement on the Fiduciary Study on Monday saying, "FSI supports the Study's efforts to provide a roadmap to improved investor protection through a uniform standard of care and harmonized regulatory requirements. The Study also emphasizes the need for regulators to provide broker-dealers and investment advisers with clear guidance on how to comply with the new requirements."