In case you missed it as you were preparing for the holidays, the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) released a report on December 15 that compares the costs of overseeing investment advisory firms by: (1) the SEC, (2) FINRA, the self-regulatory organization (SRO) for broker-dealers, and (3) a new SRO. The study was commissioned by the Investment Adviser Association (the organization that I head), the CFP Board, NAPFA, FPA, and TDAmeritrade Institutional.
The full text of the BCG report, along with a survey of investment advisory firms, is available on the IAA web site.
The debate about how to enhance oversight of investment advisory firms has been raging for some time. A year ago, the SEC issued a report required by the Dodd-Frank Act that suggests three basic Congressional options:
- authorize the SEC to collect user fees from SEC-registered IAs to fund their examinations
- authorize one or more SROs to examine all SEC-registered IAs; or
- authorize FINRA to examine dual registrants for compliance with the Advisers Act.
Until now, no one has come forward with any credible information about the costs involved.
The results of the BCG report are crystal clear: enhancing the SEC's ability to inspect investment advisory firms is absolutely the most cost-efficient solution.