Fiduciary advocates have once again christened September as 'Fiduciary September', and are gearing up to underscore the importance of requiring that brokers adhere to a fiduciary standard to the Securities and Exchange Commission and Congress.
Knut Rostad, president of the Institute for the Fiduciary Standard, says the fiduciary advocates will stress throughout the month the "enormous responsibility" the SEC has as it considers revising the meaning of "advice" under federal securities laws.
Rostad told ThinkAdvisor on Tuesday that as the SEC moves forward in crafting a fiduciary rule for brokers — even as the commission absorbs the recent addition of two new members — he predicts that while "fiduciary duties will not be outright eliminated, a middle ground [between the advisory and brokerage industries] will emerge, or there will be a long stall."
Fiduciary September also comes a month before the Department of Labor is scheduled to repropose its rule revising the definition of fiduciary under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA).
Rostad is spearheading, along with other industry officials like Vanguard founder John Bogle, a number of Fiduciary September initiatives, including:
—A Sept. 5 conference call on 401(k) fees and expenses with industry experts Jeffrey Turner of DOL's Employees Benefits Security Administration; John Rekenthaler of Morningstar; Edward Lynch of Fiduciary Plan Governance; and Kate McBride, Institute for the Fiduciary Standard
—The release on Sept. 9 of a white paper on The Six Core Fiduciary Duties the Institute identifies as essential to the fiduciary standard
—Meetings with members of Congress as well as with Treasury and the SEC on Sept. 12 and 24
—Rostad, Bogle and Boston University law professor Tamar Frankel, most revered for her teachings on, and knowledge of, fiduciary law, will meet with SEC Chairwoman Mary Jo White on Oct. 1.