The Securities and Exchange Commission will be "discussing advancing rulemakings" this year to impose a uniform fiduciary duty on broker-dealers and investment advisors under Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act and to require a program of third-party advisor exams, Chairwoman Mary Jo White said Thursday.
During her remarks at the quarterly Investor Advisory Committee meeting held at SEC headquarters in Washington, White also said that SEC staff is "completing its internal review of the very important definition of 'accredited investors,'" and that the agency has until May 6 to act on a "tick size pilot."
The SEC, the national securities exchanges and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority filed a proposal in August to establish a national market system plan to implement a targeted 12-month pilot program that will widen minimum quoting and trading increments (tick sizes) for certain stocks with smaller capitalization. The Commission plans to use the pilot program to assess whether such changes would enhance market quality for smaller capitalization stocks for the benefit of investors and issuers.
White stated on March 17 that the agency should "act" on a uniform fiduciary standard for brokers and investment advisors, one that should be "codified principles-based and rooted in the current fiduciary standard for investment advisors." While she acknowledged that a fiduciary rulemaking would take time and be challenging, she said that her "next steps" would be to have "in-depth" discussions with the SEC commissioners.