Among the many arguments made by opponents of the Department of Labor's proposed fiduciary standard for retirement account advisors, one comes with an actual price tag: the cost of implementing the rule. And the estimated dollar amount, according to a new study, is eye-popping: $3.9 billion.
Conducted by Oxford Economics, the study arrives at this figure by factoring in startup costs to implement the rule, an amount that is nearly 20 times DOL's preferred cost estimate. This amount does not take into account additional expenses incurred as a result of investors' losing access to advice or the costs of maintaining compliance with the rule.
The study also argues only high net-worth investors will be able to access and afford professional retirement investment advice if the DOL rule is implemented as now drafted.