The U.S. Appeals Court for the 5th Circuit on Thursday issued its long-awaited, and much-anticipated, order vacating the Labor Department's fiduciary rule.
In the court's 70-page order, the judges said that the stated purpose of Labor's rule "is to regulate in an entirely new way hundreds of thousands of financial service providers and insurance companies in the trillion-dollar markets for ERISA plans and individual retirement accounts."
The court cited groups' objections on "multiple grounds" to Labor's fiduciary rule, including the rule's inconsistency with the governing statutes; DOL's overreaching to regulate services and providers beyond its authority; DOL's imposition of legally unauthorized contract terms to enforce the new regulations as well as First Amendment violations; and the rule's arbitrary and capricious treatment of variable and fixed indexed annuities.
"Finding merit in several of these objections, we VACATE the Rule," the court wrote.
The Department of Justice did not petition the Supreme Court on June 15 to challenge the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit's decision to vacate Labor's fiduciary rule. Industry officials said then that the DOJ's decison, while not surprising, further signaled the rule's demise.