Compliance with the Securities and Exchange Commission's Customer Relationship Summary, or Form CRS, along with a new fiduciary rule from the Labor Department as well as potential passage of a new tax and spending bill are just a few items that will keep advisors on their toes in 2022.
Just before Christmas, the SEC issued sweeping guidance on Form CRS, pointing to numerous disclosure aspects of the rule where advisors are falling short.
The agency's Standards of Conduct Implementation Committee, according to the Dec. 17 guidance, "reviewed filed relationship summaries from a diverse cross-section of firms and observed how firms have implemented the content and format requirements of Form CRS."
The SEC's Division of Examinations as well as the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority have also been examining firms to assess compliance with the Form CRS requirements.
The SEC committee reviewed areas of Form CRS "where compliance improvements appear to be needed — namely regarding specific disclosure topics required by the form's instructions, and with respect to the general requirements pertaining to content, format and website posting.
For instance, the SEC pointed to shortcomings in descriptions of relationships and services as well as fees, costs, conflicts and standard of conduct.
The study noted that some firms' relationship summaries did not describe the services included as part of a wrap fee program. "Other relationship summaries did not appear to adequately describe the fees and costs of the programs."
Ron Rhoades, associate professor of finance at Western Kentucky University and director of its personal financial planning program, told ThinkAdvisor that the SEC staff study "reflects the substantial level of non-compliance with Form CRS, and essentially encourages firms to up their game."
Rhoades noted that he is "deeply disturbed" by the study's findings "wherein the staff stated that 'some firms represented that they were held to the 'highest possible legal standard' and characterized such a statement as prohibited 'marketing material' in Form CRS."
In his view, "that may well be an accurate reflection of a firm's adopted standard of conduct. Many fee-only RIAs adhere, in essence, to the 'sole interests' fiduciary standard, which is in fact the highest standard under the law. If firms are required to describe their standard of conduct, they should be permitted to characterize it as 'the highest possible legal standard' when such is a truthful statement."