The Securities and Exchange Commission's newly proposed custody rule greatly expands the universe of advisors subject to the rule, legal experts warn.
How?
The proposed rule, according to Gail Bernstein, general counsel for the Investment Adviser Association in Washington, would capture more advisors by expanding the types of assets and activities that are covered.
"The rule would expand from funds and securities to also include other assets, such as crypto assets, bank loan participations, artwork, real estate, precious metals and physical commodities," Bernstein explained.
The proposal would also "expand the activities that fall under the definition of custody by specifying that discretionary authority to trade is included. This would eliminate the authorized trading exception from having custody that is commonly relied upon today," she said.
The new Safeguarding Rule pulls in more advisors because those with "discretionary investment authority" will be considered to have custody, "even if the investment adviser does not have the authority to cause the client's custodian to transfer assets to third parties," Mike McGrath, K&L Gates' Asset Management and Investment Funds partner based in Boston, added in an email to ThinkAdvisor.
The newly proposed rule, McGrath said, explicitly includes an advisor's "discretionary authority to trade client assets and the ability to transfer client assets within the definition of 'custody.'"
With this proposed change, "all of an adviser's authorized trading on behalf of its clients" will be subject to the new rule, Bernstein explained.
The proposed change "narrows even further a position the SEC staff has taken over the past few years applying the Custody Rule differently based on how a transaction settles," Bernstein relayed. "This is an issue the IAA advocated on and we're reviewing the release to assess the implications of the proposed changes."
Issa Hanna, partner at Eversheds Sutherland, agreed in another email that the "activities giving rise to custody would be substantially expanded" under the new Safeguarding Rule.