While the Securities and Exchange Commission's recently released guidance on Regulation Best Interest's Care Obligation is focused mainly on broker-dealer compliance, the alert offers several must-knows for advisors, says Amy Lynch, founder and president of FrontLine Compliance.
The SEC's bulletin, released on April 20, zeroes in on how advisors and brokers should comply with their care obligations when providing investment advice and recommendations to retail investors.
In the Q&A, SEC staffers focuses primarily on the Care Obligation of Regulation Best Interest for broker-dealers and the duty of care enforced under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 for investment advisors.
Lynch told ThinkAdvisor in a recent email that advisors should take note of the following four items:
1. Advisors can't rely on a firm-approved list of investments.
Question 4 of the bulletin describes how advisors "cannot rely upon due diligence performed on investments by the firm itself," Lynch explained. "This means that the use of a list of 'firm-approved investments' cannot be relied upon to satisfy the care obligation alone," Lynch told ThinkAdvisor.
"Advisors must also do their own analysis of the approved investment options on a client-by-client basis," she added. "This is a good reminder to firms and advisors as the use of approved lists of investments has increased since Reg BI."