Regulation Best Interest is "a work in progress," Gary Gensler, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, said Tuesday.
During a question-and-answer session at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority's annual conference in Washington, Robert Cook, FINRA's CEO, asked Gensler if Reg BI and the standard of conduct for investment advisors has been "successful," and also asked Gensler to provide some highlights on the SEC staff bulletins on Reg BI.
"The clients' interest comes first," Gensler responded. "Regulation Best Interest and the associated guidance on fiduciary duty at its core, that's what it's about. How successful it is: that's a work in progress. It's about FINRA's examination of broker-dealers, of course, it's oversight of the markets, but ultimately it's about those individual broker-dealers, investment advisors, ensuring that they put their clients' best interest" first.
The SEC staff bulletin is "really about the core of that concept — this is not meant to be just a check-the-box exercise. That it's more than just suitability with some new wrapper. That means really looking at account openings, looking at costs, looking at reasonable alternatives — that's what the staff bulletins were trying to answer."
On Friday, FINRA expelled a firm for Reg BI-related violations.
Next Steps
Cook asked Gensler if any further guidance can be expected. "There's not staff work on further guidance but it's ongoing work on industry itself, FINRA the SEC, and as things come up we'll try to address that," Gensler responded.
Separately, Gensler continued, "I've asked staff to consider recommendations to the Commission with regard to the conflicts that might arise in predictive analytics."