Charles Schwab is urging the Labor Department to withdraw its fiduciary rule proposal, arguing that Labor is embarking on an "ill-fated sequel" to its now defunct 2016 rulemaking.
In a Jan. 2 comment letter, Peter Morgan, Schwab's general counsel and managing director, told Labor that its plan is "a solution in search of a problem," and that "altogether, the Proposal is wrong as a matter of law and policy, and is destined to meet the same fate as its 2016 predecessor."
Labor's plan "defies ERISA's statutory text, exceeds the Department's authority, and will curtail the availability of financial advice," Morgan stated.
Morgan highlighted several reasons Schwab thinks Labor's plan is doomed.
The new proposal's "redefinition of investment-advice fiduciary is little more than a do-over of the 2016 Rule," Morgan argued. "The Department again defines 'fiduciary' in an expansive manner that draws in countless circumstances where there is no relationship of trust and confidence."
The term "fiduciary," Morgan wrote, "is not ambiguous, and may not be construed to capture broker-dealers and other financial professionals giving one-time advice. That the Department's proposed definition would encompass such personnel is, therefore, a fatal flaw."
One-Time Rollovers
The rule's "overbreadth is evident, too, in the types of 'investment transaction[s]' and 'investment strateg[ies]' that trigger fiduciary status, when recommended by a financial professional," Morgan wrote.
Most notably, Labor's plan "replicates the 2016 Rule's coverage of all rollovers from an ERISA Title I plan or an IRA," Morgan wrote.
Yet as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit explained in its ruling that torpedoed Labor's 2016 rule, "'it is ordinarily inconceivable' that a 'one-time IRA rollover' is fiduciary advice."
Labor's fiduciary rule "problems do not end with misinterpretation of the key statutory term, 'fiduciary,'" Morgan states.
The Department is charged with regulating employer-sponsored benefit plans; it has no enforcement or regulatory authority over IRAs, which are governed by the Internal Revenue Service, Morgan said.