The staunchest opposition to a universal fiduciary standard that would put clients' interests first isn't from securities brokers. It's from insurance agents, comments to the Securities and Exchange Commission show.
The staunchest opposition to a universal fiduciary standard that would put clients’ interests first isn’t from securities brokers. It’s from insurance agents, comments to the Securities and Exchange Commission show.
The SEC is due to submit a report to Congress in January on investor protection with the option to create a universal standard as part of the financial-services overhaul bill that became law July 21. The rule would apply to anyone who gives retail investment advice, including insurance agents who are dually registered as brokers.
The agency requested comments on the effectiveness of the current standards and received about 2,700 responses, including 426 form letters, which is “a robust response,” according to John Nester, a spokesman for the SEC. Almost 240 form letters were from people in the insurance industry, who are opposed to the standard, whereas some responses from brokers were conditionally supportive. Comments were due Aug. 30 and will be considered by the SEC as it prepares its report, Nester said.
Brokers currently must meet a standard to offer clients “suitable investments,” while most registered investment advisers have a fiduciary duty to put clients’ best interests first. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, Wall Street’s main lobbying group, had been opposed to a fiduciary standard for brokers until last year when the group said it supported a single national rule for brokers and financial advisers.
“The brokerage industry is now talking about a difference in degree rather than in kind,” said Mercer Bullard, founder of Fund Democracy LLC, an advocacy group in Oxford, Mississippi. “The source of firmest opposition is the insurance industry, which doesn’t want to disclose conflicts of interest.”
Increased Costs
The regulations will increase costs for consumers and alienate middle-income investors, said Thomas Currey, president of the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors, which represents about 200,000 members and is based in Falls Church, Virginia. Dually registered insurance agents are permitted to sell variable insurance products, such as variable annuities, which are generally considered securities, Currey said.
“Requiring compliance with fiduciary standards will drive many advisers out of the market and eliminate a valuable advisory resource to consumers,” Thomas Kelly, a licensed life insurance agent and registered representative in O’Neill, Nebraska, wrote in comments to the SEC. The additional risk of lawsuits will increase costs for consumers, he wrote.
Finra’s Rules
“No one likes new rules, but I believe a Finra ‘rules- based’ approach offers the best opportunity for compliance by brokers and, therefore, the investing public,” wrote Robert Burke, president of Commonwealth Financial Partners, an insurance and financial services firm in Virginia Beach, Virginia.
Insurance agents who are dually registered are subject to rules, inspections and fines by the Washington-based Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the self-regulator funded by securities firms. State regulators generally oversee the insurance industry.
Comments on the SEC’s website from proponents of a fiduciary standard cited the need for a common standard, which would include disclosure of conflicts, as necessary to stop confusing and harming consumers when they’re seeking advice and purchasing investments.
A fiduciary standard should be followed by insurance agents because for many retail investors, an insurance agent is the only financial professional they ever see and may assist with other investments, said David Massey, North Carolina’s deputy securities administrator and president-elect of the North American Securities Administrators Association.
Hidden Compensation
Variable annuities sold by insurance agents are the “most abused investment products” in part because of the hidden compensation structure under which they’re sold, said Bullard of Fund Democracy. These annuities offer investment options including stocks, bonds and money-market funds.
“It would take an actuary days to reverse engineer an insurance policy and tell you where all the premiums are going,” said Luke Dean, academic coordinator of the financial planning program at William Paterson University in Wayne, New Jersey. “There’s no way consumers can tell what they’re being sold.”
Disclosures Sufficient
SIFMA, which has said it supports putting clients’ interests first and disclosing conflicts of interest, still isn’t in line with the fiduciary principles outlined in the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, according to Knut Rostad, chairman of the Committee for the Fiduciary Standard. The committee is a group of financial professionals who favor a fiduciary standard that meets the requirements of the Investment Act.
That’s because SIFMA considers disclosures as sufficient for managing conflicts and puts the onus on clients to make informed decisions rather than holding advisers accountable, said Rostad, who is regulatory and compliance officer at Rembert Pendleton Jackson Investment Advisors in Falls Church, Virginia.
The main objective of any standard is to ensure it’s implemented in a uniform manner, protects investors and preserves individual investor choice, Andrew DeSouza, a spokesman for SIFMA, said in an e-mail.
Total assets managed by brokers registered with Finra and registered investment advisers were $10.37 trillion at the end of 2009, according to Boston-based consultant Cerulli Associates. There were 96,983 insurance broker-dealers and 19,681 registered investment advisers, Cerulli said.