A Finra official on Monday expressed concern over the sale of variable annuities, as investors look for higher returns and the products become more complex.
Carlo di Florio, chief risk officer and head of strategy at the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., said variable annuities are taking on features that resemble complex structured products. For instance, they have caps that limit how high returns can go during market rallies and buffers that put a floor on how far they can fall during market slumps.
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The broker-dealer self-regulator wants to ensure investors understand what they're getting into when they buy these vehicles.
“That's something we're very focused on,” Mr. Di Florio said at the Insured Retirement Institute Government, Legal and Regulatory Conference in Washington. “Variable annuities remain one of the products that's always at the top of the [investor] complaint list.”
Investors have frustrations about disclosures, sales practices and surrender rules with variable annuities, according to Mr. Di Florio.
During a question-and-answer session, a conference participant pressed Mr. Di Florio on why Finra does not provide a specific rule on how much variable-annuity weight is too much in a portfolio.
“The thing that keeps us from issuing very prescriptive guidance is that when we get into these firms, it really is [a] facts-and-circumstances [review],” Mr. Di Florio said.
Whether a variable-annuity portion of a portfolio is appropriate depends on the client's objectives, Mr. Di Florio said. He stressed the importance of a broker's discussing those parameters before putting a customer into a complex variable annuity.
“The dialogue and disclosures are critical,” he said.
He also mentioned complex products and interest-rate-sensitive products as other vehicles Finra is monitoring.
James S. Shorris, executive vice president and deputy general counsel at LPL Financial, said financial advisers are put in a tough position when clients demand returns in the current low-interest-rate environment.
“You don't want to chase people into equities,” said Mr. Shorris, who moderated Mr. Di Florio's session. “Where do you send them? Where do they get that yield? We're struggling on that front. It's hard to find a reasonable yield if you're a retiree, and so we are seeing more equity … which creates more risk.”