Rule | Goal | Outcome |
---|---|---|
Adviser SRO | Create a self-regulatory organization to help the SEC oversee advisers. Three options include: allowing the SEC to charge a user fee to conduct exams, establishing a new SRO or allow Finra to oversee advisers. | Not finalized |
Fiduciary Duty | Create a uniform fiduciary standard for all advisers and broker-dealers to abide by, where they would provide retail investment advice to act in their clients' best interests. | Not finalized |
Adviser Switch | Move midsize advisers managing $25 million and $100 million away from the SEC to state regulators. | Finalized |
Private Funds | Have hedge fund advisers and private fund advisers register with the SEC. | Finalized |
Performance Fees | Adjust the requirement of net worth of an investor for advisers to charge a performance fee. | Finalized |
Broker-dealer Reporting | Push broker-dealers to file more information about the custody of client assets. | Finalized |
Compensation Disclosure | Require the SEC and other federal agencies to write rules about compensation to prevent reckless financial decisions that could harm investors. | Not finalized |
Accredited investor | Exclude an investor's home when determining their net worth and investments. | Finalized |
Fifth anniversary of Dodd-Frank Act. Financial reform that never happened in the right areas.
— Dennis K. O'Brien (@denniskobrien) July 17, 2015
There's still a ways to go in implementing Dodd-Frank's provisions. Of the 390 rulemaking requirements set forth by the law, 63.3% have been satisfied with finalized rules, while 15.4% more rules have been proposed. The last 21.3% of rules have not yet been proposed, according to a report by Davis Polk & Wardwell.
ADVISER-FOCUSED RULES IN PLACE
Some of the Dodd-Frank rules that affect advisers and broker-dealers have already been implemented, including one requiring private fund advisers to register with the SEC, as well as another shifting small and mid-size advisers to become state regulators' responsibility.
Within a year of the legislation passing, hedge funds and private-equity firms were registering with the SEC.
Within two years, the SEC required mid-sized advisers with assets under management between $25 and $100 million to amend their ADV forms to state they were no longer eligible to remain registered with the commission. Instead, they were forced to switch to a state regulator, decreasing the number of advisers registered with the SEC by 10% but increasing the total number of assets under management by 13% as the average AUM increases.
Another rule that was passed raised the minimum net-worth requirement of an investor for which an adviser can charge a performance-based fee.
#womensforum2015 Schapiro: "The Dodd-Frank law drives a lot of people crazy, and I get that. But we have a lot that's really great."
— Marion Asnes (@marionasnes) June 23, 2015
And yet, some of the most significant rules have been held up indefinitely. There has been a debate since Dodd-Frank began rolling out about whether or not there needs to be a new self-regulatory organization to enforce Dodd-Frank requirements and do more adviser examinations.
Currently, the SEC examines about 10% of the 11,500 registered investment advisers from around the country every year. Suggestions include allowing the SEC to charge a user fee to conduct exams, establishing a new SRO or allowing the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. to step in and take over jurisdiction of adviser examinations.
"There's no real progress," said Thomas Gorman, a partner at Dorsey and Whitney, referring to the SRO debate. "I think many advisers, particularly the smaller ones, are content with the way the SEC is conducting the examinations."
LITTLE CONFIDENCE
Mr. Rhoades said he doesn't have much hope that there will be significant progress in the near future. Mandatory initiatives can be delayed, and suggestions could be avoided completely.
"You have some optional rulemakings by the SEC, such as the fiduciary standard, where the SEC has a history of making proposals but not acting on them," Mr. Rhoades said.
"I don't have a great deal of confidence that the SEC is able — with its current staff — to implement a whole new set of rules that are consumer-friendly," he said.
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