Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee are urging the Securities and Exchange Commission to refrain from imposing a universal fiduciary duty of care for retail investment advice
Republicans on the House Financial Services Committee are urging the Securities and Exchange Commission to refrain from imposing a universal fiduciary duty of care for retail investment advice.
“It is our view that the commission has not identified and defined clear problems that would justify a rulemaking, and does not have a solid basis upon which to move forward,” stated a March 17 letter to SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro from Rep. Scott Garrett, R-N.J., chairman of the Capital Markets Subcommittee, and 13 of his GOP colleagues on the panel.
The Republicans criticized a January SEC staff report, mandated by the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, recommending that a universal fiduciary standard of care be required to protect investors, who the report contends are confused by the differing rules for investment advisers and broker dealers.
Currently, advisers must offer advice that is in a client's best interest, while broker-dealers adhere to a less stringent rule that says their guidance must be suitable for an investor's needs, timelines and risk appetite.
The Dodd-Frank measure authorizes the SEC to proceed with rulemaking on fiduciary duty. But the House Republicans, echoing the dissent to the report from Republican SEC commissioners Kathleen Casey and Troy Paredes, wrote: “A much stronger analytical and empirical foundation than provided by the study is required” before the SEC writes a rule.
An SEC spokesman declined to comment about the letter.
The Republicans suggested that the SEC “conduct a thorough cost benefit analysis that considers consumer preferences” and also “assess the broader practical impact” of a universal fiduciary duty on “the entire financial marketplace.”
They said that they intend to hold a hearing “in the coming weeks.”
In addition, the lawmakers told the SEC to consider how a universal standard of care would align with the fiduciary rule the Labor Department is writing under federal retirement law.
They also said that the SEC must take into account the ramifications of a staff report on investment adviser oversight.
That study, also mandated by Dodd-Frank and delivered in January, provides three recommendations to Congress to increase adviser examinations: authorize the SEC to charge user fees to fund the monitoring, establish a self-regulatory organization, and allow the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. to expand its jurisdiction to include advisers who are dually registered as broker-dealers.
An advocate for fiduciary duty maintains that the letter isn't necessarily a defeat for him and his allies.
David Tittsworth, executive director of the Investment Adviser Association, noted that, like Ms. Casey and Mr. Paredes, the congressional Republicans didn't explicitly state opposition to the idea of universal fiduciary duty.
“Nobody can read too much into this right now,” Mr. Tittsworth said.
“The [fiduciary duty] issues have always been controversial,” he said. “This underscores that they're going to remain controversial.”
In fact, Mr. Tittsworth said that he is looking forward to a hearing, which might cover fiduciary duty as well as the potential for an adviser SRO.
“A hearing does not equal regulation,” he said. “It does not equal legislation, but it can take the issue to a different level.”
E-mail Mark Schoeff Jr. at mschoeff@investmentnews.com.