Registered investment advisers and broker-dealers are taking the Department of Labor's decision to decline another round of delays for
the fiduciary rule in stride.
Indeed, it looks to be business as usual for registered investment advisers, although some firm heads discussed this morning the need to be even more vigilant with respect to record-keeping, especially with individual retirement accounts, to be able to show they're acting in clients' best interests.
"I thought the rule was going to die on the vine or be punted in perpetuity, so I am pleasantly surprised to see that it's moving forward," said Douglas Boneparth, president of Bone Fide Wealth. "This is ultimately good for Americans and the financial services industry."
After spending millions of dollars to prepare for the new rule, some large brokerage firms were mum on the DOL fiduciary regulation becoming applicable next month.
An LPL Financial branch manager, who asked not to be identified, said at midday Tuesday the firm had yet to comment directly to advisers about the announcement. A spokeswoman for Raymond James Financial Inc., Anthea Penrose, declined to comment.
A registered rep with Cetera Advisors, who asked not to be identified, said the firm last week had a telephone conference, saying it expected no further delays.
"They've been working diligently to prepare for this, and working all along like there would be no delays," he said.
Labor Secretary
Alexander Acosta confirmed Monday the fiduciary rule will become applicable June 9. The rule's implementation had been delayed 60 days — from April 10 to June 9 — while the DOL reassessed the regulation under
a directive from President Donald J. Trump.
Paul Pagnato, founder of advisory firm PagnatoKarp, said the DOL made a strong statement with its decision, even though he expects the agency will make some tweaks to the rule after the partial implementation date of June 9 and before the Jan. 1, 2018, full implementation date. Overall, he said the news is good for retirement savers and firms that work in their best interests.
His fee-only firm talks with clients every week who specifically say they want to work with a fiduciary.
"It's becoming obvious that a firm that isn't focused on a client's best interest is looking silly right now," he said.
Jamie Hopkins, co-director at The American College, said advisory firms need to make sure they are compliant or able to show a good faith effort to comply with the rule or they could be put out of business.
"For some companies, it will be a boon for business, while for others the fiduciary rule creates significant challenges," he said.
Firms making changes to comply with the rule should ensure they are communicating with clients about those modifications and are documenting their processes, Mr. Hopkins said.
Rob Foregger, co-founder of NextCapital, a digital advice platform for large financial services firms, said the industry is moving toward a fiduciary model with or without a new fiduciary standard.
"That is a megatrend that's bigger than the regulation debate itself," he said.
Digital advice is considered key for some firms that seek to implement the new rule's requirements and provide affordable financial advice in clients' best interest in a scalable manner.
The industry has worked hard to prepare for the new fiduciary standard over the past 18 months, despite the multitude of questions that have popped up in the last six months with Mr. Trump seeking a delay, Mr. Foregger said.
"Some firms had clearly put things on hold, but a lot of others are looking at this as an offensive strategy to provide legal and scalable advice to consumers," he said.