Fiduciary Standard Rhetoric Heats Up

The Financial Planning Coalition, a group that includes several organizations representing thousands of financial advisors, last week released a copy of a petition it sent to the Securities and Exchange Commission, asking the regulatory agency to extend the definition of fiduciary standard to include "anyone providing personalized investment advice to retail clients."

Processing Content

During a press conference Thursday, Marilyn Mohrman-Gillis of the Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards claimed that there is "really broad support" for the proposed expansion of the fiduciary standard, but she added that opposition has come from "insurance companies and especially NAIFA," a reference to the National Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors.

The SEC is considering a measure that, if adopted, would extend the fiduciary standard to all broker-dealers, stockbrokers and insurance agents, regardless of how they are compensated, requiring that all those who provide any kind of financial advice to individuals place the interests of the client first.

The FPC petition, which was signed by more than 5,200 financial advisors, claims that most consumers simply — and wrongly — assume, that the people giving them financial advice to buy an investment product, insurance policy or annuity are putting their interests first.

Gary Sanders, NAIFA vice president of securities and government relations, said his association believes, along with the two Republican members of the five-member SEC board, that "more study is needed on the impact of expanding the fiduciary standard on the affordability of financial services to midmarket consumers."

Sanders said NAIFA also disputes claims that the so-called suitability standard currently applied to fee-based brokers and agents is "any weaker than a fiduciary standard."

Daniel Barry of the Financial Planning Association, another member organization in the FPC, said sending the petition to the SEC was based on the coalition's belief that with the one-year anniversary of passage of the Dodd-Frank Act approaching, the SEC will be soon taking action on the fiduciary expansion regulation.


For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Wealth management
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER
Load More