Compliance
Court Rulings Won't Derail Drive For Higher Fiduciary Standards - Industry

Regardless of specific court rules about the Department of Labor fiduciary rule, moves towards higher standards aren't going to stop, industry figures say.
Recent conflicting US court decisions have thrown doubts on how
the US wealth industry upholds fiduciary duties to clients – but
practitioners say they intend to keep pushing forward what they
see as higher standards regardless of legal twists.
The status of the Department of Labor’s final regulation
expanding the scope of fiduciary status due to “render[ing]
investment advice for a fee” and its accompanying prohibited
transaction exemptions appears to have hit a speedbump after
conflicting decisions handed down last week from two US Courts of
Appeals. The Tenth Circuit upheld the Fiduciary Rule following a
procedural challenge regarding its application to fixed indexed
annuity sales. However, the Fifth Circuit reacted rapidly with a
decision rejecting the premise of the Fiduciary Rule and vacating
it entirely.
The fiduciary rule requires brokers to act in the “best
interests” of their clients; the rollout of this rule, taking
effect in stages, has seen firms such as Merrill Lynch push
towards fee-based advice and away from its previous sales-driven
commission model. Some firms, such as Morgan Stanley, are
retaining a menu of options for clients in terms of how they want
pay for services. In general, the DoL rule is seen as encouraging
fee-based advice of a kind that has also taken place in the UK,
following the Retail Distribution Review changes kicking in from
2013.
The fee-based financial advisory market nearly doubled in the six
years ending in 2016 to $9 trillion, according to Cerulli
Associates, which has predicted will surge to nearly $13 trillion
by 2019, suggesting clients are already voting with their
feet.
“We have long advocated for a `harmonized’ best interest
standard, with consistent and clear rules, when advisors provide
personalized investment advice to retail clients in any account.
We have also encouraged close coordination among regulators to
achieve such a standard, and we are confident that our approach
will be consistent with the measures they will ultimately adopt,”
Andy Sieg, head of Merrill Lynch Wealth Management, said in an
internal memo shown to this publication.
“As announced...the US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit has
ruled to strike down the Department of Labor (DoL) Fiduciary Rule
in its entirety. While there is uncertainty regarding the DoL’s
next steps in light of this decision, our core strategy -
consistent with our principles - remains that we always will act
in our clients’ best interest,” the memo added.
“Advisors who are genuine fiduciaries don’t need to do anything -
they are already acting in their clients’ best interests.
Advisors who do not uphold a fiduciary duty should be prepared
for clients to question their compensation models. And anyone who
asks an advisor if they are a fiduciary and does not hear an
unqualified `yes, I am a fiduciary and I have a legal duty to put
your interest first’ should seriously consider their options,”
Elliot Weissbluth, chief executive of HighTower, the wealth
management group, told this publication.
“Regardless of what happens with the DOL rule itself, our
industry needs to make an unambiguous commitment to upholding a
fiduciary duty to our clients. If the law does not demand that
advisors act in their clients’ best interests, the clients will.
It’s a shame that we’re having an argument over the righteousness
of whether advisors who look after clients’ financial wellbeing
should have to uphold a fiduciary duty. As a society, we don’t
question that doctors and lawyers should put their patients’ and
clients’ best interests first, and we should require the same of
financial advisors,” Weissbluth continued.
“People need to recognize that Wall Street and corporate
influences who are opposed to the fiduciary rule have an economic
interest in not putting the clients’ best interests first. There
are plenty of successful commercial enterprises, doctors,
lawyers, etc. that uphold the fiduciary standard. The financial
services industry should not be exempted from doing right by its
clients in order to drive its own financial gains,” he added.
Marthin De Beer, founder and CEO at BrightPlan, a digital
financial advisor certified by CEFEX as a fiduciary, said:
“Clients would be wise to have discussions with their current
advisors to determine to what standard they are being held:
suitability or fiduciary.”
“Think of these standards like car salesmen. The “suitability”
salesman is out to make the maximum commission he can on every
sale. He checks the minimum number of his customers’ boxes that
allow him to make maximum profit. The “fiduciary” salesman, on
the other hand, acts in his customers’ best interest. He focuses
not on the money he’ll make from the sale, but on which vehicle
actually checks as many of the customers’ boxes as possible while
getting them the best price. As for advisors, those who already
act in a fiduciary capacity for clients really don’t have much to
do to prepare—aside from ensuring that their processes for
documenting their fulfilment of fiduciary duties aligns with new
regulations, should the ruling pass. For us as fiduciaries
certified by CEFEX (Centre for Fiduciary Excellence), it is
business as usual.”
“At one point in time, the term `fiduciary’ was once considered a
term that many weren’t familiar with outside of the financial
services industry. However, today, `fiduciary’ has made it into
our everyday lexicon and we’re happy to see the public’s interest
in educating themselves about what the different standards are
and the level of service they deserve when it comes to financial
advice,” De Beer continued.
“As the wealth management landscape shifts towards digitization,
part of the industry’s due diligence must be educating consumers
about which types of technology tools truly are ‘advisors’ and,
as a result, are held to the same fiduciary standard as
traditional RIAs. There is a common misconception that every
investment app and ‘robo advisor’ in our industry has the same
commitment to providing fiduciary advice, but that’s not the
case,” he said.
Allison Brecher, general Counsel at Vestwell, a digital
retirement platform, added: “The ruling by the Fifth Circuit is a
major victory for some in the financial services industry. It was
unexpected, especially since other courts generally supported the
rule and the appellate court declined to block the rule while the
case was on appeal. The scope of the Fifth Circuit's ruling is
unclear as is whether the DOL will appeal and whether the Supreme
Court will rule on it.”
“Firms and advisers who followed the DOL’s direction last year
should be wary of undoing that work based upon a Fifth Circuit
decision that may very well be on its way to the Supreme Court.
It may be better for them to stay the course for now.
Unfortunately, that leaves consumers without sufficient
protection for their retirement and other assets. Many
consumers do not understand the distinctions between a
`salesperson’ and `advisor’ with fiduciary responsibility. In a
world of retirement accounts with multiple plan options and often
confusing language about fees and costs, consumers need guidance
and that should not come from misguided salespeople with
inadequate experience who may be heavily incentivized not to act
in the consumer's best interests,” she said, adding that the
legal wrangle is likely to be finally handled by the US Supreme
Court.