Compliance
Dodd-Frank, Fiduciary Rule Up In The Air - More Wealth Management Reactions

More wealth management firms comment on the possibility that the Dodd-Frank legislation could be rolled back, and that the upcoming DOL Fiduciary Rule may not come into force, at least not yet or in its current form.
As already reported, the Dodd-Frank legislation of 2011 could be
reformed or even pulled back completely by the Trump
administration. There are also expectations that the Department
of Labor Fiduciary Rule could be delayed (it is due to kick in by
April.) So far, the industry appears pleased that
legislation could, hopefully, be simplified, lifting heavy
compliance burdens. (To see some comments and a previous report,
see here
and here.) The
details of what exactly will happen are as yet unknown.
Family Wealth Report has asked a number of organizations
for their views. Here is a sample. For those who wish to add
comments, they can contact the editor at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
George Clough, vice president of wealth management
strategies at People's United Wealth Management in Bridgeport,
CT
Dodd-Frank has impacted financial firms both large and small,
however none more that those deemed “too big to fail”. The costs
of compliance have been great. The argument is that Dodd-Frank
will assure not only future profitability but also in times of
great financial stress, solvency. No longer would government have
to step in to rescue financial firms from their own folly as
occurred in 2008. On the other side, most financial firms felt
they were being unfairly penalized when they hadn’t been the bad
actors. Overturning Dodd-Frank would significantly decrease
compliance cost for all and potentially drive greater profit to
the firm’s bottom line. There is no anecdotal evidence to suggest
that these costs have led to higher wealth management fees or a
reduction in client returns. However, a reduction in compliance
cost with repeal of Dodd-Frank could conceivably result in lower
wealth management fees going forward.
The major source of difficulty lies with the “too big to fail”
financial firms. Not only have they carried the biggest cost of
compliance in general, they have been further required to draw up
a “living will” that documents the steps they could take to wind
down their firms without taxpayer’s help in the event of an
imminent failure of the firm. As you can imagine this “stress
testing” has been a particularly thorny exercise that must meet
with regulators’ approval. Another area perceived to be
problematic is the CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau)
which was created in concert with Dodd-Frank. Focused on issues
around the mortgage, credit card, and student loan business, the
cost of compliance again is a major complaint by financial
firms.
It is more than likely that the industry will go in the direction
of greater transparency. Several major firms including Merrill
Lynch and Ameriprise have announced that even if the DOL
[Department of Labor Fiduciary Rule] regulation are delayed or
repealed entirely they will continue their transition to full
disclosure of fees, commissions, or other costs to the consumer.
So the question becomes which of these fee structures best
benefits the individual investor. For some commissions may be
fine, while others who may require more advice or planning may
wish to pay a fee based on assets under management and upon which
they are being advised. The value proposition regarding how you
charge therefore will need to match the way you deliver your
services and with greater transparency going forward.
In theory, Trump’s blocking of the enforcement of the DOL
regulations beginning in April would leave the client/advisor
relationship as it has been. That is, those advisors that are
held to a suitability standard would remain under those
regulations and fiduciaries would continue under the standard of
care and loyalty acting in the client’s best interest. In
practice, we are seeing many large firms acting as if the DOL
regulations had been implemented regardless of what may happen
under Trump. Merrill Lynch and Amerprise, as an example have
publicly announced that they will move to a best interest
standard as they argue the client deserves a transparent
relationship. It appears that, in reality, the fiduciary genie is
out of the bottle. Finally, there are some who believe the delay
of the DOL regulations by Trump is designed to give an
opportunity for the SEC to form their own set of regulations less
restrictive and removing such language as the right to class
action status for the client.
I would keep it simple. For the advisor held to a suitability
standard, I would simply point out to the client that you
discussed the client’s financial situation as required under the
need to know your client regulations and suggested suitable
products to meet their needs. Fiduciaries can explain that they
are required to know their client and then review all available
solutions even if they can’t necessarily provide that product or
service and only recommend those that are actually in their best
interest. Under DOL the easiest to understand example would be a
suitable investment may cause a client to rollover their 401(k)
to an IRA. A fiduciary would have to point out that it may be
less expensive to leave their 401(k) at their employer than any
option available in a rollover. One is suitable; the other is an
example of best interest.
Manuel Andrade, senior vice president of wealth
management at People's United Wealth Management
A lasting benefit of the Obama Administration's DOL Fiduciary
rule is that advisors and their clients have a heightened
awareness of the need to put a client's best interests first.
Even full repeal of the rule will not erase that. At a
minimum, advisors will inquire more about their clients' needs
and goals, and their clients will ask more about the advisors'
fees.
Some financial advisory firms will likely continue down the path
of acting more like RIAs and Trust investment advisors in putting
a client's best interests first. This is standard practice
for our People's United Wealth Management clients. Still,
the work done so far by firms to prepare for the rule has helped
raise the bar on investment advice and will benefit both
retirement investors and the investment industry.
Advisors who are not already operating under the best interest
standard in place for RIAs and Trust investment advisors need to
be proactive in telling clients how the delay and potential
repeal will affect their services. Advisors should explain
how they currently learn about a client's goals, make
recommendations and add value for the fees paid. Advisory
firms were already taking steps to support their advisors with a
more disciplined process for counseling clients, and should
continue with some of these efforts. For those of us who
are trust investment advisors or RIAs, it may be more business as
usual, but even we are moving towards additional discipline and
disclosures.
Cliff Moyce, global head of financial services at
DataArt
The Dodd-Frank Act was intended to reduce levels of systemic risk
in the banking sector, such that we would never again see highly
leveraged balance sheet positions causing the failure of banks,
and those failures causing contagion in other institutions and
whole economies.
Unfortunately, the Act became an unintended assault on lending to
businesses with capital adequacy provisions causing banks to stop
lending for commerce. Loans were called in or withheld;
overdrafts, materials financing and factoring agreements were not
renewed; and, as a result, rates of business failures exploded.
In some regions, banks refusing to fund the growth (i.e.
not the decline) of small and medium sized enterprises has become
the biggest single cause of business failure. The Act and much of
the other related regulation since the financial crash also
caused banks to divert most of their discretionary project
budgets towards regulatory compliance initiatives – including
meeting the needs of more demanding regulatory
reporting.
Regardless of your personal and professional view on the value of
increased regulatory reporting (Is anyone doing anything with the
data? What difference has it made?), diverting funding away
from projects that could improve products and services to
customers should be a concern for everyone. It is in no-one’s
interests for our banks to become moribund.
Another highly ironic unintended consequence of the whole
explosion in regulation (including Dodd-Frank, Basel X, EMIR,
MiFid etc) has been that it punishes small banks and financial
institutions more than the big guys. Ie the institutions
that represent the biggest source of systemic risk are impacted
less negatively than those that present almost no systemic risk.
This is because the smaller institutions lack the resources
(people, money, skills) to do the wholesale legacy system
upgrades and rationalisations, and new systems developments to
meet regulatory reporting and risk management requirements.
Review and reform is very much required, otherwise our
western banking system, business environments and economies will
be stuck in a nose dive that could become a death
spiral.
We should welcome a review of Dodd Frank and the Volcker Rule,
and all other recent financial regulation. We will not see
proprietary trading in banks returning to the extent that it puts
the whole institution at risk (when it does come back – and it
will come back - there will be severe ring-fencing of assets at
risk) but we should all want to see our businesses better
financed with a wide range of financial products.