Legal
Wealth Manager Sues SEC Over Controversial "Best Interests" Rule

The financial planning firm joins US states and the District of Columbia in suing the regulator.
A financial planning firm is suing the US Securities
and Exchange Commission over its recent “Best Interest” rule
over financial advice, adding to other organizations who are
alarmed that the regulator’s rule enables conflicts of
interest.
XY
Planning Network announced yesterday at its XYPN LIVE
National Conference that it is filing a lawsuit in the Southern
District of New York to challenge the SEC over its new Regulation
Best Interest rule. It claims that the SEC has “exceeded its
regulatory authority” with the rule by permitting comprehensive
financial planning services to be delivered in connection with
the sale of brokerage products without requiring the financial
planner to register as an investment advisor and/or without fully
subjecting such financial planning advice itself to an RIA's
fiduciary duty.
The lawsuit follows a similar action filed earlier this week by
seven states and the District of Columbia against the SEC. The
claimants say the new rule is too weak. New York Attorney General
Letitia James reportedly said in a statement that the SEC rule
puts the savings and retirement accounts of Americans at risk by
exposing them to potential conflicts of interest.
The SEC has yet to comment on the lawsuits. Reports said the
regulator did not respond to requests for comment.
In its lawsuit, XY Planning alleges that the SEC also exceeded
its authority by reinterpreting investment advisor registration
requirements by permitting dual-registrants to use advisor-like
titles and hold out as being in the business of providing
financial planning advice while actually selling non-advisory
brokerage services and products.
SEC commissioners in early June voted by three to one for the
Regulation Best Interest, and supported other actions to improve
disclosures and clarify advisors’ responsibilities. Regulators
had started proposals for such a move a year ago. They follow a
failed attempt by the Department of Labor to enact a fiduciary
rule that would have introduced a “best interests” test of how
financial advice is provided. (In the case of the DoL's Fiduciary
Rule, a key issue was whether broker-dealers’ recommendations to
clients counted as “advice” and should be subject to a fiduciary
responsibility rule or not. This remains a big area of
contention.)
However, senior wealth management industry figures have
criticised the SEC as a “far cry from the existing fiduciary
standard required of registered investment advisors”. (See
related commentary here.)
Explaining its lawsuit, XY Planning said: "We are ferocious
advocates for the impact financial planning can have to help
clients live their great lives, and therefore the fiduciary
responsibility that a financial planner must have when delivering
such advice to their clients. A duty that is required of all
registered investment advisors, and that Congress first
recognized in 1940 by requiring that anyone who delivers advice
for compensation, and is in the business of providing such
advice, must register and be regulated accordingly.”
"With Reg BI, however, the SEC is permitting brokers and
dual-registrants to provide financial planning advice, without
being subject to full RIA registration and/or without being
subjected to the fiduciary duty that Congress prescribed for such
advice,” XYPN's co-founder and CEO Alan Moore said.
Moore and fellow XY Planning founder Michael Kitces issued a
public comment letter to the SEC after the initial draft of
Regulation Best Interest was released, specifically raising
concerns about the need to separate product sales from financial
planning and investment advice.
"When a consumer hires a financial planner, they expect that the
advice they receive will be in their best interests at all times,
which is the very essence of a fiduciary rule and the definition
of 'advice' itself," Moore said. "By allowing brokers to hold out
as financial planners and provide financial planning advice
upfront, and then switch to non-advisory services selling
brokerage products during the implementation phase, the SEC
amplifies the very consumer confusion they claimed they were
seeking to fix with Regulation Best Interest,” he added.
"It is our hope that the courts will recognize that when Congress
created the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, they created a clear
and bright-line delineation between brokerage salespeople in the
business of selling products, and investment advisors in the
business of providing financial advice, and that the SEC's Reg BI
has inappropriately attempted to redefine this bright line
separation," Kitces said.
"In the end, there is a place for both the sale of brokerage
products and services, and financial planning and other
investment advice, but reducing consumer confusion requires a
clear separation between the two, including a requirement that
all financial planning advice be delivered under an RIA and
subject to the RIA's fiduciary duty, that brokers and
dual-registrants should not be able to use titles that connote
they are in the business of providing fiduciary advice unless
they do so at all times, and that once a consumer engages a
fiduciary advisor that advisor remains a fiduciary for the
entirety of the advice relationship and such advisors cannot
downgrade their fiduciary duty when implementing brokerage
products pursuant to that fiduciary advice,” he added.