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Day after DOL delay, SEC’s Jay Clayton calls a fiduciary rule a priority

Chairman says it's important that the SEC be involved in coming up with a fiduciary standard that will make investors happy.

In light of the Department of Labor’s decision Monday to delay the full implementation of the fiduciary rule for retirement accounts, the Securities and Exchange Commission will make a fiduciary standard for brokers a priority, according to SEC Chairman Jay Clayton.

“I think I’ve been clear, we are working on a fiduciary rule and exploring it for brokers and investment advisers,” said Mr. Clayton Tuesday morning on the sidelines of the Managed Funds Association meeting in New York. “It’s a priority for me to address this space in light of the action that the Department of Labor took to step into this space.”

“I think we belong in this space,” he said. “And we should try and produce a rule, that, when investors see it, they are happy with.”

Mr. Clayton’s comments come the day after the DOL released a final rule that would delay implementation of its enforcement mechanism until the middle of 2019.

The rule would postpone from Jan. 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019, the applicability of a legally binding contract between brokers and retirement-account clients that requires brokers to act in their best interests, among other disclosure provisions and prohibited-transaction exemptions being pushed back.

The DOL said it needs the extra time to conduct a reassessment of the rule’s impact on retirement advice that was ordered by President Donald J. Trump in a Feb. 3 memo. Two provisions of the rule — one that expands the number of financial advisers who are deemed fiduciaries and another that sets impartial conduct standards — were implemented in June.

Critics of the DOL’s delay on Monday said it spelled death for the regulation. Supporters of the delay said it gives the DOL time to conduct a thorough review of the rule.

The DOL also said it needs the next year-and-a-half not only to conclude its review of the rule but also to coordinate with the SEC as well as state insurance regulators on setting investment advice standards.

Senior reporter Mark Schoeff Jr. contributed to this story.

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