Subscribe

TIAA settles SEC and NY rollover investigations for $97M

TIAA

Sales reps failed to disclose conflicts of interest when recommending rollovers from employer plans to higher-fee managed accounts that often had worse performance, regulators said.

TIAA misled retirement plan customers for five years about its conflicts of interest related to IRA rollover recommendations, according to a settlement notice published Tuesday by regulators.

The company has agreed to pay $97 million to settle charges that it provided inaccurate statements to clients and did not disclose conflicts of interest to thousands of plan participants, the Securities and Exchange Commission stated.

The settlement covers two actions one by the SEC and another from the New York state attorney general. The investigations found that from Jan. 1, 2013, to March 30, 2018, the company and its wealth management advisers characterized themselves as fiduciaries while recommending rollovers to TIAA’s Portfolio Advisor managed accounts. Despite being trained to tell clients that the advice was objective and not commission-based, sales reps had compensation incentives and faced disciplinary pressure to make recommendations, according to the announcements.

“[T]ens of thousands of customers were pressured by TIAA advisers to move their investments from low-cost, employer-sponsored retirement plans to higher-cost, individually managed accounts,” the New York attorney general’s office stated. “The program was significantly more expensive for clients and generated hundreds of millions of dollars in fees for TIAA.”

According to the SEC’s order, there were more than 18,000 rollovers to the Portfolio Advisor program over the five years it examined, during which time revenues from those assets went from $2.6 million to $54 million. TIAA-CREF’s dually registered Individual and Institutional Services, which services retirement plans and participants, had about $36.4 billion in assets under management as of March 30.

Advisers “were heavily incentivized … to identify clients’ ‘pain points.’ These pain points helped the company pressure clients into making different investments by essentially selling fear,” the attorney general’s office wrote. “Similarly, TIAA advisors represented to clients that TIAA was operating under a fiduciary standard, but in reality the company treated rollover recommendations as subject only to a less rigorous ‘suitability’ standard.”

The Portfolio Advisor program charged asset-based fees ranging from 40 basis points to 115 bps during the timeframe the regulators examined, “whereas clients paid no wrap fees for assets in their [employer-sponsored plans] or self-directed accounts,” the SEC order noted.

After a review of its procedures, the company began to fix some of its practices in 2017, partially in response to the Department of Labor’s fiduciary rule, according to the SEC order. That year the company also came under public scrutiny for its recommendations of in-house products and services.

The following year, TIAA’s analysis of its Portfolio Advisor program showed that performance in those accounts lagged the performance in employer-sponsored retirement plans with free third-party advice, the New York attorney general’s office wrote. A following evaluation that was conducted at the request of the attorney general similarly found that accounts in employer-sponsored plans had better risk-adjusted returns.

In an emailed statement from a company spokesperson, TIAA noted that it cooperated with the regulators.

“We regret the times that we did not live up to our clients’ expectations of us,” the statement read. “We have learned some valuable lessons and have applied those lessons to enhancing our training, supervisory controls and disclosures. We started implementing some of these enhancements even before regulators opened their investigations, and we continuously look for ways to better serve our clients’ interests.”

In addition to the monetary component of the settlement, TIAA agreed to “significant internal reforms,” the regulators noted. Those include a strict fiduciary standard for rollover recommendations, stopping compensation tied to managed accounts sales, disclosing conflicts of interest, using plain language to communicate times when advisers are not acting as fiduciaries and training its advisers to show participants “a fair comparison between managed accounts and employer-sponsored plans.”

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

What an outsider CEO could mean for Vanguard

Former iShares leader Salim Ramji will take over in July with question marks over Vanguard's ETFs, crypto strategy, customer service, and international business.

What will the end of noncompete agreements mean for advisors?

A bill in New York City, in addition to the new FTC rule, could be good news for restless advisors.

Empower keeps growing but what does it mean for advisors?

The company has grown enormously in a short amount of time, and is poised to expand more into small retirement plans and wealth management.

Should you be a finfluencer?

Social media is the new storefront. Advisors could miss reaching people looking for information, who instead get it from a bad finfluencer.

Active ETFs are on a roll

There has been an explosion in the number of products and total assets in active ETFs – and things might just be getting started.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print