Subscribe

SEC offers advisers amnesty to move clients out of high-fee mutual fund share classes

Enforcement division giving advisers until June 12 to declare intentions to self-report fiduciary violations and make financial restitution.

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday launched an initiative to waive fines against investment advisers who come forward and admit that they had been putting clients into high-fee mutual fund classes and agree to reimburse those clients.

According to the announcement, under the Share Class Selection Disclosure Initiative, the SEC’s enforcement division “will not recommend financial penalties against investment advisers who self-report violations of the federal securities laws relating to certain mutual fund share classes and promptly return money to harmed clients.”

The announcement, which twice references “widespread” lack of fee disclosures, is the latest sign of an increased effort by regulators to crack down on investment fees.

In December, the SEC filed a complaint against a Connecticut investment adviser who invested clients’ money in mutual fund share classes with 12b-1 fees when the same fund without such fees was available.

Neils Holch, executive director of the Mutual Fund Investors Coalition, compared the SEC initiative to a practice sometimes used by Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. to flesh out violators of break-point discounts.

“This is a reasonably efficient way to clean up this problem,” he said.

The SEC’s Monday afternoon announcement cited Section 206 of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, which imposes a fiduciary duty on advisers to act in the best interest of clients, including disclosing conflicts of interest.

The SEC is giving advisers until June 12 to announce their intention to self-report.

“This focused initiative reflects our effort to allocate our resources in a way that effectively targets the continued failure by some advisers to disclose conflicts of interest around share class selection and, importantly, is intended to facilitate the prompt return of money to victimized investors,” Stephanie Avakian, co-director of the Division of Enforcement, said in a prepared statement.

Related Topics:

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Are AUM fees heading toward extinction?

The asset-based model is the default setting for many firms, but more creative thinking is needed to attract the next generation of clients.

Advisors tilt toward ETFs, growth stocks and investment-grade bonds: Fidelity

Advisors hail traditional benefits of ETFs while trend toward aggressive equity exposure shows how 'soft landing has replaced recession.'

Chasing retirement plan prospects with a minority business owner connection

Martin Smith blends his advisory niche with an old-school method of rolling up his sleeves and making lots of cold calls.

Inflation data fuel markets but economists remain cautious

PCE inflation data is at its lowest level in two years, but is that enough to stop the Fed from raising interest rates?

Advisors roll with the Fed’s well-telegraphed monetary policy move

The June pause in the rate-hike cycle has introduced the possibility of another pause in September, but most advisors see rates higher for longer.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print