Complaints surface at Finra over buffer annuities

Complaints surface at Finra over buffer annuities
Regulator says new type of VA is highly complex and uses structured products — not mutual funds — in the sub account as the underlying investment.
JAN 03, 2017
A new type of variable annuity called a buffer annuity is beginning to gain attention from regulators. It is highly complex and uses structured products — not mutual funds — in the sub account as the underlying investment. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. has started to see complaints about the product, said Donald Lopezi, senior vice president and regional director for Finra's western region. And while California hasn't received any consumer complaints about buffer annuities, the California Department of Business Oversight has been approached by the state's insurance commissioner to discuss the product, according to Jan Lynn Owen, commissioner of the department. Both were speaking Tuesday afternoon on a due diligence panel in San Francisco at the annual Financial Services Institute meeting, OneVoice. “I spent some time with my team trying to see how this thing works,” said Mr. Lopezi. “It's very complicated. I can't speak nationally but we are starting to see some complaints on those products in the west region.” “We have some individuals who really understand VAs and they were struggling with this,” Mr. Lopezi said. “You have to wonder, does the firm understand it? Does the rep?” InvestmentNews reported three years ago that buffer annuities, so called because they are contracts that use structured products to buffer clients' account values against downside losses, had just started to gain interest among financial advisers. In most cases, these annuities place a premium on principal protection and steady account value growth rather than rapid accumulation. Generally, they allow clients to receive returns that are linked to a stock market index over a limited period of time. Those returns are subject to a cap or limit determined periodically by the life insurer. At the same time, insurers use options to duplicate the performance of the index and to buffer a percentage of downside risk, which varies across the board on products offered by the insurers. (See: DOL fiduciary rule hastening the death of L-share variable annuities) Mr. Lopezi said he did not know the extent of complaints nationally about buffer annuities, but Finra's western region, which encompasses all states west of Denver, had seen them. Asked by a brokerage executive whether Finra had received investor complaints about such annuities, Mr. Lopezi responded: “I know exactly what you are talking about. We have seen this buffer annuity product. To be honest my head spins.” Both Mr. Lopezi and Ms. Owen declined to comment more specifically on the product. (More: LPL sued by Galvin over top producer's alleged variable annuity abuses)

Latest News

Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades
Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades

Liquidity risk overtakes access as the top concern for E&Fs as private markets dominate portfolios.

Fintech bytes: GReminders rolls out automated scorecards for meeting intelligence
Fintech bytes: GReminders rolls out automated scorecards for meeting intelligence

Elsewhere, Feathery touts efficiency gains for custodian account opening at Sequoia, while DeepVest unveils a governance layer for CIOs to keep AI agents in check.

SEC defendant loses bid to escape fraud case on service technicality
SEC defendant loses bid to escape fraud case on service technicality

He said he was overseas when served. The judge wasn't buying the workaround.

Advisor moves: Raymond James reels in $620M Stifel team in Utah
Advisor moves: Raymond James reels in $620M Stifel team in Utah

Meanwhile, LPL and Ameriprise each welcomed experienced advisors from Edward Jones in Tennessee and South Carolina.

Rising medical premiums push workers to cut retirement savings, LIMRA finds
Rising medical premiums push workers to cut retirement savings, LIMRA finds

New BEAT Study data reveals half of workers made financial tradeoffs after medical premium hikes, with Gen Z hardest hit

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.