Raymond James will continue to allow commissions for IRAs under DOL fiduciary rule

Raymond James will continue to allow commissions for IRAs under DOL fiduciary rule
Firm anticipates expenses could go up $28M in next fiscal year, in large part because of costs connected with the fiduciary regulation. <b><i>(More: <a href="//www.investmentnews.com/section/fiduciary-faq&quot;" target="&quot;_blank&quot;" rel="noopener noreferrer">A comprehensive, searchable database of advisers' fiduciary FAQs</a>)</i></b>
NOV 21, 2016
Raymond James Financial Inc. on Thursday said it would continue to allow advisers to collect commissions for IRAs after the Department of Labor's fiduciary rule takes effect next year. During an earnings call, CEO Paul Reilly said that the firm expected to continue to pay its 7,146 advisers both fees and commissions for the work they do with individual retirement accounts. In so doing, Raymond James lined up with other large broker-dealers such as Morgan Stanley and Amerprise that said this week that they would continue to pay its advisers on a commission-basis on IRAs. Other broker-dealers such as Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Commonwealth have decided to discontinue commissions on IRAs and move to a more fee-based platform. Raymond James said that expenses, in large part related to the DOL's new rule, could increase by about $28 million during the company's fiscal 2017. The charge is part of the company's communication and information processing area, which finished the company's fiscal year at the end of September on its target of $280 million, said Jeffrey Julien, the CFO, on a conference call with investors. “Going forward, I will tell you that our guidance on this would be something like 10% higher ... and the biggest driver of that is the systems work that is already under way related to the DOL rule and what we're having to do to comply with that,” Mr. Julien said during the call. “It becomes effective in the middle of fiscal 2017 for us. That's the biggest driver, but there are other projects of course as well.” A number of brokerage firms during earnings season so far have reported costs of the DOL's new fiduciary rule, which requires to work under a fiduciary standard of care with clients' retirement accounts. Ameriprise this week reported it spent another $7 million preparing for the new rule in the quarter ended in September. It spent $7 million in the second quarter and $4 million to $5 million in the first, meaning Ameriprise has spent about $19 million on the new rule so far in 2016. Raymond James reported total revenue of $5.52 billion for the year ended in September, an increase of 4% compared with fiscal 2015. Its net income for the fiscal year was $529 million, an increase of 5%.

Latest News

DeSantis unleashes ‘Florida DOGE’ in quest to kill property taxes
DeSantis unleashes ‘Florida DOGE’ in quest to kill property taxes

To help fund the proposal, the governor and Florida's finance chief are probing municipal finances on a "local government accountability tour" to uncover potential waste.

Edward Jones job cuts and buyouts hit 811 employees
Edward Jones job cuts and buyouts hit 811 employees

Edward Jones’ job cuts and overall realignment internally are contributing to higher costs for the company, it said in its recent quarterly report.

Advisor moves: LPL nabs $715M team from Cetera's Avantax community
Advisor moves: LPL nabs $715M team from Cetera's Avantax community

Meanwhile, Fifth Third's RIA arm adds a former billion-dollar BNY trio in Boulder, Colorado, while a hybrid RIA opens a new North Carolina location with a former Raymond James-affiliated team.

Tax compliance costs US economy over $536B, Tax Foundation finds
Tax compliance costs US economy over $536B, Tax Foundation finds

Analysis highlights swelling out-of-pocket costs and wasted time on paperwork, with an outsized toll on businesses and around crypto transactions.

Raymond James taps Allianz alum in continued push into ETF space
Raymond James taps Allianz alum in continued push into ETF space

The appointment to its investment management arm comes roughly a year after the firm first announced plans to launch its own exchange-traded fund platform.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.