In the fall, it will be two years since the compliance deadline for the SEC Marketing Rule for investment management firms, but how are firms ensuring that they stay within the rules?
A new report from the CFA Institute and the IAA reveals compliance practices of 189 firms, mostly smaller ($1B-$5B AUM), and mid-size ($50B-$250B AUM) firms with 90% claiming compliance with CFA Institute Global Investment Performance Standards.
Karyn Vincent, CFA, CIPM, Senior Head of Global Industry Standards, CFA Institute, said that the SEC Marketing Rule continues to be a hot topic of discussion among impacted firms and noted the substantial overlap between GIPS® and the SEC Marketing Rule.
“Until now, firms have had to rely on anecdotal information for insights into how their peers are complying. The survey results remove this uncertainty,” Vincent said. “As an example, the results show that a majority of investment firms are calculating composite net returns using model fees. This is especially the case for larger asset managers. We hope this new information offers a baseline of understanding for firms to use in assessing their policies for complying with the SEC Marketing Rule.”
The rule, which has been criticized as having ‘fallen short’ of industry expectations in a recent report, applies to SEC-registered investment management firms in the United States and those firms globally who market investment products in the US.
The CFA Institute/IAA report found that the biggest challenge for complying with the SEC Marketing Rule is determining which information is considered “performance” that must be presented on a net basis.
Other key findings include:
There are more findings on the CFA Institute website.
“The SEC’s Marketing Rule remains a significant compliance focus for investment advisers and the performance related provisions continue to be the most challenging to implement,” said Sanjay Lamba, Associate General Counsel, IAA. “The survey results should be helpful for firms to benchmark their compliance programs with how other firms are implementing the marketing rule.”
A new analysis shows the number of actions plummeting over a six-month period, potentially due to changing priorities and staffing reductions at the agency.
The strategic merger of equals with the $27 billion RIA firm in Los Angeles marks what could be the largest unification of the summer 2025 M&A season.
Report highlights lack of options for those faced with emergency expenses.
However, Raymond James has had success recruiting Commonwealth advisors.
In a saturated market of PE secondaries and repackaged alts, cultural assets stand out as an underutilized, experiential, and increasingly monetizable class of wealth.
Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.
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.