At the Financial Services Institute, our mission is to create a fair, business-friendly regulatory environment for our members. At the heart of it is to preserve Main Street Americans’ access to affordable, professional financial advice, products and services.
Indeed, our financial advisor and firm members primarily serve clients whose main objectives are not to buy a yacht or join another country club, but to save for a dignified retirement and plan for major life events.
So when we engage in the rulemaking process, it’s not because we're predisposed to think that all new rules are bad. Instead, it’s to make sure rules achieve their objective without detrimental unintended consequences.
Do they provide meaningful protections? Do they maintain investor access to financial advice? Do they treat all different business models with deference? These are the questions we think about when we engage regulators and provide them with feedback.
Frankly, those are the types of questions regulators need to hear. When experts weigh in on proposals and offer workable suggestions, their insights help to ensure whatever comes of them positively impacts markets and investors.
That’s why regulation by enforcement is so troubling: It circumvents the formal rulemaking process, denying industry stakeholders the opportunity to lend expertise and provide valuable perspectives. The practice has become so troublesome that we developed a white paper about it.
What is regulation by enforcement? At a basic level, it’s an enforcement action penalizing conduct that advisors or other market participants did not previously understand to violate federal securities laws despite reasonable efforts to understand them.
Regulation by enforcement is harmful in a variety of ways. For one, it is fundamentally unjust. In our democracy, no one should be subject to government enforcement action without prior – and fair – notice of the standards, rules or laws that form the basis of an alleged violation.
Secondly, it sometimes yields unintended consequences. A big issue with de facto laws in our industry is that they ignore a crucial part of the rulemaking process: public feedback. Barring that, it’s far more likely that a new standard set by enforcement will result in actions that cause harm to the investing community, like higher fees for products and services.
Third, the practice weakens the public’s trust. It’s pretty simple: The Securities and Exchange Commission undermines its own mission and credibility with the investing public when it doesn’t properly engage with stakeholders.
Financial services doesn’t just benefit from consistent and predictable rules – it needs them to operate properly and best serve Main Street investors. Yet the SEC has, at times, used enforcement actions to establish new regulatory requirements or fine-tune existing ones, leaving firms and advisors guessing.
Perhaps the most egregious example is the SEC’s Share Class Selection Disclosure Initiative, launched in 2018. As we point out in our white paper, “[with] the benefit of hindsight and after over a hundred enforcement actions,” it’s become clear that the SCSDI has produced a “de facto regulatory presumption against the use of mutual fund A share classes and 12b-1 fees.”
The presumption is so strong, in fact, that it can “only rarely be cured through disclosure and has essentially become a rule, though with no notice or comment or any other opportunities for industry input.”
In light of this – and other examples of regulatory overreach – we’re calling on the SEC to adopt a procedural framework to detect and prevent certain unfair enforcement practices. In our white paper, we’ve laid out several concrete procedures:
None of the above should be controversial. Nor should any of the procedures be difficult to adopt because the SEC already has the proper infrastructure to do so. And doing so would promote investor protection while creating a healthier, fairer regulatory environment for the industry, an outcome that benefits everyone, including the commission itself.
Dale Brown is the president and CEO of the Financial Services Institute.
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