J.P. Morgan moves ahead on dropping retirement commissions

Clients will be moved to self-directed accounts; bank may kill shift if DOL rule is dropped.
MAR 14, 2017

Although the fate of the Department of Labor fiduciary rule remains unclear, J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. is moving ahead with its plan to drop commissions in retirement accounts that use a financial adviser, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. The New York bank told some wealth management customers with individual retirement accounts that as of April 7 their "financial adviser will no longer be able to provide investment guidance," according to a letter sent to clients. Affected clients will be moved automatically to a self-directed retirement account on that date, the letter said. If the DOL rule is not implemented as planned, J.P. Morgan said in its letter that "it may not proceed with this transition" of accounts. About 5% of J.P. Morgan's $1.1 trillion in wealth management assets are held in retirement accounts, and only those that are charged commissions are affected by the change, a bank spokesman who also confirmed the letter told the Journal. J.P. Morgan said in November that it would stop accepting commissions in retirement accounts in an effort to avoid the more-stringent compliance standards required under the rule. The bank said affected retirement clients in its Chase Wealth Management, Private Bank and J.P. Morgan Securities units would be steered toward accounts where they manage the investments themselves or accounts that charge fees based on a percentage of assets, which could be costlier for those who trade little. Most of J.P. Morgan's clients in recent months were given the choice of moving to a fee-based account or a self-directed option, the bank's spokesman said. Those who elected to move to an account where they manage their own investments received letters recently, the spokesman said, while others who haven't made a decision were also issued the notice.

Latest News

LPL names Emily Field as chief people officer amid Commonwealth integration push
LPL names Emily Field as chief people officer amid Commonwealth integration push

The McKinsey veteran brings her expertise as LPL targets a lofty 90% advisor retention rate from its acquisition and integration of the $300 billion RIA.

Court rejects Perfection Bakeries' $2M pension credit in key ERISA case
Court rejects Perfection Bakeries' $2M pension credit in key ERISA case

An appeals court sided with a pension fund, ruling Perfection Bakeries must apply a $2M credit earlier in its withdrawal liability calculation.

Milton seeks Sanctuary in break for independence, reunites with former Merrill colleague
Milton seeks Sanctuary in break for independence, reunites with former Merrill colleague

Veteran advisor managing $400M launches firm through strategic partnership.

Osaic nabs two advisor teams from LPL in North Carolina
Osaic nabs two advisor teams from LPL in North Carolina

The giant hybrid RIA's latest East Coast move adds $175 million in recruited assets as it looks to offset broader advisor attrition.

Fintech bytes: Altruist launches new subscription service for RIA custody
Fintech bytes: Altruist launches new subscription service for RIA custody

Also, Nitrogen has added Indivisible Partners to its integration network, while Wealthtender unveiled an AI-focused update to help boost advisors' online presence.

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.