He provided fake information about their investment holdings to hide his scheme.
The Labor secretary says the regulation that would increase investment advice standards for retirement accounts will withstand challenges from those looking to kill it.
The more structure we can provide advisers during this seismic shift, the more likely they will be about to adapt.
51% of advisers say the rule will help their businesses, an improvement from 2015 when only 27% saw the regulation helping.
Senate expected to follow suit, but Obama is almost certain to veto it.
Broker-sold fund companies lag since new regulation released.
Regulator seeks comment on plan for building massive database to help it quickly unravel flash crashes.
"We're harming savers worldwide with low and negative interest rates," he says.
Bradford Campbell, an ERISA attorney and former head of the Employee Benefits Security Administration, discusses how the Labor Department's new fiduciary rule flies in the face of the Earth Day celebration, due to thousands of pages of required disclosures and printouts of the regulation's text.
<i>InvestmentNews</i> debates whether the battle over holding advisers to a strict fiduciary standard for retirement accounts will end up in court. <i>(More: <a href="//www.investmentnews.com/section/fiduciary-focus"" target=""_blank"" rel="noopener noreferrer">Coverage of the DOL rule from every angle</a>)</i>
Lobbying group talks about priorities at private client conference in New York.
Mutual fund giants bank on low-cost index funds, robos to prosper in wake of the Labor Department's regulation.
Although the board relented, it does have a $10 million fundraising goal for its new Center for Financial Planning.
Regulators concerned about systematic risk in a market rout.
The more we do to help clients understand conflicts of interest, the better we can serve their interests.
Massachusetts Democrat calls Stamford Harbor a 'mockery' of the SEC's mission.
Executives from broker-dealers and RIAs say the fallout would create opportunity for advisers specializing in 401(k) plans to steal business away from “generalist” advisers.
Brian Graff, the executive director of NAPA, equates the rule to an infant that “pees you in the face,” joining a large chorus of observers citing the complexity of the new regulation and the massive shake-up it will have on the industry.
The agency's final reg will allow the asset class to be sold after all.
Wine mogul Peter Deutsch is seeking as much as $500 million in damages from Fidelity for a bad investment in one Chinese stock.