Massachusetts regulator blasts SEC's Piwowar over fiduciary rule

William Galvin reiterates support for fiduciary standard in letter to DOL.
JUL 28, 2017

Citing the "horrific financial abuses associated with conflicted advice in the area of retirement rollovers" in a letter to the Department of Labor, Massachusetts' securities regulator William Galvin criticized recent comments by SEC Commissioner Michael Piwowar and reiterated his support for the DOL's fiduciary rule. "Retirees have been fodder for unscrupulous brokers for years upon leaving their place of employment and rolling-over their retirement assets," wrote Secretary of the Commonwealth William F. Galvin, adding "I am therefore dismayed that a sitting SEC Commissioner would so forcefully join with industry to attack the rule. Business groups looking to capitalize on Piwowar's comments are already using them to their advantage." In a recent letter to the Department of Labor, Commissioner Piwowar detailed his opposition to the fiduciary rule, which requires that providers of retirement financial advice act in the best interest of the client. The commissioner has advocated for disclosure as a solution to the problem of conflicted investment advice.

Latest News

Caprock expands Texas footprint with $4B Venturi acquisition
Caprock expands Texas footprint with $4B Venturi acquisition

Deal brings 10 advisors and deeper family office reach to Austin market.

Mariner aims to ‘break growth ceiling’ by deploying AI workforce of 700
Mariner aims to ‘break growth ceiling’ by deploying AI workforce of 700

Mega-RIA to adopt AI workforce at enterprise scale as firm rethinks growth without hiring.

Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms
Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms

As Goldman Sachs tightens rules on event contract trading, RIAs and hedge funds are weighing their own policies

Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina
Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo lures defectors from UBS and JPMorgan to expand in the East Coast, while another bank aligns itself with RayJay's financial institutions division.

AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds
AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds

New research suggests AI-exposed workers over 55 are leaving jobs more often than before ChatGPT’s rise.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income