SEC sets June 5 date for vote on Regulation Best Interest

SEC sets June 5 date for vote on Regulation Best Interest
Commission adds new item to agenda: Interpretation of broker guidance that qualifies as advice
MAY 23, 2019

The Securities and Exchange Commission will vote on an investment-advice reform package on June 5. The agency posted the agenda for the open meeting on its website Thursday afternoon. The four SEC members will decide whether to adopt Regulation Best Interest, which is designed to raise the advice standard for brokers above the current suitability rule. They also will vote on a final client relationship disclosure document known as Form CRS. The third of the four items says the commission will "consider whether to publish a commission interpretation of the standard of conduct for investment advisers." It's not clear how this is related to the interpretation of the Investment Advisers Act that the SEC proposed last year as part of the advice reform package. The fourth item is new. It's labeled "Interpretation of 'Solely Incidental.'" This was not part of the advice reform proposal the SEC released in April 2018. It appears to address the language in the Investment Advisers Act that exempts brokers from registering as investment advisers if advice they give to clients is "solely incidental" to the recommendation to purchase an investment. Whether broker advice is incidental to their relationship with a customer or at the center of it has been at the heart of a decades-long debate over investment advice standards. The brokerage industry has maintained that broker advice should not subject them to the fiduciary standard that governs investment advisers. Investor advocates say that brokers long ago crossed the line from "solely incidental" to something much more comprehensive and deserving of the fiduciary standard. "That's the one unanticipated addition to the agenda," said Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America. "There are infinite possibilities there for the commission to make things even worse by adopting an anti-investor interpretation of 'solely incidental to.'" Under the SEC advice reform package, brokers would be subject to Reg BI and investment advisers would continue to be fiduciaries. SEC Chairman Jay Clayton has said Reg BI is based on fiduciary principles and would provide investors with similar protections whether they use a broker or adviser. The reform package proposal drew 6,000 comments.

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