Tussle over mandatory arbitration

SEP 10, 2013
The Securities and Exchange Commission may be putting off reforming mandatory-arbitration clauses in brokerage contracts, but that doesn't mean state regulators are backing off their fight to change the system. The North American Securities Administrators Association Inc. has been pushing the SEC to use its authority under Dodd-Frank to end or limit the pre-dispute mandatory-arbitration provisions that are included in nearly every broker-client agreement. At the InvestmentNews Regulatory Round Table last Monday, A. Heath Abshure, Arkansas' securities commissioner and NASAA's president, used an example of an investor whose individual retirement account totals $27,000. “If he's got a mandatory-arbitration provision with a Charles Schwab [& Co. Inc.] class action waiver, that means he's going to arbitration. That's the only alternative he has,” Mr. Abshure said. The way things are set up, “the [arbitration system] really presents an absolute prohibition and an impossibility for small investors to seek redress for securities fraud,” he said. But Ira Hammerman, senior managing director and general counsel at the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, said that the arbitration process, which the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc. administers, is a fair and efficient way to help small investors. “It is one where customers who have small claims can go and have those claims resolved,” he said during the round table. But among independent broker-dealers, there has been a growing “disenchantment” with the system over the past year, according to Dale Brown, president and chief executive of the Financial Services Institute Inc. “The reality they're experiencing is that it's becoming more unpredictable, more costly,” he said during the round table. Finra arbitration panels are inconsistent in applying rules related to evidence and the statute of limitations, said Mr. Brown, whose organization comprises independent brokers and financial advisers. He also is wary of attempts to limit the involvement of industry representatives on arbitration panels. “Industry participants bring a perspective on how things really work, and I think add to the fairness of the proceedings for investors,” he said. Mr. Abshure disagreed. “Industry participants mean they're there as employees of the industry,” he said. “I don't want a broker deciding an arbitration matter.” The FSI is engaged in conversation with Finra to improve the arbitration system, Mr. Brown said. But he defended arbitration as the better forum for fraud claims because the court system “is too high a barrier — too costly.” In a letter last month to 37 lawmakers who urged the SEC to take action on mandatory arbitration, Chairman Mary Jo White wrote that the issue “warrants serious consideration” and that the staff “currently is studying whether — and if so, how and under what circumstances — they would recommend that the commission consider using this authority.” After the round table, Mr. Abshure and other NASAA officials met with Ms. White, who didn't offer any further details about her position. Although disappointed she didn't act on the letter from Congress, “she seems very open and willing to talk with us, hear our concerns, which is a good sign,” Mr. Abshure said.

Latest News

OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients
OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients

The partnership arrives as most small business owners near retirement age still don''t have a formal succession plan in place.

Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption
Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption

A spokesperson for the estate planning fintech cited AI's reshaping of the industry as Trust & Will restructures its business.

Ex-Merrill broker who allegedly wooed client to pay $2.75 million to dismiss lawsuit
Ex-Merrill broker who allegedly wooed client to pay $2.75 million to dismiss lawsuit

Juan Rionda, a Merrill veteran, told bereaved client that “he loved her,” convinced her to give him cash, a Florida lawsuit claimed. 

Carson Group adds $236 million California team in latest deal
Carson Group adds $236 million California team in latest deal

Omaha-based RIA expands Northern California footprint with Roseville acquisition amid record annual pace for wealth management M&A.

Envestnet expands tax-management push with Vanguard alliance
Envestnet expands tax-management push with Vanguard alliance

Advisor's Alpha framework joins Envestnet's platform, giving advisors new tools to manage client tax exposure year-round.

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

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.