Study will recommend that accountants examine advisers

Study will recommend that accountants examine advisers
White paper by Georgetown professor will broaden — and stir up — discussion, TD Ameritrade's Bradley predicts
OCT 27, 2011
A study by a Georgetown University professor about advice industry regulation will suggest that accountants or another third party be put in charge of financial adviser examinations, according to Tom Bradley, president of TD Ameritrade Institutional, which sponsored the report. After giving the study a preliminary review yesterday, Mr. Bradley said that the white paper by James Angel will offer suggestions that go beyond the current options being bandied about. Those include ramping up funding for the Securities and Exchange Commission — the current regulator of larger firms — or creating a self-regulatory organization such as Finra to police the industry. “The paper that will come out from Jim Angel will suggest another potential option, to put this out to competition and potentially allow accounting firms, for example, to do the examinations for advisers under the guidelines of the SEC,” Mr. Bradley told about 400 advisers attending the firm's regional conference in Washington today. The Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation called for increased scrutiny of investment advisers, which the SEC has said it can examine only about every 11 years. The commission has said it will need more resources in order to boost its examinations program. RELATED ITEM Five things you may not know about advisers The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority Inc., which examines broker-dealers, has said that it would like to take on that responsibility for investment advisers, too. Legislation has been drafted in the House that would give the exam duties over to one or more SROs. Mr. Bradley said only one thing is clear: “Either way, what will likely happen is that you'll have to pay something.” The paper is due to be released next week, according to TD Ameritrade spokeswoman Jessica Taylor.

Latest News

JPMorgan mulls new asset lending scheme aimed at crypto ETF investors
JPMorgan mulls new asset lending scheme aimed at crypto ETF investors

Insiders say the Wall Street giant is looking to let clients count certain crypto holdings as collateral or, in some cases, assets in their overall net worth.

Fintech bytes: Future Capital adds RayJay alum to C-suite, Advyzon welcomes ex-Envestnet leader
Fintech bytes: Future Capital adds RayJay alum to C-suite, Advyzon welcomes ex-Envestnet leader

The two wealth tech firms are bolstering their leadership as they take differing paths towards growth and improved advisor services.

UBS 'wrongfully' fired Idaho advisor in 2021: FINRA panel
UBS 'wrongfully' fired Idaho advisor in 2021: FINRA panel

“We think this happened because of Anderson’s age and that he was possibly leaving,” said the advisor’s attorney.

Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role
Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role

The newly appointed leader will be responsible for overseeing fiduciary governance, regulatory compliance, and risk management at Cetera's trust services company.

Trump's 'revenge tax' might come back to bite US borrowers, experts say
Trump's 'revenge tax' might come back to bite US borrowers, experts say

Certain foreign banking agreements could force borrowers to absorb Section 899's potential impact, putting some lending relationships at risk.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

How intelliflo aims to solve advisors' top tech headaches—without sacrificing the personal touch clients crave

SPONSORED The evolution of private credit

From direct lending to asset-based finance to commercial real estate debt.