TD Ameritrade and Fidelity tweak RIA referral fees ahead of DOL fiduciary rule

TD is dropping its fees, while Fidelity is giving is RIAs fewer options on how to pay for referrals.
APR 21, 2017

Client-referral programs at the major custodian firms are being quietly revised in preparation for the Department of Labor's looming fiduciary rule, but some industry analysts still question whether the changes will be enough to pass muster under the new rules. Both TD Ameritrade and Fidelity confirmed changes this month to the fees charged advisers for client referrals from their retail investor businesses. At TD, the 150 registered investment advisers participating in the AdvisorDirect referral program have seen the fees they pay the custodian for client referrals altered from 25% of the annual fee they charge on referral assets to 25 basis points annually on those assets. The fee drops to 10 basis points above $2 million, and to 5 basis points above $10 million. The changes at Fidelity's referral program, Wealth Advisor Solutions, removed the option of paying 20 basis points on the referral assets for a seven-year period. As of April, the 90 RIAs participating in Fidelity's referral program will be charged 25 basis points annually on equity assets and 10 basis points on fixed income. Previously, advisers could choose between the current fee schedule and the 20-basis-point schedule. A spokesperson for Charles Schwab Corp. said there are 170 RIAs participating in the Schwab Advisor Network referral program, and that the fee structure has not changed since 2007. Schwab's referral fee schedule is reportedly in line with TD's new schedule. During an earnings conference call Wednesday morning, TD president and chief executive Tim Hockey described the fee schedule change as an attempt to "normalize" and create a "a flat fee across our RIA partners." "It is more in line with some of the tenets of the DOL rule, and it's designed to remove any potential conflicts of interest," he added. Kevin Duggan, vice president and senior business consultant of Fidelity Clearing & Custody Solutions, also cited the DOL rule in justifying the fee schedule changes. "Wealth Advisor Solutions and other referral programs like it will be considered fiduciary investment advice under the new DOL rule," he said. "Because of this, we leveled the fee for all advisers and expanded the oversight and diligence for all firms to ensure we can operate (Fidelity's referral program) under the new fiduciary standard." Despite the effort, there are questions about the future of such referral fees under the fiduciary rule, which was originally scheduled to take effect April 10. "This is one of those gray areas I would think a custodian would want to address with regulators under the new law," said Duane Thompson, senior policy analyst at fi360, a fiduciary training and consulting firm. Jason Roberts, chief executive of the Pension Resource Institute, an ERISA compliance consulting firm, said the future of the referral fees could depend on exactly how the custodians are referring investors to RIAs. "We're talking about some pretty astute firms with some very sharp counsel and compliance people, but the receipt of a third-party payment is a prohibited transaction under the new rule," he said. "I would be surprised if it was structured in a way where (the custodians) are giving fiduciary advice." Because the fiduciary rule only covers qualified retirement account assets, Mr. Roberts said the referral programs might have to avoid specifics regarding which type of investor account is being referred. "The cleanest path would be just referring the client and not getting into the types of accounts," he said. "One option would be to stay intentionally blind about the client." Of course, as Mr. Thompson pointed out, being vague about an investor's needs defeats the purpose of a referral program that is designed to match investors with RIAs. "It seems the (referring custodian) would have to know something about the investor in order to make the referral to an adviser," he said.

Latest News

Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034
Social Security trustees see one less year in insolvency countdown, project shortfall to start 2034

New report shows dimmed outlook for benefits to retirees and disabled Americans, creating further pressure for federal tax hikes or more borrowing.

NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale
NY Republican Stefanik presses SEC to probe Harvard bond sale

Open letter to SEC Chair Paul Atkins questions whether the Ivy League university withheld material information prior to its $750 million taxable bond offering.

Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group
Ex-LPL leader re-emerges at The Wealth Consulting Group

The Las Vegas-based hybrid RIA overseeing $8.8 billion in assets has named Andy Kalbaugh president to help scale its advisor platform.

Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios
Envestnet extends investment offerings with new alts model portfolios

The wealth tech giant – in collaboration with Fidelity, BlackRock, State Street, and Franklin Templeton – is offering its advisor and wealth firm users more ways to diversify.

Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again
Just as wealth industry M&A was picking up, economic uncertainty could kill it again

Deal volume increased post-election but now caution has taken over.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.

SPONSORED Beyond the dashboard: Making wealth tech human

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