Advice or selling? Why language matters in U.S. fiduciary battle

Advice or selling? Why language matters in U.S. fiduciary battle

CHICAGO (Reuters) - The marketing come-ons of broker-dealers and insurance companies send this message: "We are financial advisers you can trust." But dig through court documents and the same companies argue something quite different: "We are just sales people."

The language gap helps explain what is at stake in one of the most important consumer protection initiatives of our time - laying down rules of the road for conflict-free retirement advice. That is the goal of the U.S. Department of Labor's (DoL) new fiduciary rule, a key initiative of the Obama administration that requires retirement advisers to put their clients' interests ahead of their own by eliminating conflicts of interest on retirement accounts.

And the rule has teeth - it permits consumers to sue advisers if they do not think they have met their fiduciary obligations.

Firms must comply with the new rule no later than April 10, but financial services opponents have been sending up smoke signals that they expect the new Trump administration to put on the brakes or move to kill the rule. That certainly would provoke a new round of legal battles.

The message that customer-centric advice is important is slowly making its way into public consciousness (http://reut.rs/2k1nJ5k).

But absent a tough rule with enforcement mechanisms, retirement investors will find it very difficult to understand the protections they may - or may not - be getting from financial services firms. That much is clear from a new report by the Consumer Federation of America (CFA).

The study underscores the contradictions between the marketing pledges of financial providers to put the best interests of clients first with the positions they have taken in legal challenges to the DoL rule.

The CFA reviewed marketing language on the websites of 25 brokerage and insurance firms, all of whom are members of two key trade groups challenging the DoL rule - the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), and the American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI). The firms consistently describe themselves as financial advisers or consultants, and many claim they put the needs of clients first (Check to see if a company you work with uses this type of pitch, see the full report: http://bit.ly/2jz3afD).

But in court cases challenging the rule, the self-descriptions of these firms are different. Take, for example, the industry's legal challenge of the DoL rule in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, a widely watched case. The plaintiff filings are riddled with language arguing that what they really do is sell products, rather than provide investment advice.

“The idea that they are financial advisers is a fiction,” says Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at CFA. “They are salespeople.”

A WATERED-DOWN STANDARD

SIFMA and ACLI both claim they support a fiduciary standard - but not the DoL rule. Instead, they have argued that the rules should be the exclusive purview of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

“SIFMA has long supported a best interest standard for broker-dealers across all retail investment accounts, not just retirement accounts,” a SIFMA representative said in response to my query about the CFA study.

“We continue to believe that the SEC, not the DoL, is the right agency to create a best-interest standard to protect retail investors, and we will continue to advocate to make that happen,” the representative said.

An ACLI spokesman issued a similar statement, adding, “We support consumer choice so that retirement savers maintain access to the retirement products and services they want and need.”

But Roper notes that an SEC standard would not regulate sales of insurance or other non-securities products, such as annuities. And, she adds, the SEC has had plenty of time to take action on a fiduciary standard, but has not done so. “It’s been 10 years since the SEC said this was needed, and there’s still no rule,” she said.

The SEC has become a highly political agency over the past decade. The five commissioners are all appointed by the president, including the chairperson, and no more than three commissioners may belong to the same party. Since the SEC failed to establish a new fiduciary rule during the Obama era, it is a safe bet that handing the job to a Trump-dominated SEC would be a death sentence.

Roper and other fiduciary advocates argue that what the industry really wants is a watered-down fiduciary standard. “They want something that gives lip service to best interests, so long as it doesn’t actually mean it, or require mitigation of conflicts.”

Which brings us back to those troubling marketing promises. If the Trump administration does water down or kill the DoL rule, we could wind up with a worst-of-both-worlds result: consumers who absorbed the message that conflict-free advice is important but have trouble determining that they are getting it because the new standard lacks real teeth.

In that kind of buyer-beware environment, there is a simple solution: retirement investors can demand the services of a fiduciary, or take a walk. You can ask any prospective adviser to sign the Fiduciary Oath, a simple, legally enforceable contract created by the Committee for the Fiduciary Standard. The adviser simply promises to put the client’s interest first, exercise skill, care and diligence, to not mislead you, and to avoid conflicts of interest. You can download the oath here (http://bit.ly/1PtGy4w).

But consumer and investor education will not get the job done in the face of misleading marketing pitches, Roper thinks. “We can educate people to ask for a fiduciary adviser, but people will misrepresent.”

(Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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