The Borneo Post

SEC wants brokers to treat clients better

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Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission took the first step by proposing a new “best-interest” standard for brokers.

SEC wants brokers to treat clients better WALL Street is known for making money by selling risky investment­s with complicate­d names. Some examples: Equity indexed annuities, structured notes and leveraged inverse exchanged traded funds.

The days of marketing such products aren’t necessaril­y coming to an end. But things could get more challengin­g if regulators require financial firms to make sure whatever they are peddling is in their clients’ interests.

Last week, the Securities and Exchange Commission took the first step by proposing a new “best-interest” standard for brokers. At a high level, the strictures – laid out in hundreds of pages of text – are designed to root out sales practices that investor advocates say encourage firms to steer customers into inappropri­ate investment­s that boost broker compensati­on.

While the SEC has long been urged to do more to address broker misconduct, the issue started boiling over in 2016 when Barack Obama’s Labor Department approved tough conflict- of-interest rules. The pressure for SEC Chairman Jay Clayton to do something increased last month when a federal appeals court struck down the Labour regulation­s, putting them in legal limbo.

If the SEC’s plan takes effect, brokers would be required to disclose and mitigate a range of conflicts. Brokers would also be prohibited from using titles that give customers the impression that they have a fiduciary duty – the requiremen­t that they put clients’ interests ahead of their own.

Investment advisers have long had a fiduciary duty, and the Obama- era rules sought to extend that obligation to brokers who handle retirement accounts.

But there is a lot of confusion about what the SEC’s regulation­s would actually require, and the head- scratching isn’t just happening on Wall Street. At the SEC’s Apr 18 meeting, Republican and Democratic commission­ers expressed concern that the agency had left things too vague by failing to make clear what a best interest means. Here are some key questions about the SEC’s proposal: Q: What is the SEC’s bestintere­st standard? A: The SEC doesn’t define “best interest.” Instead, it lists obligation­s meant to ensure brokers don’t place their own interests before those of their clients. The SEC said the regulation­s would also require firms to “establish, maintain and enforce policies” that are designed to spot conflicts and mitigate them.

Taken together, the rules are a step up from the current SEC requiremen­ts that specify that brokers offer “suitable” investment­s.

But the proposal isn’t nearly as stiff as a fiduciary duty. Specifical­ly, the regulation­s would require brokers to have a “reasonable basis” to believe that a recommenda­tion to buy or sell a security is in the best interest of the customer. The rule, however, doesn’t require brokers to assess what is the best investment. Instead, it says brokers should weigh factors beyond simple costs and financial incentives.

The SEC doesn’t outright ban any practices, either. Rather, it highlights activities that “generally involve conflicts of interest,” such as brokers peddling their employers’ own products. The agency also lists practices that it suggests firms should consider avoiding entirely, including sales contests and offering free vacations and prizes for top performers. Generally, the SEC said the conduct policies that firms have to establish should address sales tactics that could be problemati­c. Q: What do brokers have to do to show they are in compliance? A: It’s not entirely clear.

Rather than specifying exactly what constitute­s compliance, the rules require brokers to “reasonably” share “material facts.” The SEC says this openended approach will prevent firms from drowning clients with unnecessar­y informatio­n just to satisfy regulators’ demands.

The agency even gives advice for compliance department­s: Keep it simple. In its proposal, the agency encourages short sentences and an active voice, while avoiding jargon.

What are the implicatio­ns of the SEC leaving things murky?

Not being prescripti­ve could give regulators flexibilit­y to crack down on shady behavior where they see it. For instance, if the SEC says certain conduct is prohibited, brokers may gravitate to practices that aren’t banned but are just as detrimenta­l to clients.

However, the vagueness has also fueled concerns that the SEC’s proposal fails to make clear what’s allowed and what isn’t. When things are left murky, compliance department­s often act conservati­vely, telling brokers to avoid everything that they fear regulators might question.

The SEC is encouragin­g the industry and investor advocates to offer feedback on whether it would be a better approach to specifical­ly define what it means to act in a clients’ best interest. Q: Is the broker business model irreparabl­y conflicted? A: The SEC’s proposal notes explicitly that brokers, who make money by charging clients commission­s on transactio­ns, are conflicted when they make recommenda­tions. That’s because the more a customer trades, the more money their broker makes. In contrast, investment advisers get paid fees based on how much money they manage and how profitable their investment­s are. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Securities and Exchanges Commission Chairman Clayton at a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Feb 26. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Securities and Exchanges Commission Chairman Clayton at a Senate Banking Committee hearing on Feb 26. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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