New SEC Proposal Should Even Out Your Best Interest Playing Field: ACLI
April 19, 2018 by Allison Bell
The American Council of Life Insurers (ACLI) today celebrated the birth of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s own fiduciary rule draft.
SEC members voted 4-1 this afternoon to put the draft through a 90-day public comment period.
Click HERE to read the original story via ThinkAdvisor.
SEC Chairman Jay Clay said the SEC ought to move to fill the gaps between investor expectations of broker-dealers and investment advisors and the legal requirements, in a way that would coordinate the SEC’s actions with the actions of the SEC’s fellow financial services regulators.
Critics of the SEC proposal say it would replace the requirements the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) fiduciary rule has imposed on financial professionals’ actions with disclosure requirements.
Sellers of annuities have objected to the special “best interest” requirements the DOL has tried to impose on sellers of indexed annuities.
Dirk Kempthorne, the president of the ACLI, said in a statement that the ACLI welcomes the SEC’s efforts.
“We are encouraged by the SEC proposal to implement a best interest standard of conduct that can be uniformly applied across all regulatory platforms — the states, FINRA, and the Department of Labor,” Kempthorne said in the statement. “ACLI strongly supports comments made by SEC Chairman Clayton at the meeting about the need for regulatory coordination. ”
Kempthorne also praised the broad scope of the draft regulations.
“ ACLI supports reasonable and appropriately tailored rules that require all sales professionals to act in consumers’ best interest,” Kempthorne said. “ACLI will continue contributing to state and federal efforts to develop consistent and uniform standards that truly work in consumers’ best interest.”
Fiduciary Rule
A fiduciary rule, such as the DOL fiduciary rule, requires an individual or company to act in the best interest of a client or other party being served.
The DOL best interest standard sets the requirements an insurance agent, financial planner, broker-dealer, insurance company or other provider of retirement savings products or services must meet to show that the provider has acted in the best interest of a retirement saver.