NTSA Adopts Policy to Apply Fiduciary Rule to Governmental 403bs
“This policy is in keeping with NTSA’s long-standing support for effective and clear disclosure of fees, compensation and alternatives within 403(b) plans,” says NTSA Executive Director Chris DeGrassi.
The National Tax-deferred Savings Association (NTSA) has formally
affirmed its support for a fiduciary standard for all not-for-profit
organizations, and the extension of the Labor Department’s fiduciary rule to governmental 403(b) plans and participants.
NTSA,
an independent, non-profit association dedicated to the 403(b) and
457(b) marketplace, chose to embrace the standard, even though the Labor
Department’s fiduciary rule does not apply to governmental retirement
plans.
“This policy is in keeping with NTSA’s long-standing
support for effective and clear disclosure of fees, compensation and
alternatives within 403(b) plans,” says NTSA Executive Director Chris
DeGrassi.
As part of its support for this new standard, NTSA, in
conjunction with its parent organization, the American Retirement
Association, began development of a fiduciary education program in
advance of the final Labor Department rule, and will make the program
available to its members later this year, ahead of the April 10, 2017,
implementation date of the fiduciary regulation for private-sector
plans, such as 401(k)s and IRAs.
“NTSA and NTSA partners have led on these issues for many years, and
will continue to work to advance professional standards in the best
interests of public education employees that need these important
services our members provide,” DeGrassi says. “America’s teachers need
and deserve access to the best, and most transparent financial advice as
they work to prepare for their future, and NTSA’s members have long
been an integral part of that planning.”
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Acknowledging that “smart regulation is only as effective as its
implementation,” the DOL has issued extensive guidance for
advisers and providers seeking to comply with the new conflict of interest
standards and prohibitions.
The Department of Labor (DOL) has published an in-depth FAQ document based on the input received from the financial services
industry and others in response to the April finalization of the new,
stricter fiduciary standard to be applied starting next year under the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act (ERISA).
“These questions are an important part of the regulatory
process as they allow the department to clarify important parts of the rule,”
explains Phyllis Borzi, assistant secretary for
Employee Benefits Security Administration (EBSA) of the U.S. Department of Labor, “and to head
off misunderstandings that could lead to bad results for retirement savers, or
financial services professionals.”
Borzi adds that she “believes we have succeeded in this
effort, and our continued engagement with the industry will only make the rules work better,” and that the FAQ published today are the
first of several that will be published in the coming months.
Today’s release addresses general questions like, “How will the Labor
Department approach implementation of the new rule and
exemptions during the period when financial institutions and advisers are coming into compliance?” as well as much more exacting questions about specific circumstances advisory firms are likely to face.
NEXT: Details from the
FAQ release
On the question of when, exactly, do firms and their
advisers have to comply with the conditions of the new BIC Exemption and
Principal Transactions Exemption, the DOL makes it clear that it intends to
stick to the initial deadlines set earlier this year.
“The Department has adopted a phased implementation approach
to both of these exemptions,” the FAQ explains. “The Rule’s amended definition
of fiduciary advice will first apply on April 10, 2017. On that same date, the
BIC Exemption and Principal Transactions Exemption will become available to
fiduciary advisers. At the outset, however, and for a transition period
extending until January 1, 2018, fewer conditions will apply to financial
institutions and advisers that seek to rely upon the exemptions.”
DOL says the transition period gives these fiduciaries ample
time to prepare for full compliance with all of the conditions of the
exemptions, while providing basic safeguards to protect the interests of
retirement investors. Important to note, during the transition period,
financial institutions and advisers still must comply with the “impartial conduct
standards” which are consumer protection standards that ensure that advisers
adhere to fiduciary norms and basic standards of fair dealing.
On the related but importantly distinct question of when firms
and their advisers have to comply with the new conditions added to preexisting exemptions
that were amended in connection with the fiduciary rule reform (such as the 84-24 annuity exemption, among a handful of others), the DOL says the full
compliance deadline is April 10, 2017.
“The impartial conduct standards simply
require fiduciaries to adhere to basic fiduciary norms and standards of fair
dealing (act in the best interest of customers, charge no more than reasonable compensation,
and avoid misleading statements). The Department concluded that financial institutions
and their advisers should be able to meet these standards within a year after publication
of the Rule in the Federal Register, and accordingly requires compliance with
these conditions beginning April 10, 2017,” DOL explains.
There is, however, an additional transition period for
certain transactions under the exemption known as “PTE 86-128,” which generally
require a written authorization executed in advance by an independent fiduciary
or individual retirement account (IRA) owner. More detail is in the release itself.
“For IRAs and non-ERISA plans that were already customers of
the financial institution as of April 10, 2017, the fiduciary engaging in the
transaction need not obtain affirmative written consent for such transactions
as would otherwise be required, but instead may rely on negative consent, as
long as the fiduciary gave the required disclosures and consent termination
form to the customer by that date (See PTE 86-128, as amended, at Section
III(b)(2)),” DOL clarifies.
NEXT: More important
details
Other questions/answers highlighted in the document are a
lot more abrupt.
For example, on the question, “Is the BIC Exemption broadly
available for recommendations on all categories of assets in the retail advice
market, as well as advice on rolling assets into an IRA or hiring an adviser?”
DOL says the short answer is simply, “Yes.”
“The BIC Exemption is broadly available for a wide variety
of transactions relating to the provision of fiduciary advice in the market for
retail investments,” DOL says. “The BIC Exemption is intended to be broadly
available for advisers and financial institutions that provide investment
advice to retail investors such as plan participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners,
and is intended by the department to serve as the primary exemption for
investment advice transactions involving these retail investors.”
Interestingly, the FAQ suggests compliance with the BIC
Exemption is not required as a condition of executing a transaction, such as a
rollover, at the direction of a client in the absence of an investment recommendation.
“In the absence of an investment recommendation, the rule does not treat
individuals or firms as investment advice fiduciaries merely because they
execute transactions at the customer’s direction,” DOL explains.
Another FAQ response makes it clear that the ongoing receipt
of a fixed percentage of the value of a customer’s assets under management,
where such values are determined by readily available independent sources or
independent valuations, typically does not, in and of itself, raise prohibited
transaction concerns or require a fiduciary to comply with a prohibited
transaction exemption.
“However, transactions involving this kind of compensation
may raise conflict of interest concerns,” DOL warns. “For example, there is a
clear and substantial conflict of interest when an adviser recommends that a
participant roll retirement savings out of a plan into a fee-based account that
will generate ongoing fees for the adviser that he would not otherwise receive,
even if the fees going-forward do not vary with the assets recommended or
invested.”
NEXT: FAQ should prove
valuable
Given the highly detailed requirements of
the rule’s various restrictions and exemptions, the FAQ document will undoubtedly make for
valuable reading for any defined contribution (DC) plan industry practitioner. There are numerous
detailed explanations of the specific circumstances in which the BIC may or may
not need to be evoked by different types of advisers and product providers—especially
as it all pertains to rollovers and the way fees are measured.
For example, DOL says it has received many questions to
this effect: “Is the BIC Exemption available for prohibited conflicts of
interest arising from the actions of a discretionary manager of assets held in
a plan or IRA? What exemptions are available for these prohibited transactions?”
In the FAQ document, DOL says the BIC Exemption “does not
provide relief for a recommended transaction if the adviser has or exercises
any discretionary authority or control with respect to the transaction. Persons
with such discretionary investment authority have long been treated as fiduciaries
under ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code. As such, they have been and continue
to be subject to a regulatory regime that specifically addresses the issues
raised when a fiduciary is given the discretionary authority to manage plan
assets. Including discretionary fiduciaries in the relief provided by the BIC
Exemption could expose discretionary fiduciaries—and the retirement investors
they serve as fiduciaries—to conflicts they are currently not exposed to. The
conditions of the BIC Exemption are tailored to the conflicts that arise in the
context of the provision of investment advice, not the conflicts that could
arise with respect to discretionary money managers.”
For advisory firms expecting to continue to utilize commission-base
sales structures in which higher volumes of sales are more richly rewarded,
there is a lot of food for thought in the FAQ. For example, DOL says such financial
institutions “must take special care in developing and monitoring compensation
systems to ensure that they do not run counter to the fundamental obligation to
provide advice that is in the customer’s best interest.”
In short, financial institutions may use such payment
structures if they are “not intended or reasonably expected to cause advisers
to make recommendations that are not in the best interest of retirement
investors and they do not cause advisers to violate the reasonable compensation
standard.”
** PLANADVISER will be gathering responses to the FAQ from advisers, attorneys and other ERISA experts, so stay tuned!