1st House Hearing on Fiduciary Proposal Falls Along Partisan Lines

Congress weighs in on the controversial proposal for the first time, with Republicans often against and many Democrats in support.

The U.S. House Committee on Financial Services’ Subcommittee on Capital Markets hosted a hearing on Wednesday about the Department of Labor’s retirement security proposal, sometimes called the fiduciary proposal. The hearing proceeded largely along partisan lines, with Republicans pointing out flaws and Democrats noting merits.

The proposal, whose comment period closed January 2, would extend fiduciary status under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act to one-time transactions that are not currently fiduciary acts. These include investment menu design, annuity sales and rollovers to individual retirement accounts.

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During the hearing, Subcommittee Chair Ann Wagner, R-Missouri, explained that this is the “fourth attempt” the DOL has made to regulate in this space, a reference to past rulemakings, one of which was struck down by the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in 2018. Wagner argued that the proposal will only lead to the “disrupting of the client-adviser relationship” and severely restrict access to annuities and rollovers for lower-income retirement savers.

Wagner added that Regulation Best Interest, enforced by the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the current five-part fiduciary test enforced by the DOL “fully protect consumers seeking financial advice.”

Arguments for …

Representative Brad Sherman, D-California, said the proposal needs some improvements, but “we need a regulation in this space.” He urged the DOL, as many commenters did, to more clearly exclude educational materials and “hire me” conversations in which an adviser pitches their services to an ERISA plan.

Sherman also entered into the subcommittee’s record a letter written by national retiree advocacy group AARP. The lobby group’s statement supports the proposal, arguing that “when Americans seek out financial advice for their retirement savings, they expect the advice they get will be in their best interest, not in the best interest of their financial adviser. This is very simply what the Retirement Security Rule does.”

The letter also states that “regulatory loopholes allow some financial advisers to recommend that their clients invest their retirement savings in products simply because the adviser will get higher fees and commissions for doing so” and that the proposal “closes a glaring loophole that allows some advisers to offer very bad advice to their clients, as long as they only do it once.”

A representative of AARP did not testify at the hearing.

Kamila Elliott, the CEO and founder of Collective Wealth Partners, testified at the hearing representing the Certified Financial Planner Board in support of the proposal.

She argued that under current law, “financial professionals can be paid handsomely for advice that is not in the investor’s best interest.” She added that “financial professionals should not be allowed to make recommendations that compensate them well but burden the client with excessively high fees, unnecessary risk or harmful illiquidity.”

Elliott noted that CFPB certificants abide by a fiduciary standard, even with one-time recommendations, and are still able to service smaller accounts.

The CFPB has been a supporter of the proposal.

… and Against

Jason Berkowitz, the chief legal and regulatory affairs officer at the Insured Retirement Institute, who testified at the hearing, sided with Subcommittee Chair Wagner in arguing that the proposal would hurt low-income savers.

Many professionals, he argued, would not be able to work with smaller balances because the costs associated with regulatory compliance and risk would make these smaller accounts no longer worth servicing. He added that “this proposal is not fixable.”

The IRI has been an opponent of the proposal throughout its rollout.

Brad Campbell, a partner in the Faegre Drinker law firm and a former assistant secretary of labor, testified that the DOL was going beyond its authority by regulating IRAs.

“The reason we are here today is that the proposals go well beyond DOL’s limited authority,” Campbell noted in written testimony. “In fact, the proposals would make DOL the primary financial regulator of $26 trillion, approximately half of which is held by individuals in individual retirement accounts and annuities (“IRAs”) rather than employer-provided plans.”

He argued in his remarks that individuals receiving financial assistance from insurance, securities and bank professionals are subject to other state and federal securities and banking regulation.

“If the proposals were finalized,” he testified, “and those individual accounts were subjected to the department’s authority in a manner similar to employer-provided plans, those insurance, securities and bank professionals serving them would now have to comply with a new, highly detailed, and very proscriptive federal regulatory regime led by the Labor Department that would simultaneously apply with—and in many cases, materially conflict with—the requirements of their ‘normal’ state insurance regulation, state and federal securities regulation, or state and federal banking regulation.”

The DOL has not yet announced a timetable for finalizing the proposal.

Product Partnerships – 1/10/24

NIPA, WIPN enhance professional development, networking opportunities; FusionIQ announces partnership with Kinecta Federal Credit Union; Ameritas and Ethos launch Index Universal Life Product.

NIPA, WIPN Enhance Professional Development, Networking Opportunities

The National Institute of Pension Administrators and the WE Inspire. Promote. Network, an organization advocating for women in the retirement industry, announced a partnership to promote professional development and networking opportunities.

“This partnership aligns seamlessly with WIPN’s mission to empower and connect women in professional settings,” Jennifer Mulrooney, WIPN’s president, said in a statement. “Together with NIPA, we look forward to providing our members with unparalleled opportunities for growth and success.”

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Key highlights of the collaboration include:

  1. Educational Initiatives: Members of both organizations can access educational resources, webinars and workshops on professional development;
  2. Membership Discounts: Members of NIPA and WIPN will receive special discounts on membership fees, as the partnership aims to expand the reach of both organizations and provide greater access to valuable resources; and
  3. WIPN Brunch at NAFE: The WIPN brunch will continue to be hosted at NIPA’s Annual Forum and Expo. The gathering is an opportunity for networking, mentorship and celebrating women’s achievements in the professional landscape.

“We are excited to embark on this collaborative journey with WIPN,” Laura Rudzinski, NIPA’s executive director, said in a statement. “We aim to create a synergistic environment that fosters professional development, diversity, and collaboration among our members.”

FusionIQ Announces Partnership With Kinecta Federal Credit Union

FusionIQ, a provider of cloud-based wealth management solutions, announced a partnership with Kinecta Federal Credit Union. The integrated FusionIQ One platform makes it easy for banks and credit unions to offer additional investing services focused on retaining customers while growing their membership base.

“There’s mounting evidence that traditional small accounts solutions have not evolved to properly service and meet the growing demands of institutions in the banking and credit union space,” Mark Healy, CEO of FusionIQ, said in a statement. “We’re excited to partner with Kinecta on their digital transformation, delivering proven digital investing solutions that align with their mission of empowering their members to live their best financial lives.”

FusionIQ’s end-to-end technology provides Kinecta with hybrid digital advice and self-directed investing modules, allowing digital investors to make their own investing decisions.

“Here at Kinecta, we recognized our membership needed an investing solution that was designed to align with a digitally driven demographic,” Donna McNeely, president of Kinecta Wealth Management said in a statement. “FusionIQ provides a turnkey offering that goes beyond a tech solution.”

Ameritas, Ethos Launch Index Universal Life Product

Ameritas and Ethos have introduced a new index universal life insurance product offered exclusively through Ethos, which offers customers a web-based experience, along with guidance from an agent.

“Since 2020, Ameritas and Ethos have been collaborating to bring products to market and Ethos IUL is our newest product extension,” Peter Colis, CEO of Ethos, said in a statement. “We’re delivering the best IUL customer and agent experience that has ever existed with one of our strong partners.”

Ethos Index Universal Life Insurance issued by Ameritas offers a “one-stop-shop sales” platform to sell more policies from quoting to activation. Customers and agents can choose Smart Solve, an optimized case design tool for premium and coverage targets, or one of three advanced design options. All illustrations include a custom client report.

In addition to death benefit protection, Ethos IUL provides no-cost living benefits in case of illness; tax-advantaged growth potential; and a lifetime safety net with liquidity during working years and retirement income options.

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