INVESTORS BEWARE
-- THE FIDUCIARY RULE IS DEAD!
Investors beware! An appellate court just
ruled that the Fiduciary Rule is dead – before it was even fully implemented
in an attempt to protect your retirement savings.
A lot of people are after your money – especially
if you are one of the millions of Americans who will be retiring and rolling
over your 40l(k) money into an Individual Retirement Account. Once you do a
rollover to keep your money growing tax deferred, you will be at the
mercy of the “financial advisor” or broker who can recommend expensive and
complicated products you don’t really need.
The Labor Department recognized this
challenge to retirement security when it created the Fiduciary Rule two years
ago. That rule would have required all financial advisors, brokers, and
insurance salespeople to do these two things:
- Fully
disclose all fees, commissions, hidden costs, and incentive programs in
any recommended investment.
- Put
the client’s interest ahead of their own in recommending products.
There’s a lot of money at stake - -and a
lot of fees and commissions involved in rollover accounts. With more than $6
trillion invested in 40l(k) plans now, the average account size is just under
$100,000. But for those who are ages 60-70, the average 40l(k) balance
is well over $160,000.
That’s why the industry trade associations
are gloating over the ruling by the U. S. Court of Appeals, 5th
Circuit, which just struck down the entire fiduciary rule requirement. The
Securities Industry Association, the Chamber of Commerce, and numerous other
business groups opposed the rule that was designed to protect unsuspecting
consumers of financial products. They argued that the “cost” of telling
people the truth about recommended investments would, in the end, keep the
industry from providing any advice to consumers.
If that sounds ridiculous, it
is! The Fiduciary Rule would have cut deeply into Wall Street’s
profits. That’s why so many big firms banded together to fight the
rule. We should all be against costly and unnecessary regulation.
But with the rule struck down in the courts, the financial services
industry is the big winner – and consumers stand to lose a lot.
Actually, the financial services industry
had already figured a way around the rule in case it went into effect. They
had decided to charge an “investment management fee” instead of sales
commissions to offset the cost of advice. But what careful retiree
needs to pay 1 percent a year on total assets, just to be told to keep a
large portion of his or her assets in safe things like money market funds and
CDs?
What happens now?
Well, the Fiduciary Rule is officially
dead. Now, the securities and insurance industries will revert back to the
old standard of “suitability.” That rule says if a salesperson
recommends an investment that is “suitable”, they will no longer have to
disclose that there is a better, lower cost mutual fund or annuity
available – one that doesn’t pay the salesperson a commission.
Under the suitability standard, it’s much harder to sue for bad and costly
advice.
It’s said the Securities and Exchange
Commission is working on its own version of the Fiduciary Standard. But
despite their long-running responsibility to protect investors, they haven’t
gotten around to it yet. And after the court’s ruling, crafting an
equally strong standard as the Fiduciary Rule may be difficult, if not
impossible.
How this impacts you
So, investors beware! Now it’s up to you
to carefully choose an advisor who is worried about YOUR retirement, not
theirs! There are steps you can take to protect yourself.
- Go to
www.CampaignforInvestors.org.
This website was created by the Institute for a Fiduciary Standard, the
group behind the push for the original Labor Department rule. There you
can learn what to ask a prospective financial advisor. And you can
directly search the disciplinary histories of all securities and
insurance salespeople.
- Ask
your financial advisor or broker or salesperson if he or she promises to
act as a fiduciary. Just because there isn’t a law, it doesn’t mean that
an advisor can’t sign a personal pledge to fully reveal all costs and
commissions – and to put your interests first. In fact, a Certified
Financial Planner (CFP) agrees to abide by those high standards. Go to www.CFPBoard.org to
search for one.
- Find
a “fee-only” financial advisor at www.NAPFA.org – the website of the financial
planners who charge fees, not commissions. Research their backgrounds
and choose a fee-only Certified Financial Planner.
This is not about getting something for
nothing. It’s always worth paying for good financial advice – not only about
products, but about organizing your life for financial success -- and getting
consistent reassurance along the way.
But you deserve to know all the costs
involved. And now only a true fiduciary will tell you. That’s the
Savage Truth. To see more articles, get advice and to hire Terry Savage go to TerrySavage.com
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