The Department of Labor announced new rules that will require financial advisors and brokers to act in the best interests of their clients when handling individual retirement and 401(k) investment accounts. Seems like common sense? It is, but unfortunately the advice provided by brokers isn’t always in their client’s best interest but rather the amount of commissions the broker will make. The ‘conflict of interest’ rules aren’t expected to go into effect until Spring of 2017, if they survive the next year of challenges in court. Full implementation and adoption won’t occur until January of 2018.
Money is the name of the game. According to the Obama Administration, “extensive academic research” showed that conflicts of interest were estimated approximately $17 billion a year in embedded fees and investments that were recommended to clients but weren’t in their best interests. The new rules are aimed specifically at tax-advantaged individual retirement accounts and 401(k), mutual funds and variable annuities.
Broker vs. Financial Advisor
Brokers perform the actual buying and selling of investment products such as stocks, securities, and providing financial advice. They recommend investments and make the purchases on behalf of their clients based on ‘suitable’ investments based on their client’s proximity to retirement, financial situation and risk tolerance. Brokers have a great deal of power in their position to make recommendations and steer clients toward annuities or other investments that pay higher commissions than other products. This is where the conflict of interest comes into play. Rather than being a true ‘fiduciary’ for clients, offering only guidance and investment options that are truly in the client’s best interests, they are not obligated to put their client’s interests above their own financial motivations. The semantic difference is that the recommendations they make must be ‘suitable’ but not necessarily products that are the most appropriate for you. Under the new rules, brokers will now be required to act solely in their client’s best interests even if it will cost them potential commissions down the line. Brokers must also act as fiduciaries if they are managing an investment account or given full control over an investor’s account.
Read the other half of the article here: http://bit.ly/2coZPy6