Duties of Brokers, Dealers, and Investment Advisers, 14848-14866 [2013-05222]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 45 / Thursday, March 7, 2013 / Notices
submitted to Topaz Exchange
electronically by its registered brokerdealer members, as well as from quotes
submitted electronically by market
makers.
A more detailed description of the
manner of operation of Topaz
Exchange’s proposed system can be
found in Exhibit E to Topaz Exchange’s
Form 1 application. The proposed
rulebook for the proposed exchange can
be found in Exhibit B to Topaz
Exchange’s Form 1 application, and the
governing documents for both Topaz
Exchange and ISE Holdings can be
found in Exhibit A and Exhibit C to
Topaz Exchange’s Form 1 application,
respectively. A listing of the officers and
directors of Topaz Exchange can be
found in Exhibit J to Topaz Exchange’s
Form 1 application.
Topaz Exchange’s Form 1 application,
including all of the Exhibits referenced
above, is available online at
www.sec.gov/rules/other.shtml as well
as in the Commission’s Public Reference
Room. Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning Topaz Exchange’s
Form 1, including whether the
application is consistent with the
Exchange Act. Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
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Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number 10–209 on the subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number 10–209. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/other.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to Topaz Exchange’s Form
1 filed with the Commission, and all
written communications relating to the
application between the Commission
and any person, other than those that
may be withheld from the public in
accordance with the provisions of 5
U.S.C. 552, will be available for Web
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site viewing and printing in the
Commission’s Public Reference Room,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549, on official business days
between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and
3:00 p.m. All comments received will be
posted without change; the Commission
does not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make publicly available. All
submissions should refer to File
Number 10–209 and should be
submitted on or before April 22, 2013.
By the Commission.
Kevin M. O’Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013–05242 Filed 3–6–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–69013; IA–3558; File No.
4–606]
Duties of Brokers, Dealers, and
Investment Advisers
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Request for data and other
information.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange
Commission is requesting data and
other information, in particular
quantitative data and economic
analysis, relating to the benefits and
costs that could result from various
alternative approaches regarding the
standards of conduct and other
obligations of broker-dealers and
investment advisers. We intend to use
the comments and data we receive to
inform our consideration of alternative
standards of conduct for broker-dealers
and investment advisers when
providing personalized investment
advice about securities to retail
customers. We also will use this
information to inform our consideration
of potential harmonization of certain
other aspects of the regulation of brokerdealers and investment advisers.
DATES: Comments should be received on
or before July 5, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
Electronic Submission:
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/other.shtml); or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number 4–606 in the subject line.
Paper Submission:
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• Send paper submissions in
triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549–1090. All
submissions should refer to File
Number 4–606. This file number should
be included on the subject line if email
is used. To help us process and review
your comments more efficiently, please
use only one method. The Commission
will post all submissions of data on the
Commission’s Internet Web site (https://
www.sec.gov). Comments are also
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. All comments
received will be posted without change;
we do not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly.
Please refer to the Appendix at the end
of this release for instructions on
submitting data and other information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Marietta-Westberg, Assistant
Director, Matthew Kozora, Financial
Economist, Division of Risk, Strategy
and Financial Innovation, at (202) 551–
6655; David W. Blass, Chief Counsel,
Lourdes Gonzalez, Assistant Chief
Counsel—Sales Practices, Emily
Westerberg Russell, Senior Special
Counsel, Daniel Fisher, Branch Chief,
Leila Bham, Special Counsel, Division
of Trading and Markets, at (202) 551–
5550; Office of Chief Counsel, at (202)
551–6825 and Office of Investment
Adviser Regulation, at (202) 551–6787,
Division of Investment Management;
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
Discussion
I. Introduction
A. Background
Today, broker-dealers and investment
advisers routinely provide to retail
customers 1 many of the same services,
and engage in many similar activities
related to providing personalized
investment advice about securities to
1 For the purposes of this request for comment,
and as noted in Part III below, the term ‘‘retail
customer’’ has the same meaning as in Section 913
of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act. Public Law 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376 (2010). Specifically, it means ‘‘a natural
person, or the legal representative of such natural
person, who (A) receives personalized investment
advice about securities from a broker, dealer or
investment adviser; and (B) uses such advice
primarily for personal, family, or household
purposes.’’ 15 U.S.C. 80b–11(g)(2).
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retail customers.2 While both
investment advisers and broker-dealers
are subject to regulation and oversight
designed to protect retail and other
customers, the two regulatory schemes
do so through different approaches
notwithstanding the similarity of certain
services and activities.
Investment advisers are fiduciaries to
their clients, and their regulation under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
(‘‘Advisers Act’’) is largely principlesbased. In contrast, a broker-dealer is not
uniformly considered a fiduciary to its
customers.3 Broker-dealer conduct is
subject to comprehensive regulation
under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (‘‘Exchange Act’’) and the rules of
each self-regulatory organization
(‘‘SRO’’) to which the broker-dealer
belongs. Both broker-dealers and
investment advisers also are subject to
applicable antifraud provisions and
rules under the federal securities laws.
Studies suggest that many retail
customers who use the services of
broker-dealers and investment advisers
are not aware of the differences in
regulatory approaches for these entities
and the differing duties that flow from
them.4 Some of these regulatory
differences primarily reflect the
different functions and business
2 In 2006, the SEC retained the
RANDCorporation’s Institute for Civil Justice
(‘‘RAND’’) to conduct a survey, which concluded
that the distinctions between investment advisers
and broker-dealers have become blurred, and that
market participants had difficulty determining
whether a financial professional was an investment
adviser or a broker-dealer and instead believed that
investment advisers and broker-dealers offered the
same services and were subject to the same duties.
RAND noted, however, that generally investors they
surveyed as part of the study were satisfied with
their financial professional, be it a representative of
a broker-dealer or an investment adviser. Angela A.
Hung, et al., RAND Institute for Civil Justice,
Investor and Industry Perspectives on Investment
Advisers and Broker-Dealers (2008) (‘‘RAND
Study’’).
3 A broker-dealer may have a fiduciary duty
under certain circumstances. This duty may arise
under state common law, which varies by state.
Generally, courts have found that broker-dealers
that exercise discretion or control over customer
assets, or have a relationship of trust and
confidence with their customers, are found to owe
customers a fiduciary duty similar to that of
investment advisers. See, e.g., United States v.
Skelly, 442 F.3d 94, 98 (2d Cir. 2006); United States
v. Szur, 289 F.3d 200, 211 (2d Cir. 2002);
Associated Randall Bank v. Griffin, Kubik, Stephens
& Thompson, Inc., 3 F.3d 208, 212 (7th Cir. 1993);
MidAmerica Fed. Savings & Loan Ass’n v.
Shearson/American Express Inc., 886 F.2d 1249,
1257 (10th Cir. 1989); Leib v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner & Smith, Inc., 461 F. Supp. 951, 953–954
(E.D. Mich. 1978), aff’d, 647 F.2d 165 (6th Cir.
1981). For the staff’s discussion of relevant case law
see Study, infra note 10, at 54–55. See also A Joint
Report of the SEC and the CFTC on Harmonization
of Regulation (Oct. 2009), available at https://
www.sec.gov/news/press/2009/
cftcjointreport101609.pdf at 8–9 and 67.
4 See, e.g., RAND Study.
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activities of investment advisers and
broker-dealers (for example, rules
regarding underwriting or market
making). Other differences reflect
statutory differences,5 particularly when
broker-dealers and investment advisers
engage in the same or substantially
similar activity (for example, providing
personalized investment advice,
including recommendations, about
securities to retail customers).
Over the decades since the Advisers
Act and Exchange Act were enacted, we
have observed that the lines between
full-service broker-dealers and
investment advisers have blurred.6
Investment advisers and broker-dealers,
for example, provide investment advice
both on an episodic and on an ongoing
basis.7 We have expressed concern
when specific regulatory obligations
depend on the statute under which a
financial intermediary is registered
instead of the services provided.8
5 Advisers Act Section 202(a)(11) defines
‘‘investment adviser’’ to mean ‘‘any person who, for
compensation, engages in the business of advising
others, either directly or through publications or
writings, as to the value of securities or as to the
advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling
securities, or who, for compensation and as part of
a regular business, issues or promulgates analyses
or reports concerning securities.’’ Advisers Act
Section 202(a)(11)(C) excludes from the investment
adviser definition any broker or dealer (i) whose
performance of its investment advisory services is
‘‘solely incidental’’ to the conduct of its business as
a broker or dealer; and (ii) who receives no ‘‘special
compensation’’ for its advisory services. Brokerdealers providing investment advice in accordance
with this exclusion are not subject to the fiduciary
duty under the Advisers Act.
6 See Certain Broker-Dealers Deemed Not to be
Investment Advisers, Exchange Act Release No.
51523 at 3 and 37 (Apr. 12, 2005) (‘‘Release
51523’’). Many financial services firms may offer
both investment advisory and broker-dealer
services. According to data from the Investment
Adviser Registration Depository as of November 1,
2012, approximately 5% of Commission-registered
investment advisers reported that they also were
registered as a broker-dealer, and 22% of
Commission-registered investment advisers
reported that they had a related person that was a
broker-dealer. As of October 31, 2012, 755 firms
registered with FINRA as a broker-dealer, or
approximately 17.4% of broker-dealers registered
with FINRA, were also registered as an investment
adviser with either the Commission or a state. See
Letter from Angela Goelzer, FINRA, to Lourdes
Gonzalez, Assistant Chief Counsel, Securities and
Exchange Commission (Nov. 16, 2012). Further, as
of mid-November 2012, approximately 41% of
FINRA-registered broker-dealers had an affiliate
engaged in investment advisory activities. Id. Many
of these financial services firms’ personnel may also
be dually registered as investment adviser
representatives and registered representatives of
broker-dealers. As of October 31, 2012,
approximately 86% of investment adviser
representatives were also registered representatives
of a FINRA-registered broker-dealer. Id.
7 A broker-dealer that receives special
compensation for the provision of investment
advice would not be excluded from the definition
of investment adviser. See supra note 5.
8 In Release 51523, we engaged in an analysis and
discussion of the history of the Exchange Act and
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In a staff study (the ‘‘Study’’) required
by Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act of 2010 (the ‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’),9
our staff made recommendations to us
that the staff believed would enhance
retail customer protections and decrease
retail customers’ confusion about the
standard of conduct owed to them when
their financial professional provides
them personalized investment advice.10
The staff made two primary
recommendations in the Study. The first
recommendation was that we engage in
rulemaking to implement a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct for
broker-dealers and investment advisers
when providing personalized
investment advice about securities to
retail customers. The second
recommendation was that we consider
harmonizing certain regulatory
requirements of broker-dealers and
investment advisers where such
harmonization appears likely to
enhance meaningful investor protection,
taking into account the best elements of
each regime.11
Advisers Act. We explained that the Advisers Act
was intended to regulate what, at the time that Act
was enacted, was a largely unregulated community
of persons engaged in the business of providing
investment advice for compensation. See Release
51523 at 22.
9 Publci Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376. Section 913
of the Dodd-Frank Act, among other things,
required a study of the effectiveness of the existing
legal or regulatory standards of care that apply
when broker-dealers and investment advisers (and
persons associated with them) provide personalized
investment advice and recommendations about
securities to retail customers. It also required the
identification of any legal or regulatory gaps,
shortcomings, or overlaps in legal or regulatory
standards in the protection of retail customers
relating to the standards of care for providing
personalized investment advice about securities to
retail customers that should be addressed by rule
or statute.
10 Staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, Study on Investment Advisers and
Broker-Dealers As Required by Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Jan. 2011) (‘‘Study’’), available at
www.sec.gov/news/studies/2011/913studyfinal.pdf.
The views expressed in the Study were those of the
staff and do not necessarily reflect the views of the
Commission or the individual Commissioners. See
also Statement by SEC Commissioners Kathleen L.
Casey and Troy A. Paredes (Jan. 21, 2011)
(‘‘Statement’’) (opposing the Study’s findings and,
among other things, stating that ‘‘stronger analytical
and empirical foundation than provided by the
Study is required before regulatory steps are taken
that would revamp how broker-dealers and
investment advisers are regulated’’).
11 As discussed in more detail below, we have a
variety of options relating to the staff’s
recommendations; we could take no action with
regard to either, or could take action to implement
one or both recommendations, either partially or
wholly. The choice of whether and how to take an
action with respect to the recommendations would
consider the facts and circumstances of the
marketplace at the time of the potential action, as
well as the regulatory landscape existing at such
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The staff explained that its
recommendations were intended to
address, among other things, retail
customer confusion about the
obligations broker-dealers and
investment advisers owe to those
customers, and to preserve retail
customer choice without decreasing
retail customers’ access to existing
products, services, service providers or
compensation structures.12 The staff
stated in the Study that retail customers
should not have to parse legal
distinctions to determine whether the
advice they receive from their financial
professional is provided in their best
interests, and stated that retail
customers should receive the same or
substantially similar protections when
obtaining the same or substantially
similar services from financial
professionals.13 The staff further noted
that the Commission could consider
harmonization as part of the
implementation of the uniform fiduciary
standard or as separate initiatives.14
In preparing the Study’s discussion of
the benefits and costs of aspects of the
staff’s recommendations, the staff,
among other things, considered
comment letters that we received in
response to an earlier request, and
reiterated this request when meeting
with interested parties, in order to better
inform the Study.15 Few commenters,
however, provided data regarding the
benefits and costs of the current
regulatory regime or the benefits and
costs likely to be realized if we were to
exercise the authority granted in Section
913. This may be because most
comments were made in advance of the
Study’s publication and could not be
informed by the staff’s specific
recommendations.16 Of the relatively
few comments received after
time (including, if applicable, any prior or
contemporaneous actions which would impact the
recommendations).
12 Study at viii, x, 101, 109, and 166.
13 Study at viii and 101.
14 Study at 129.
15 Study Regarding Obligations of Brokers,
Dealers, and Investment Advisers, Exchange Act
Release No. 62577 (July 27, 2010) (requesting
comment from the public to inform the preparation
of the Study). The Commission received over 3,500
comment letters before and after publication of the
Study. The comment letters are available at
www.sec.gov/comments/4–606/4–606.shtml.
16 Before the Study was published, we received a
comment describing results of a survey that had
been conducted based on certain assumptions about
a potential change in the standard of conduct,
which differ from those set out in this request for
information and data. The survey, for example,
assumed that under a new standard of conduct,
broker-dealer firms would no longer charge
commissions and instead would only maintain feebased accounts. See Oliver Wyman and Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association,
Standard of Care Harmonization Impact
Assessment for SEC (Oct. 27, 2010).
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publication of the Study, one
commenter expressed support for
further economic analysis of the Study’s
recommendations and other approaches
for Commission rulemaking, and offered
to provide data and other information
relating to implementing a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct.17
The Study recommended that we
engage in rulemaking using the
authority provided to us in Section 913
of the Dodd-Frank Act. The section
grants us discretionary rulemaking
authority under the Exchange Act and
Advisers Act to adopt rules establishing
a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
for all broker-dealers and investment
advisers when providing personalized
investment advice about securities to
retail customers.18 That section further
provides that such standard of conduct
‘‘shall be to act in the best interest of the
customer without regard to the financial
or other interest of the broker, dealer, or
investment adviser providing the
advice’’ and that the standard ‘‘shall be
no less stringent than the standard
applicable to investment advisers under
Sections 206(1) and 206(2) of the
Advisers Act when providing
personalized investment advice about
securities.’’
The Commission recognizes that
Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act does
not mandate that we undertake any such
rulemaking, and the Commission has
not yet determined whether to
commence a rulemaking. We expect that
the data and other information provided
to us in connection with this request
will assist us in determining whether to
engage in rulemaking, and if so, what
the nature of that rulemaking ought to
be. Among other considerations, we are
sensitive to the fact that changes in
existing legal or regulatory standards
could result in economic costs and
benefits and believe that such costs and
17 Comment Letter from Ira D. Hammerman,
Senior Managing Director and General
Counsel, Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association (July 14, 2011) (‘‘SIFMA
Letter’’) at 2. But see, Comment Letter from Barbara
Roper, Director of Investor Protection, Consumer
Federation of America, et al., (Mar. 28, 2012)
(‘‘Roper Letter’’) (asserting adoption of a uniform
standard could be implemented in a way that does
not lead to reduced investor choice or product
access).
18 See Section 15(k) of the Exchange Act and
Section 211(g) of the Advisers Act, each as added
by Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Section 913
of the Dodd-Frank Act also added Section 15(l) of
the Exchange Act and Section 211(h) of the
Advisers Act to add discretionary authority to
promulgate rules prohibiting or restricting certain
broker-dealer and investment adviser sales
practices, conflicts of interests, and compensation
schemes that the Commission deems contrary to the
public interest and the protection of investors. See
Exchange Act each as added by Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
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benefits must be considered in the
economic analysis that would be part of
any rulemaking under the discretionary
authority provided by Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. In considering the
options for a potential standard of
conduct applicable to broker-dealers
and investment advisers providing
personalized investment advice to retail
customers, we will take into account
existing regulatory obligations that
apply today to broker-dealers and
investment advisers.
If we determine to engage in
rulemaking, furthermore, the
rulemaking process would provide us
the opportunity to request further data
and other information on the range of
complex considerations associated with
any proposal implementing such a
standard, including any potential costs
and benefits associated with the
rulemaking. The rulemaking process
would also allow commenters to
address the extent to which any
proposal would further the goals
highlighted by Section 913, including
(1) preserving retail customer choice
with respect to, among other things, the
availability of accounts, products,
services, and relationships with
investment advisers and broker-dealers,
and (2) not inadvertently eliminating or
otherwise impeding retail customer
access to such accounts, products,
services and relationships (for example,
through higher costs). We may also
consider reassessing and potentially
harmonizing certain of the other
regulatory obligations that apply to
broker-dealers and investment advisers
where such harmonization is consistent
with the mission of the Commission.
B. Overview of the Request for
Additional Data and Other Information
We are requesting below additional
public input to assist us in evaluating
whether and how to address certain of
the standards of conduct for, and
regulatory obligations of, broker-dealers
and investment advisers. Since
publishing the Study, the staff has
continued to review current information
and available data about the current
marketplace for personalized
investment advice and the potential
economic impact of the staff’s
recommendations to inform its
consideration of any potential
rulemaking with respect to the Study’s
recommendations. While we and our
staff have extensive experience in the
regulation of broker-dealers and
investment advisers, the public can
provide further data and other
information to assist us in determining
whether or not to use the authority
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provided under Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
Data and other information from
market intermediaries and others about
the potential economic impact of the
staff’s recommendations, including
information about the potential impact
on competition, capital formation, and
efficiency, may particularly help inform
any action we may or may not take in
this area. We also especially welcome
the input of retail customers.
We are specifically requesting
quantitative and qualitative data and
other information and economic
analysis (herein ‘‘data and other
information’’) about the benefits and
costs of the current standards of conduct
of broker-dealers and investment
advisers when providing advice to retail
customers, as well as alternative
approaches to the standards of conduct,
including a uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct applicable to all investment
advisers and broker-dealers when
providing personalized investment
advice to retail customers. We recognize
that retail customers are unlikely to
have significant empirical and
quantitative information. We welcome
any information they can provide.
In this release, we discuss a potential
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
and alternatives to that standard of
conduct. A uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct can be understood quite
differently by various parties. In fact,
public comments on such a standard
have made widely varying assumptions
about what a fiduciary duty would
require. Comments have assumed, for
example, that a uniform fiduciary duty
would require all firms to, among other
things: provide the lowest cost
alternative; stop offering proprietary
products; charge only asset-based fees,
and not commissions; and continuously
monitor all accounts.19 These outcomes
would not necessarily be the case. By
contrast, many of the rules or other
obligations discussed over the years for
potential regulatory harmonization,
such as recordkeeping, advertising, pay
to play, and other obligations that
19 See also SIFMA Letter, supra note 17, at 7 and
10 (recommending, among other things, that the
Commission articulate a new uniform standard of
conduct, applicable to both broker-dealers and
investment advisers, to ‘‘act in the best interest of
the customer,’’ while applying existing case law,
guidance, and other legal precedent developed
under Section 206 of the Advisers Act only to
investment advisers, not broker-dealers) compared
with the Roper Letter at 2 (recommending, among
other things, that rather than replacing the current
Advisers Act standard with something new and
different, the Commission should extend the
existing Advisers Act standard (currently applicable
to investment advisers) to broker-dealers, while
clarifying its applicability in the context of brokerdealer conduct).
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currently apply to broker-dealers and
investment advisers, are more specific.
Accordingly, we believe that
consideration of a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct would benefit from
a set of assumptions and other
parameters that commenters can use
and critique in order to generate
meaningful data and other information.
The identification of particular
assumptions or parameters, however,
does not suggest our policy view or the
ultimate direction of any action
proposed by us.
We also request comment in this
release on whether or to what extent we
should consider making other
adjustments to the regulatory
obligations of broker-dealers and
investment advisers, including
regulatory harmonization. While this
release addresses both a potential
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
and regulatory harmonization more
generally, and at times, discusses and
requests comment relating to the
potential interrelationship of the two,
harmonization beyond a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct could be
considered separately. As noted below,
there are a variety of options relating to
whether and how to act with respect to
a potential uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct or potential regulatory
harmonization, including taking no
action, taking action to implement one
(either partially or wholly) and not the
other, or taking action to implement
both (again, either partially or wholly).
In order to inform our consideration of
all of these options, this release
discusses both a potential uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct and
regulatory harmonization and
encourages comment on the potential
practical, regulatory, and economic
effects that action or inaction with
respect to one or both may have. For
example, we request comment on the
extent to which regulatory
harmonization might address customer
confusion about the obligations owed to
them by broker-dealers and not
investment advisers (or by investment
advisers and not broker-dealers) even if
a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
is implemented. We also request
comment on the extent to which
regulatory harmonization might result
in additional investor confusion or
otherwise negatively impact investors.
We request data and other
information relating to the provision of
personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers to better
understand the relationship between
standards of conduct and the
experiences of retail customers. In
particular, we seek data and other
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information regarding: (a) Investor
returns generated under the existing
regulatory regimes; (b) security
selections of broker-dealers and
investment advisers as a function of
their respective regulatory regimes; (c)
characteristics of investors who invest
on the basis of advice from brokerdealers, invest on the basis of advice
from an investment adviser, or invest
utilizing both channels; (d) investor
perceptions of the costs and benefits
under each regime; and (e) investors’
ability, and the associated cost to
investors, to bring claims against their
broker-dealer or investment adviser
under their respective regulatory
regimes.20 We are also particularly
interested in the activities, conflicts of
interest21 and disclosure practices of
investment advisers and broker-dealers,
as well as the economics of the
investment advice industry and
characteristics of the current
marketplace. We also are asking for data
and other information about the benefits
and costs of the current set of regulatory
obligations that apply to broker-dealers
and investment advisers, and the
benefits and costs of different
approaches to harmonizing particular
areas of broker-dealer and investment
adviser regulation.
C. Suggested Guidelines and
Considerations for Submissions of Data
and Other Information
The data and other information
requested in this document have the
potential to be instructive in our
determination of which, if any, new
approach or approaches to consider
implementing with respect to the
regulatory obligations of investment
advisers and broker-dealers. We
welcome any relevant data and other
information, as well as comment, in
response to our inquiries below.
Responsive data and other information
would be more useful to us, however, if
they are prepared and submitted in a
consistent fashion. We set forth
suggested guidelines (‘‘Guidelines’’) in
the Appendix to this request for
commenters to follow, where possible,
in submitting data and other
information. In particular, through the
Guidelines, we request broker-dealers,
investment advisers, and dually
registered investment adviser/brokerdealers submitting comments to provide
specific data and other information
describing their businesses, retail
customers, and retail customer
20 See
Statement.
this request for information and data, we use
the term ‘‘conflict of interest’’ to mean a material
conflict of interest.
21 In
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accounts. We also request that other
commenters (e.g., retail customers,
academics, trade associations, and
consumer groups) provide the
information requested in the Guidelines
to the extent applicable or appropriate.
We especially welcome the input of
retail customers.22
We are particularly interested in
receiving data and other information
that are empirical and quantitative in
nature. We encourage all interested
parties, however, to submit their
comments, including qualitative and
descriptive analysis of the benefits and
costs of potential approaches and
guidance. As stated above, we recognize
that retail customers are unlikely to
have significant empirical and
quantitative information. We welcome
any information they can provide. In
addition, if commenters prefer to
respond to only some of the requests for
comment, they are welcome to do so.
We describe throughout this request
for data and other information a series
of assumptions that commenters may
use in order to facilitate our ability to
compare, reproduce, and otherwise
analyze responses to our questions in a
robust fashion. The discussion of these
assumptions does not suggest our policy
view or the ultimate direction of any
proposed action proposed by us. If
commenters believe that we should
make additional or different
assumptions as a further analytical step
we invite them to do so and explain
clearly the additional or different
assumptions made, address why such
assumptions are appropriate, and
compare and contrast results obtained
under such assumptions with results
obtained under the assumptions
specified in this request. If commenters
wish to submit multiple sets of
comments resting on different sets of
assumptions, they may do so. Although
we seek to obtain responses that we can
compare, reproduce, and otherwise
analyze in a robust fashion, we also
wish to emphasize that commenters
have flexibility to provide whatever data
and other information they believe is
important to provide.
Examples of data and other
information sought include empirical
data, detailed datasets on a particular
topic, economic analysis, legal analysis,
statistical data such as survey and focus
group results, and any other
observational or descriptive data and
other information. Such data and other
information can be quantitative,
22 This includes, where possible, information and
data focusing on accounts that receive nondiscretionary advice because they are most likely to
be impacted by changes in the standard of conduct.
See Guidelines in the Appendix.
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qualitative, or descriptive. Again,
commenters are invited to provide any
other information that they believe
would be useful to us as we consider
our options in this area.
Commenters should only submit data
and other information that they wish to
make publicly available. Commenters
concerned about making public
proprietary or other highly sensitive
data and other information may wish to
pool their data with others (e.g., through
a trade association, law firm, consulting
firm or other group) and submit
aggregated data in response to this
request. While we request that
commenters provide enough data and
other information to allow us to
compare, replicate, and otherwise
analyze findings, commenters should
remove any personally identifiable
information (e.g., of their customers)
before submitting data and other
information in response to this
request.23
II. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to the Current
Market for Personalized Investment
Advice
We are requesting data and other
information about the specific costs and
benefits associated with the current
regulatory regimes for broker-dealers
and investment advisers24 as applied to
particular activities as a baseline for
comparison, as described below.
Accordingly, and in addition to the
request for data and other information
which follows in Parts III and IV below,
we request data and other information
relating to the economics and
characteristics of the current regulatory
regime, and other data and other
information relating to investment
adviser and broker-dealer conflicts of
interest and the cost and effectiveness of
disclosure. Many of the requests ask
commenters to provide data and other
information describing retail customer
demographics and accounts; brokerdealer or investment adviser services
offered to retail customers; security
selections by or for retail customers; and
23 Cf. 17 CFR 248.3(u)(1) (defining for purposes of
Regulation S–P, ‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ as ‘‘any information: (i) A consumer
provides to you to obtain a financial product or
service from you; (ii) About a consumer resulting
from any transaction involving a financial product
or service between you and a consumer; or (iii) You
otherwise obtain about a consumer in connection
with providing a financial product or service to that
consumer.’’).
24 Please see our staff’s discussion in the Study
about the existing regulatory structures for
investment advisers and broker-dealers, and the
general differences and similarities between the
regulatory regimes. See Study at 14–46 (discussing
investment adviser obligations) and 46–83
(discussing broker-dealer obligations).
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the claims of retail customers in dispute
resolution. We request commenters refer
to the Appendix for the specific
characteristics of each of these topics
that are important to include when
submitting data and other information.
We also request commenters refer to
other guidelines in the Appendix,
particularly the request to provide
background information and
documentation to support any economic
analysis.
To assist us in our analysis, we
request that commenters provide the
following:
1. Data and other information,
including surveys of retail customers,
describing the characteristics of retail
customers who invest through a brokerdealer as compared to those who invest
on the basis of advice from an
investment adviser as well as retail
customer perceptions of the cost/benefit
tradeoffs of each regulatory regime.25
Provide information describing retail
customer accounts at broker-dealers and
investment advisers, and the manner in
which broker-dealers and investment
advisers provide investment advice
(e.g., frequency, coverage (i.e., accountby-account or relationship), and
solicited or unsolicited). How do firms
that offer both brokerage and advisory
accounts advise retail customers about
which type of account they should
open? What are the main characteristics
of each type of account? If possible,
associate retail customer demographic
information with account descriptions.
2. Data and other information
describing the types and availability of
services (including advice) brokerdealers or investment advisers offer to
retail customers, as well as any observed
recent changes in the types of services
offered. Provide information as to why
services offered may differ or have
changed. Have differences in the
standards of conduct under the two
regulatory regimes contributed to
differences in services offered or any
observed changes in services offered? If
possible, differentiate by retail customer
demographic information.
3. Data and other information
describing the extent to which different
rules apply to similar activities of
broker-dealers and investment advisers,
and whether this difference is
beneficial, harmful or neutral from the
perspectives of retail customers and
firms. Also, provide data and other
information describing the facts and
circumstances under which brokerdealers have fiduciary obligations to
retail customers under applicable law,
and how frequently such fiduciary
25 See
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obligations arise. If possible,
differentiate by retail customer
demographic information.
4. Data and other information
describing the types of securities brokerdealers or investment advisers offer or
recommend to retail customers. To the
extent commenters believe that
differences in the standards of conduct
under the two regulatory regimes
contribute to differences in the types of
securities offered or recommended,
provide data and other information as to
why the types of securities offered or
recommended may differ. If possible,
differentiate by retail customer
demographic information.
5. Data and other information
describing the cost to broker-dealers and
investment advisers of providing
personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers, as well as
the cost to retail customers themselves
of receiving personalized investment
advice about securities. Describe costs
in terms of dollars paid and/or time
spent. Do differences in the standards of
conduct under the two regulatory
regimes contribute to differences in the
cost of providing or receiving services?
If possible, separate costs by service
type, and differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account
information.
6. Data and other information
describing and comparing the security
selections of retail customers who are
served by financial professionals subject
to the two existing regulatory regimes.26
If possible, associate retail customer
demographic and account information
with security selections, and identify
whether initial retail customer
ownership took place prior to opening
the account and whether security
selections were solicited or unsolicited.
7. Data and other information
describing the extent to which brokerdealers and investment advisers engage
in principal trading with retail
customers, including data and other
information regarding the types of
securities bought and sold on a
principal basis, the volume, and other
relevant data points. For each type of
security, compare volume and
percentage of trades made on a principal
basis against the volume and percentage
of trades made on a riskless principal
basis. Also, provide data and other
information on the benefits and costs to
broker-dealers and investment advisers
of trading securities on a principal basis
with retail customers, as well as the
benefits and costs to retail customers to
buying securities from or selling
securities to a broker-dealer or an
investment adviser acting in a principal
capacity. To the extent possible,
describe costs and benefits in terms of
dollars paid and/or time spent (e.g., any
difference in price for a customer
between a principal trade and a trade
executed on an agency basis). Do
differences in the two regulatory
regimes contribute to any differences in
the cost of trading securities on a
principal basis? If possible, differentiate
by retail customer demographic and
account information.
8. Data and other information
describing and analyzing retail customer
returns (net and gross of fees,
commissions, or other charges paid to a
broker-dealer or investment adviser)
generated under the two existing
regulatory regimes.27 If possible,
provide security returns, associate retail
customer demographic and account
information with security positions, and
identify whether the retail customer
held these security positions prior to
account opening and identify whether
security selections were solicited or
unsolicited. If security returns are not
available, describe the type of securities
held in the account and total account
returns, including changes in account
value and account inflows/outflows.
9. Data and other information related
to the ability of retail customers to bring
claims against their financial
professional under each regulatory
regime, with a particular focus on dollar
costs to both firms and retail customers
and the results when claims are
brought.28 We especially welcome the
input of persons who have arbitrated,
litigated, or mediated claims (as a retail
customer, broker-dealer or investment
adviser), their counsel, and any persons
who presided over such actions. In
particular, describe the differences
between claims brought against brokerdealers and investment advisers with
respect to each of the following:
a. The differences experienced by
retail customers, in general, between
bringing a claim against a broker-dealer
as compared to bringing a claim against
an investment adviser;
b. any legal or practical barriers to
retail customers bringing claims against
broker-dealers or investment advisers;
c. the disposition of claims;
d. the amount of awards, if any;
e. costs related to the claim forum, as
it affects retail customers, firms, and
associated persons of such firms;
f. time to resolution of claims;
g. the types of claims brought against
broker-dealers (we welcome examples of
27 Id.
26 Id.
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mediation, arbitration and litigation
claims);
h. the types of claims brought against
investment advisers (we welcome
examples of mediation, arbitration and
litigation claims);
i. the nature of claims brought against
broker-dealers as compared to the
nature of claims brought against
investment advisers (e.g., breach of
fiduciary duty, suitability, breach of
contract, tort); and
j. the types of defenses raised by
broker-dealers and investment advisers
under each regime.
If possible, differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account
information.
10. Data and other information
describing the nature and magnitude of
broker-dealer or investment adviser
conflicts of interest and the benefits and
costs of these conflicts to retail
customers. Also provide data and other
information describing broker-dealer or
investment adviser actions to eliminate,
mitigate, or disclose conflicts of interest.
Describe the nature and magnitude of
broker-dealer or investment adviser
conflicts of interest with the type and
frequency of activities where conflicts
are present, and describe the effect
actions to mitigate conflicts of interest
have on firm business and on the
provision of personalized investment
advice to retail customers.
11. Data and other information
describing broker-dealer or investment
adviser costs from providing mandatory
disclosure to retail customers about
products and securities. Describe costs
in terms of dollars and, where cost
estimates are not available, estimate
time spent. If possible, differentiate by
the form of disclosure (oral or written)
and the amount of information the
disclosure presents. Also, if possible,
separate disclosure costs by associated
activity.
12. Data and other information
describing the effectiveness of
disclosure to inform and protect retail
customers from broker-dealer or
investment adviser conflicts of interest.
Describe the effectiveness of disclosure
in terms of retail customer
comprehension, retail customer use of
disclosure information when making
investment decisions, and retail
customer perception of the integrity of
the information. Please provide specific
examples. If possible, differentiate by
the form of disclosure (oral or written),
the amount of information the
disclosure presents, and retail customer
demographic and account information.
Also, if possible, measure disclosure
effectiveness by associated activity.
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13. Identification of differences in
state law contributing to differences in
the provision of personalized
investment advice to retail customers.
Provide data and other information
describing differences across states with
respect to retail customer brokerage or
advisory account characteristics, brokerdealer or investment adviser services
offered and the types of securities they
offer or recommend, and the cost of
providing services to retail customers.
Do differences in state law contribute to
differences in the recovery of claimants?
Do differences in state law contribute to
differences in the mitigation or
elimination of conflicts of interest?
Provide information describing why. If
possible, associate retail customer
demographic information with account
descriptions.
14. Data and other information
describing the extent to which retail
customers are confused about the
regulatory status of the person from
whom they receive financial services
(i.e., whether the party is a broker-dealer
or an investment adviser). Provide data
and other information describing
whether retail customers are confused
about the standard of conduct the
person providing them those services
owes to them. Describe the types of
services and/or situations that increase
or decrease retail customers’ confusion
and provide information describing
why. Describe the types of obligations
about which retail customers are
confused and provide information
describing why.
Provide explanations describing why
responses to particular questions are not
possible. Are there operational or cost
constraints that make the data and other
information unavailable? If so, please
explain what they are. Also provide data
and other information on other factors
important in describing the current
market for personalized investment
advice that may aid or guide us in future
analysis.
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III. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to a Uniform
Fiduciary Standard of Conduct and
Alternative Approaches
We discuss below potential
alternative approaches to establishing a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
for broker-dealers and investment
advisers and request data and other
information with respect to those
approaches and their potential
implications for the marketplace.29 To
29 In Part IV, we discuss certain possible
approaches for harmonizing certain other aspects of
the regulation of broker-dealers and investment
advisers.
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be clear, the discussion of these
potential approaches—including the
identification of particular assumptions
or alternatives—does not suggest our
policy view or the ultimate direction of
any proposed action by us. Furthermore,
the approaches presented here are nonexclusive. As discussed above, this
description of potential approaches is
instead intended to (1) assist
commenters in providing more concrete
empirical data and other information
and more precise comment in response
to this request and (2) assist us in more
readily comparing, reproducing, and
otherwise analyzing data and other
information provided by commenters.
We recognize that commenters may be
able to provide additional data and
other information that may be helpful to
us under assumptions and alternatives
that are different from, or in addition to,
those presented under the various
approaches described below. We invite
commenters to explain clearly the
different or additional assumptions and
alternatives they provide, address why
such assumptions and alternatives are
appropriate, and compare and contrast
results obtained under such
assumptions and alternatives with
results obtained under the assumptions
or alternatives specified in this request.
We intend to use the data and other
information provided to inform us about
the current market for personalized
investment advice about securities and
how different approaches to establishing
a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
on broker-dealers and investment
advisers may impact retail customers,
investment advisers and broker-dealers.
A. Initial Clarification and Assumptions
As an initial matter, to provide clarity
to commenters and establish a common
baseline of assumptions, we indicate
that commenters should make the
assumptions set forth below in
considering our subsequent description
of a possible uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct when a broker-dealer or
investment adviser provides
personalized investment advice to a
retail customer. However, as described
above in the introduction to this Part III,
the identification of particular
assumptions does not suggest our policy
view or the ultimate direction of any
proposed action by us. We invite
comment based on other assumptions
chosen by commenters, and we invite
comparisons between analyses made
under assumptions chosen by
commenters and analyses made under
the assumptions—particularly
alternatives to Assumption 1 and
Assumption 8 below—we have set forth
below.
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1. Assume that the term ‘‘personalized
investment advice about securities’’
would include a ‘‘recommendation,’’ as
interpreted under existing broker-dealer
regulation,30 and would include any
other actions or communications that
would be considered investment advice
about securities under the Advisers Act
(such as comparisons of securities or
asset allocation strategies). It would not
include ‘‘impersonal investment
advice’’ as that term is used for
purposes of the Advisers Act.31 The
term ‘‘personalized investment advice’’
would also not include general investor
educational tools, provided those tools
do not constitute a recommendation
under current law.32
2. Assume that the term ‘‘retail
customer’’ would have the same
meaning as in Section 913 of the DoddFrank Act, which is ‘‘a natural person,
or the legal representative of such
natural person, who (1) receives
personalized investment advice about
securities from a broker or dealer or
investment adviser; and (2) uses such
advice primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.’’33
3. Assume that any action would
apply to all SEC-registered brokerdealers and SEC-registered investment
advisers. To the extent commenters are
of the view that the duty should be
limited to a particular subset of SECregistered broker-dealers or SECregistered investment advisers or
expanded to include all broker-dealers
or investment advisers, commenters
should explain how and why it should
be limited or expanded, and include any
relevant data and other information to
support such an application.
4. Assume that the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct would be designed
to accommodate different business
models and fee structures of firms, and
would permit broker-dealers to continue
to receive commissions; firms would not
be required to charge an asset-based fee.
As provided in Section 913, ‘‘[t]he
receipt of compensation based on
commissions, fees or other standard
30 See Study at 124–125 (staff’s discussion of
what constitutes a ‘‘recommendation’’ under the
broker-dealer regulatory regime).
31 We have defined ‘‘impersonal investment
advice’’ for certain purposes under the Advisers Act
to mean ‘‘investment advisory services provided by
means of written material or oral statements that do
not purport to meet the objectives or needs of
specific individuals or accounts.’’ 17 CFR
275.203A–3(a)(3)(ii). See also 17 CFR 275.206(3)–1;
Study at 123 (staff’s discussion of what constitutes
‘‘impersonal investment advice’’).
32 See Study at 125 (staff’s discussion of
communications that generally would not
constitute a ‘‘recommendation’’ under existing
broker-dealer regulation).
33 Sec. 913, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376;
15 U.S.C. 80b–11(g)(2). See also supra note 1.
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compensation for the sale of securities,
for example, would not, in and of itself,
be considered a violation’’ of the
uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct.34 Broker-dealers also would
continue to be permitted to engaged in,
and receive compensation from,
principal trades. To satisfy the uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct, however,
assume that at a minimum a brokerdealer or investment adviser would
need to disclose material conflicts of
interest, if any, presented by its
compensation structure.35
5. Assume that the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct would not generally
require a broker-dealer or investment
adviser to either (i) have a continuing
duty of care or loyalty to a retail
customer after providing him or her
personalized investment advice about
securities, 36 or (ii) provide services to
a retail customer beyond those agreed to
between the retail customer and the
broker-dealer or investment adviser.
Assume that the question of whether a
broker-dealer or investment adviser
might have a continuing duty, as well as
the nature and scope of such duty,
would depend on the contractual or
other arrangement or understanding
between the retail customer and the
broker-dealer or investment adviser,
including the totality of the
circumstances of the relationship and
course of dealing between the customer
and the firm, including but not limited
to contractual provisions, disclosure
34 See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1); 15 U.S.C. 80b–11(g)(1).
We also note that nothing in Section 206(1) and
206(2) of the Advisers Act prohibits the receipt of
transaction-based compensation, such as
commissions. A person engaged in the business of
effecting transactions in securities for the account
of others, would however, absent an available
exemption, be required to register as a brokerdealer. See Exchange Act Sections 3(a)(4) and 15(a);
15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(4) and 78o(a). See also SEC v.
Hansen, [1984 Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep.
(CCH) ¶ 91,426 (S.D.N.Y. 1984) (stating that
receiving transaction-based compensation is among
the activities that indicate a person may be acting
as a broker); Mutual Fund Distribution Fees;
Confirmations, Exchange Act Release No. 62544
(July 21, 2010) (proposing rules governing ongoing
mutual fund asset-based sales charges), n. 168 (‘‘As
a form of deferred sales load, all payments of
ongoing sales charges to intermediaries would
constitute transaction-based compensation.
Intermediaries receiving those payments thus
would need to register as broker-dealers under
Section 15 of the Exchange Act unless they can
avail themselves of an exception or exemption from
registration. Marketing and service fees paid to an
intermediary may similarly require the
intermediary to register under the Exchange Act.’’).
35 See discussion infra Part III.B.1.
36 See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1) (‘‘Nothing in this
section [authorizing a uniform standard of conduct
for the provision of personalized investment advice]
shall require a broker or dealer or registered
representative to have a continuing duty of care or
loyalty to the customer after providing personalized
investment advice about securities.’’).
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and marketing documents, and
reasonable customer expectations
arising from the firm’s course of
conduct.37 Similarly, the uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct would
apply within the context of the scope of
services agreed to between the customer
and the broker-dealer or investment
adviser, and would not generally require
the broker-dealer or investment adviser
to provide services beyond those agreed
to through a contractual or other
arrangement or understanding with the
retail customer.
6. As discussed below, assume that
the offering or recommending of only
proprietary or a limited range of
products would not, in and of itself, be
considered a violation of the uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct.38
7. Assume that Section 206(3) and
Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act and
the rules thereunder would continue to
apply to investment advisers, and
would not apply to broker-dealers.39
Assume that to satisfy its obligations
under the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct, however, a broker-dealer
would need to disclose any material
conflicts of interest associated with its
principal trading practices.
8. Assume that existing applicable
law and guidance governing brokerdealers, including SRO rules and
37 We understand that market participants
generally have taken the view that the extent to
which a continuing duty of loyalty or care exists
under the Advisers Act depends on the scope of the
relationship with the customer. They believe, for
example, that investment advisers who act as
financial planners generally would not have a
continuing duty to a customer after providing the
financial plan.
38 See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(2) (‘‘The sale of only
proprietary or other limited range of products by a
broker or dealer shall not, in and of itself, be
considered a violation of the [uniform standard of
conduct for the provision of personalized
investment advice.]’’).
39 Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act makes it
unlawful for an investment adviser to ‘‘engage in
any act, practice, or course of business which is
fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative’’ and
authorizes the Commission ‘‘by rules and
regulations [to] define, and prescribe means
reasonably designed to prevent, such acts, practices,
and courses of business as are fraudulent,
deceptive, or manipulative.’’ See also infra the
discussion of principal trading and the
inapplicability of Section 206(3) of the Advisers Act
in Part III.B.1.
We have authority to adopt rules for brokerdealers that are substantially similar to those
adopted under Sections 206(3) and 206(4) of the
Advisers Act. For purposes of our request for
information and data about a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct, we request that commenters
assume that such rules will not be incorporated into
such a standard of conduct. However, commenters
may wish to express their views on whether the
Commission should engage in rulemaking to
impose such rules on broker-dealers as part of
harmonization of the regulatory obligations of
broker-dealers and investment advisers. See
discussion infra Part IV.
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14855
guidance, would continue to apply to
broker-dealers.
B. Discussion of a Possible Uniform
Fiduciary Standard
Pursuant to Section 913 of the DoddFrank Act, ‘‘[t]he Commission may
promulgate rules to provide that the
standard of conduct for all brokers,
dealers, and investment advisers, when
providing personalized investment
advice about securities to retail
customers * * * shall be to act in the
best interest of the customer without
regard to the financial or other interest
of the broker, dealer, or investment
adviser providing the advice.’’ 40 We
have not yet determined whether to
exercise this authority. Section 913 also
provides that any standard of conduct
we adopt shall be no less stringent than
the standard applicable to investment
advisers under Sections 206(1) and
206(2) of the Advisers Act.41 The
Supreme Court has construed Advisers
Act Sections 206(1) and 206(2) as
requiring an investment adviser to fully
disclose to its clients all material
information that is intended ‘‘to
eliminate, or at least expose, all
conflicts of interest which might incline
an investment adviser—consciously or
unconsciously—to render advice which
was not disinterested.’’ 42
The Study recommended that we
should engage in rulemaking to
implement the uniform fiduciary
standard described in Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The staff
recommended that, in implementing the
uniform fiduciary standard, we should
address both components of the uniform
fiduciary standard: a duty of loyalty and
a duty of care. The staff also supported
extending the existing guidance and
precedent under the Advisers Act
regarding fiduciary duty, which has
developed primarily through
Commission and staff interpretive
pronouncements under the antifraud
provisions of the Advisers Act, as well
as through case law and numerous
enforcement actions, to broker-dealers,
where similar facts and circumstances
would make the guidance and precedent
relevant and justify a similar outcome.43
40 15
U.S.C. 80b–11(g)(1); 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1).
41 Id.
42 SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc.,
375 U.S. 180, 194 (1963).
43 As discussed in more detail below, the
Commission acknowledges that existing guidance
and precedent under the Advisers Act regarding
fiduciary duty turn on the specific facts and
circumstances, including the types of services
provided and disclosures made. Accordingly, the
existing guidance and precedent may not directly
apply to broker-dealers depending on the facts and
circumstances.
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We request data and other
information on the benefits and costs of
implementing the uniform fiduciary
standard (as described below), entailing
two key elements: a duty of loyalty and
a duty of care. Our description below of
a potential uniform fiduciary standard is
only one example of how we could
implement a uniform fiduciary standard
designed to require broker-dealers and
investment advisers to provide advice
that is in the best interest of the
customer. The discussion of the uniform
fiduciary standard described below and
the potential alternative approaches
does not suggest our policy view or the
ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us. To obtain the most
comparable and useful data and other
information on a uniform fiduciary
standard, however, we ask commenters
to consider the uniform fiduciary
standard as described below. We also
discuss certain potential alternative
approaches in the discussion below and
request comment on those alternatives.
We recognize, among other things,
that the list of potential options
discussed below—including the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct,
potential alternative approaches to the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct,
and taking no action at this time—is not
exhaustive, and that commenters may
formulate additional alternative
approaches. To the extent commenters
are of the view that we should consider
additional alternative approaches, we
request they explain those approaches,
address their reasons for recommending
such approaches, and compare such
approaches to the ones specified in
detail below.
1. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of
Conduct—the Duty of Loyalty
The duty of loyalty is a critical
component of a fiduciary duty. As noted
above, Dodd-Frank Section 913(g)
addresses the duty of loyalty by
providing: ‘‘[i]n accordance with such
rules [that the Commission may
promulgate with respect to the uniform
fiduciary standard] * * * any material
conflicts of interest shall be disclosed
and may be consented to by the
customer.’’ 44 The uniform fiduciary
standard would be designed to promote
advice that is in the best interest of a
retail customer by, at a minimum,
requiring an investment adviser or a
broker-dealer providing personalized
investment advice to the customer to
fulfill its duty of loyalty. This would be
accomplished by eliminating its
material conflicts of interest, or
providing full and fair disclosure to
44 15
U.S.C. 80b–11(g)(1); 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1).
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retail customers about those conflict of
interest.45 Commenters should assume
that we would provide specific detail or
guidance, summarized below, about
complying with the duty of loyalty
component of the uniform fiduciary
duty. As described above in the
introduction to this Part III, the
identification of particular assumptions
does not suggest our policy view or the
ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us. We invite comment on
other assumptions and comparisons
between analyses made under such
other assumptions and analyses made
under the assumptions set forth below.
1. Assume that any rule under
consideration would expressly impose
certain disclosure requirements.
Assume that each broker-dealer and
investment adviser that provides
personalized investment advice about
securities to a retail customer would be
required to provide the following to that
retail customer:
a. Disclosure of all material conflicts
of interest the broker-dealer or
investment adviser has with that retail
customer. This requirement would
reflect an overarching, general
obligation to disclose all such conflicts
of interest. Depending on the nature of
the conflict and unless otherwise
provided, this disclosure largely could
be made through the general
relationship guide described below.
b. Disclosure in the form of a general
relationship guide similar to Form ADV
Part 2A, to be delivered at the time of
entry into a retail customer
relationship.46 The relationship guide
45 The staff made a number of recommendations
in the Study for the Commission to consider in
implementing a duty of loyalty. First, the Study
recommended that we should facilitate the
provision of uniform, simple and clear disclosures
to retail customers about the terms of their
relationships with broker-dealers and investment
advisers, including any material conflicts of
interests. The Study identified a number of
potential disclosures that the Commission should
consider (e.g., a general relationship guide akin to
the new Part 2A of Form ADV, the form investment
advisers use to register with the Commission and
states, which is provided to advisory clients). See
Study at 114–117. Second, the Study recommended
that we should consider whether rulemaking would
be appropriate to prohibit certain conflicts, to
require firms to mitigate conflicts through specific
action, or to impose specific disclosure and consent
requirements. Id. Third, the Study recommended
that we should address through guidance and/or
rulemaking how broker-dealers should fulfill the
uniform fiduciary standard when engaging in
principal trading. Id. at 118–120.
46 We note that FINRA has requested comment on
a concept proposal to require the provision of a
disclosure statement for retail customers at or
before commencing a business relationship that
would include many items of information
analogous to what is required in Form ADV Part 2.
FINRA Regulatory Notice 10–54, ‘‘Disclosure of
Services, Conflicts and Duties’’ (Oct. 2010). Nothing
in this request for information and data suggests
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would contain a description of, among
other things, the firm’s services, fees,
and the scope of its services with the
retail customer, including: (i) Whether
advice and related duties are limited in
time or are ongoing, or are otherwise
limited in scope (e.g., limited to certain
accounts or transactions); (ii) whether
the broker-dealer or investment adviser
only offers or recommends proprietary
or other limited ranges of products; (iii)
whether, and if so the circumstances in
which, the broker-dealer or investment
adviser will seek to engage in principal
trades with a retail customer. It also
could include disclosure of other
material conflicts of interest, such as
conflicts of interest presented by
compensation structures.47
c. Oral or written disclosure at the
time personalized investment advice is
provided of any new material conflicts
of interest or any material change of an
existing conflict.
2. Assume that any rule under
consideration would treat conflicts of
interest arising from principal trades the
same as other conflicts of interest.
Assume that such a rule would make
clear that it would not incorporate the
transaction-by-transaction disclosure
and consent requirements of Section
206(3) of the Advisers Act for principal
trading.48 At a minimum, as with other
conflicts of interest, the broker-dealer
would be required to disclose material
conflicts of interest arising from
principal trades with retail customers.49
that FINRA or any other regulatory body could or
could not, or should or should not adopt rules or
requirements that it determines are appropriate and
that meet applicable legal standards.
47 A general relationship guide could also include
other disclosures, such as a firm’s disciplinary
history.
48 Assume that the rule would not relieve an
investment adviser from its obligations under
Advisers Act Section 206(3). We note that we have
the authority to apply similar requirements to
broker-dealers. Also assume that the rule would not
relieve an investment adviser who is also registered
as a broker-dealer from its obligations to comply
with Advisers Act Section 206(3) or the rules
thereunder. See 17 CFR 275.206(3)–3T.
As stated above, we request that, for purposes of
our request for information and data about a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct, commenters
assume that we will not incorporate these
obligations into the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct. However, commenters may wish to
express their views, on whether the Commission
should engage in rulemaking to impose such rules
on broker-dealers as part of harmonization of the
regulatory obligations of broker-dealers and
investment advisers. See discussion infra Part IV.
49 SRO rules currently impose requirements on
broker-dealers when broker-dealers engage in
principal trading. See, e.g., NASD Rule 2440 (Fair
Prices and Commissions); IM–2440–1 (Mark-Up
Policy); IM–2440–2 (Mark-Up Policy for Debt
Securities); NASD Rule 2310 (Suitability) (effective
until July 9, 2012, when replaced by FINRA Rule
2111); NASD Rule 3010 (Supervision); NASD Rule
3012 (Supervisory Control System). As noted above,
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3. Assume that the rule would
prohibit certain sales contests. The rule
would prohibit the receipt or payment
of non-cash compensation (e.g., trips
and prizes) in connection with the
provision of personalized investment
advice about the purchase of securities.
2. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of
Conduct—the Duty of Care
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The duty of care is another critical
component of the uniform fiduciary
standard. We would specify, through
the duty of care, certain minimum
professional obligations of brokerdealers and investment advisers,50
which would be designed to promote
advice that is in the best interests of the
retail customer. Commenters should
assume, for purposes of this request for
data and other information, that we
would implement the duty of care by
imposing on a broker-dealer or
investment adviser, when providing
personalized advice to a retail customer
about securities, the uniform obligations
described below. As described above in
the introduction to this Part III, the
identification of particular assumptions
does not suggest our policy view or the
ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us. We invite comment based
on other assumptions chosen by
commenters, and we invite comparisons
between analyses made under
assumptions chosen by commenters and
analyses made under the assumptions
we have set forth below.
1. Suitability obligations: A duty to
have a reasonable basis to believe that
its securities and investment strategy
recommendations are suitable for at
least some customer(s) as well as for the
specific retail customer to whom it
makes the recommendation in light of
the retail customer’s financial needs,
objectives and circumstances; 51
2. Product-specific requirements:
Specific disclosure, due diligence, or
suitability requirements for certain
securities products recommended (such
as penny stocks, options, debt securities
and bond funds, municipal securities,
these requirements would continue to apply to a
broker-dealer under a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct.
50 The staff stated in the Study that the
Commission could articulate and harmonize such
professional standards by referring to, and
expanding upon, as appropriate, the explicit
minimum standards of conduct relating to the duty
of care currently applicable to broker-dealers (e.g.,
suitability (including product-specific suitability),
best execution, and fair pricing and compensation
requirements) under applicable rules. See Study at
50–53.
51 See Study at 27–28 and 61–64 (discussing
investment adviser and broker-dealer suitability
obligations, respectively).
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mutual fund share classes, interests in
hedge funds and structured products);52
3. Duty of best execution: A duty on
a broker-dealer and an investment
adviser (where the investment adviser
has the responsibility to select brokerdealers to execute client trades) to seek
to execute customer trades on the most
favorable terms reasonably available
under the circumstances; 53 and
4. Fair and reasonable compensation:
A requirement that broker-dealers and
investment advisers receive
compensation for services that is fair
and reasonable, taking into
consideration all relevant
circumstances.54
3. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of
Conduct—Application of Prior
Guidance and Precedent Regarding
Investment Adviser Fiduciary Duty
In the interests of increasing investor
protection and reducing investor
confusion, the staff recommended in the
Study that the uniform fiduciary
standard be no less stringent than the
existing fiduciary standard for
investment advisers under Advisers Act
Sections 206(1) and 206(2).55
Accordingly, the staff recommended
that existing guidance and precedent
under the Advisers Act regarding
fiduciary duty should continue to apply
to investment advisers and be extended
to broker-dealers, as applicable, under a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.
Application of this guidance and
precedent turns on the specific facts and
circumstances, including the types of
services provided and disclosures made.
We understand, accordingly, that
existing guidance and precedent may
not directly apply to broker-dealers
depending on the facts and
circumstances. Therefore, to aid
commenters, we have identified below
certain fiduciary principles that
commenters should assume would
continue to apply to investment
advisers and be extended to brokerdealers. We also request commenters to
identify specific citations to any case
law and enforcement actions and other
guidance under the Advisers Act
52 See id. at 65–66 (discussing relevant rules
imposing specific disclosure, diligence and
suitability requirements for certain securities
products).
53 See id. at 28–29 and 69–70 (describing
investment adviser and broker-dealer duties of best
execution).
54 See id. at 66–69 (describing broker-dealer
obligations to charge fair prices, commissions, and
other charges and fees).
55 As explained above, guidance and precedent
under Sections 206(3) and 206(4) of the Advisers
Act, and the rules adopted under those sections,
would not be part of the uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct.
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regarding the fiduciary duty that they
believe should or should not apply to
broker-dealers when providing
personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers.
For purposes of this request for data
and other information, commenters
should make the assumptions below
regarding the application of prior
guidance and precedent under a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.
As described above in the introduction
to this Part III, the identification of
particular assumptions does not suggest
our policy view or the ultimate
direction of any proposed action by us.
We invite comment based on other
assumptions chosen by commenters,
and we invite comparisons between
analyses made under assumptions
chosen by commenters and analyses
made under the assumptions we have
set forth below.
1. Allocation of investment
opportunities: A fiduciary’s duty of
loyalty generally would require a firm to
disclose to a retail customer how it
would allocate investment opportunities
among its customers,56 and between
customers and the firm’s own
account; 57 for example, this disclosure
could include, among other things, the
firm’s method of allocating shares of
initial public offerings, as well as its
method (e.g., pro rata, ‘‘first in, first
out’’) of allocating out of its principal
account to its customers when agency
orders are placed on a riskless principal
basis.
2. Aggregation of orders: A firm may
aggregate or ‘‘bunch’’ orders on behalf of
two or more of its retail customers, so
long as the firm does not favor one
56 The Commission has brought numerous
enforcement actions alleging that investment
advisers unfairly allocated client trades to preferred
clients without making adequate disclosure. See,
e.g., Alpine Woods Capital Investors, LLC and
Samuel A. Lieber, Admin. Proc. File No. 3–14233
(Feb. 7, 2011) (finding the investment adviser
violated Advisers Act Section 206(2) when it
disproportionately allocated shares from an initial
public offering to the advantage of the firm’s two
smallest mutual funds); Nevis Capital Mgmt., LLC,
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2214 (Feb. 9,
2004) (settled order); The Dreyfus Corp., et al.,
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1870 (May 10,
2000) (settled order); Account Mgmt. Corp.,
Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1529 (Sept.
29, 1995) (settled order).
57 The Commission has brought numerous
enforcement actions alleging that investment
advisers unfairly allocated trades to their own
accounts and allocated less favorable or
unprofitable trades to their clients’ accounts. See,
e.g., Nicholas-Applegate Capital Mgmt., Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 1741 (Aug. 12, 1998)
(settled order); Timothy J. Lyons, Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 1882 (June 20, 2000)
(settled order); SEC v. Lyons, 57 SE.C. 99 (2003);
SEC v. Alan Brian Bond, et al., Litigation Release
No. 18923 (Civil Action No. 99–12092 (S.D.N.Y.)
(Oct. 7, 2004).
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customer over another.58 A firm would
need to disclose whether and under
what conditions it aggregates orders; 59
if the firm does not aggregate orders
when it has the opportunity to do so,
the firm would need to explain its
practice and describe the costs to
customers of not aggregating.60
C. Alternative Approaches to the
Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct
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We identify below alternative
approaches to the uniform fiduciary
standard discussed above. In
considering the alternatives, it would be
helpful to obtain information about
whether and, if so, how each alternative
meets the goals of enhancing retail
customer protections and decreasing
retail customers’ confusion about the
standard of conduct owed to them when
their financial professional provides
them personalized investment advice. It
would also be helpful to obtain
information about the relative costs and
benefits of these alternatives, including
the extent to which one alternative may
provide (1) greater benefits for the same
or lower cost than other alternatives or
(2) lower benefits for the same or higher
cost than other alternatives. The
identification of particular alternatives
does not suggest our policy view or the
ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us.
Keeping in mind these goals, we
request comment on the following
alternative approaches, including the
costs and benefits of each approach, as
well as other approaches. We could:
1. Apply a uniform requirement for
broker-dealers and investment advisers
to provide disclosure about (a) key
facets of the services they offer and the
types of products or services they offer
or have available to recommend; and (b)
material conflicts they may have with
retail customers, without imposing a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.
2. Apply the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct discussed above on
58 The staff takes the position that an investment
adviser, when directing orders for the purchase or
sale of securities, may aggregate or ‘‘bunch’’ those
orders on behalf of two or more of its accounts, so
long as the bunching is done for the purpose of
achieving best execution, and no customer is
disadvantaged or advantaged by the bundling. See
SMC Capital, Inc., SEC No-Action Letter (Sept. 5,
1995).
59 The staff understands that, consistent with
applicable law, broker-dealers currently only
aggregate orders in limited circumstances, such as
when orders are received outside of normal trading
hours and aggregated in anticipation of execution
when the market re-opens, or when the brokerdealer has discretion over the trade. Similarly, the
staff recognizes that aggregation of orders may not
occur frequently with regard to non-discretionary
advisory accounts.
60 See Item 12 of Form ADV Part 2A.
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broker-dealers and investment advisers,
but without extending to broker-dealers
the existing guidance and precedent
under the Advisers Act regarding
fiduciary duty.61 The existing guidance
and precedent under the Advisers Act
regarding fiduciary duty would
continue to apply to investment
advisers.
3. Without modifying the regulation
of investment advisers, apply the
uniform fiduciary standard discussed
above, or parts thereof, to brokerdealers. This ‘‘broker-dealer-only’’
standard could involve establishing a
‘‘best interest’’ standard of conduct for
broker-dealers, which would be no less
stringent than that currently applied to
investment advisers under Advisers Act
Sections 206(1) and 206(2), when they
provide personalized investment advice
about securities to retail customers.
4. Without modifying the regulation
of broker-dealers, specify certain
minimum professional obligations
under an investment adviser’s duty of
care (which are currently not specified
by rule). As discussed above, any rules
or guidance would take into account
Advisers Act fiduciary principles, such
as the duty to provide suitable
investment advice (e.g., with respect to
specific recommendations and the
client’s portfolio as a whole) and to seek
best execution where the adviser has the
responsibility to select broker-dealers to
execute client trades. These
requirements could be similar to those
rules currently applicable to brokerdealers, as described further in the
Study.62
5. Consider following models set by
regulators in other countries. For
instance, the United Kingdom’s
Financial Services Authority (FSA)
requires persons providing personalized
investment advice to a retail client to act
in the client’s best interests, and has set
limits on how investment advisers
charge for their services, including
prohibiting (a) the receipt of ongoing
charges unless there are ongoing
services, and (b) the receipt of
commissions from those providing the
investment advice.63 Similarly, the
61 The Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association suggested this approach. See SIFMA
Letter, supra note 17.
62 For a more detailed description of such
requirements, see the Study at 61–70.
63 See Financial Services Authority Handbook,
Conduct of Business Sourcebook (‘‘COBS’’), 2.1.1,
available at https://fsahandbook.info/FSA/html/
handbook/COBS/2/1 (FSA’s ‘‘client best interest
rule’’). See also COBS, 9.2.1(1), (2); COBS, 9.2.2
(requiring that a firm’s recommendations be
suitable and reasonable based on the client’s risk
profile). Effective in 2012, the FSA will require
firms to disclose to retail clients the type (either
‘‘independent’’ or ‘‘restricted’’) and breadth of
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Treasury of Australia imposed a best
interest obligation on persons providing
personal advice that would (a) require
the provider of the advice to place a
retail client’s interests before its own,64
and (b) prohibit the receipt of
‘‘conflicted’’ remuneration, such as
commission payments relating to the
provision of advice.65 Further, the
European Securities and Markets
Authority (ESMA) published guidelines
to clarify the application of certain
aspects of its current Markets in
Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID)
suitability requirements (arising from
both MiFID and the MiFID
Implementing Directive).66
As described above in Part III.B, we
invite comment on other potential
alternative approaches not specified in
this request for data and other
information and comparisons between
those alternative approaches and the
potential uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct and alternatives we describe
above.
D. Preserving Current Standard of
Conduct Obligations
Consistent with our discretionary
authority under Section 913, we could
also determine to take no further action
at this time with respect to the
standards of conduct applicable to
broker-dealers and investment advisers;
existing regulatory requirements would
continue to apply. We request data and
other information relating to the current
market for personalized investment
advice in Part II above. It generally
would be helpful to obtain information
about how taking no action would
compare to a uniform fiduciary standard
advice being offered (e.g., limited to certain
products or a comprehensive, fair and unbiased
analysis of the relevant market). See COBS,
6.2A.5R, 6.2A.6R, available at https://
fsahandbook.info/FSA/html/handbook/COBS. The
Adviser Charging rules, also going into effect in
2012, will prohibit receipt of any remuneration for
advice that is not disclosed and agreed upon in
advance of the recommendation. See COBS, 6.1A.
64 See The Corporations Amendment (Further
Future of Financial Advice Measures) Act 2012,
(‘‘Financial Advice Measures’’), available at https://
parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/download/legislation/
bills/r4739_aspassed/toc_pdf/
11270b01.pdf;fileType=application%2Fpdf. See
also Australian Securities & Investments
Commission, Regulatory Guide 175: Licensing:
Financial Product Advisers—Conduct and
Disclosure 15 (2011), available at https://
www.asic.gov.au/asic/pdflib.nsf/
LookupByFileName/rg175-010411.pdf/$file/rg175010411.pdf (discussing the implied warranty, under
the Australian Securities and Investments
Commission Act 2001, to render advice through
‘‘due care and skill’’).
65 See Financial Advice Measures.
66 See Guidelines on certain aspects of the MiFID
suitability requirements, ESMA, 2012, 387 (July 6,
2012), available at https://www.esma.europa.eu/
system/files/2012-387.pdf.
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of conduct and the alternative
approaches described above. In
particular, it would be helpful to obtain
information about the costs and benefits
of the current regulatory regime as
compared to the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct and the alternative
approaches described above. Such
comparisons would be particularly
helpful as commenters consider
providing data and other information in
connection with the requests specified
in Part III.E below.
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E. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to Changes in the
Marketplace for Personalized
Investment Advice Resulting from the
Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct
and Alternative Approaches
The Commission requests the
following data and other information
relating to changes in the marketplace
for personalized investment advice for
retail customers that might occur as a
result of implementing the uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct and the
alternative approaches described above.
As noted above, in providing this data
and other information, the Commission
believes it would be useful to also
obtain information about the benefits
and costs of continuing the current
regulatory regime, as requested in Part
II above, as a baseline for comparing the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
and the alternative approaches.
Accordingly, to the extent applicable,
the Commission requests commenters to
provide such comparisons. As in Part II,
many of the requests ask commenters to
provide data and other information
describing retail customer demographics
and accounts; broker-dealer or
investment adviser services offered;
financial securities; and the claims of
retail customers in dispute resolution.
We request commenters to refer to the
Appendix for the specific characteristics
of each of these topics that are
important to include when submitting
data and other information. We also
request commenters refer to other
guidelines in the Appendix, particularly
the request to provide background
information and documentation to
support any economic analysis.
1. Commenters have highlighted
several activities of broker-dealers and
investment advisers that are most likely
to be impacted by a uniform fiduciary
standard for the provision of
personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers: 67
67 The inclusion of activities in this list does not
necessarily reflect the Commission’s belief that
these activities will be impacted by a uniform
fiduciary standard, see the discussion of
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• Recommending proprietary
products and products of affiliates;
• Engaging in principal trades with
respect to a recommended security (e.g.,
fixed income products);
• Recommending a limited range of
products and/or services;
• Recommending a security
underwritten by the firm or a brokerdealer affiliate, including initial public
offerings;
• Allocating investment opportunities
among retail customers (e.g., IPO
allocation);
• Advising on a trading strategy
involving concentrated positions;
• Receiving third-party compensation
in connection with securities
transactions or distributions (e.g., sales
loads, ongoing asset-based fees, or
revenue sharing); and
• Providing ongoing, episodic or onetime advice.
a. Provide comment on this list of
activities. Does this list capture the
activities of broker-dealers and
investment advisers that would be most
impacted by a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct when providing
personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers?
b. Provide data and other information
describing the likely benefits and costs
for firms and retail customers from firms
engaging in these activities under the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
and each of the alternative approaches
discussed above. In particular, describe
the cost to broker-dealers and
investment advisers in terms of dollars
and time spent from providing these
activities to retail customers under the
uniform fiduciary standard and each of
the alternative approaches. Also provide
data and other information describing
the benefits and costs to firms and retail
customers likely to result from
voluntary actions firms may take that
are not necessarily mandated by the
relevant standard. If possible, separate
costs by service type, and differentiate
by retail customer demographic and
account information.
c. Provide data and other information
related to the nature and magnitude of
conflicts of interest when firms engage
in these activities under the uniform
fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches discussed above.
How would the uniform fiduciary
standard or each of the alternative
approaches increase or decrease brokerdealer or investment adviser conflicts of
interest?
2. Provide data and other information
describing the types and availability of
clarifications and assumptions in the introductions
to Part III and Part III.A.
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services (including advice) and
securities that broker-dealers or
investment advisers would offer or
recommend to retail customers under
the uniform fiduciary standard and each
of the alternative approaches discussed
above. Would the application of a
particular approach discussed above
require a firm, or give a firm an
incentive, to modify or eliminate
current business practices? What would
be the impact or potential impact of
each approach discussed above on retail
customer cost and access to
personalized investment advice and to
security offerings? How could such
impact or costs be mitigated? Provide
data and other information describing
why the business practices would be so
modified or eliminated, and whether
retail customer access would change.
Indicate whether business practices are
transaction-specific, account-specific,
customer-specific, or firm-wide. If
possible, separate costs by service type
and differentiate by retail customer
demographic and account information.
3. Provide data and other information
describing the security selections of
retail customers under the uniform
fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches discussed above.
If possible, associate retail customer
demographic and account information
with security selections.
4. Provide data and other information
related to the ability of retail customers
to bring claims against their financial
professional under the uniform
fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches discussed above,
with a particular focus on alternative
forums and dollar costs to both firms
and retail customers and the results
when claims are brought. Describe
disposition of claims, costs related to
claim forum, time to resolution, and
awards if any. If possible, differentiate
by retail customer demographic and
account information.68
5. Provide information, data and
comment on the extent to which the
uniform fiduciary standard and each of
the alternative approaches discussed
above affect investor protection and
confusion investors have about the
standard of conduct applicable to their
financial professionals when providing
personalized investment advice about
securities.69
6. Provide information, data and
comment on the costs and benefits to
investment advisers and broker-dealers
associated with implementing the
uniform fiduciary standard and each of
68 See supra Item 9(a)–(j) in Part II of this request
for information and data.
69 See supra note 2.
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the alternative approaches discussed
above. Discuss any changes investment
advisers and broker-dealers would need
to make to, among others, their
customer documentation, internal
controls, and training programs, as well
as other changes they would need to
make, and why.
7. Provide data and other information
describing to what extent firms would
rely on disclosure to comply with the
uniform fiduciary standard and each of
the alternative approaches detailed
above. How would retail customers be
expected to react to changes in practice
and changes in disclosure? How do
retail customers choose between a firm
with disclosed conflicts and a firm
whose business model does not involve
the same conflict(s)?
8. Provide data and other information
on how other aspects of the market for
personalized investment advice would
change if we adopt any of the alternative
approaches discussed above. In
particular, provide data about how the
alternatives described above would
impact the costs to retail customers and
any associated effect on access to
products and services. As stated above,
specific information about the potential
economic impact of the staff’s
recommendations, including
information about the potential impact
on competition, capital formation and
efficiency, may particularly help inform
any action we may take in this area.
9. Provide data and other information
describing the benefits and costs related
to alternative approaches to the
standards of conduct other than those
specified in this request for data and
other information. Additional
approaches and standards of conduct for
persons providing personalized
investment advice include but are not
limited to those standards established
under the laws of other countries.
10. Provide explanations describing
why responses to particular questions
are not possible.
F. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to Account
Conversions
In 2007, as a result of the court
decision in Financial Planning
Association v. SEC 70 (‘‘FPA’’), brokerdealers offering fee-based brokerage
accounts (i.e., brokerage accounts in
which the broker-dealer charged a single
70 Financial Planning Association v. SEC, 482
F.3d 481 (DC Cir. 2007). The court vacated Rule
202(a)(11)–1 under the Advisers Act which
excepted broker-dealers from being classified as
investment advisers based solely on their receipt of
asset-based fees and in effect, exempted brokerdealers that offered these fee-based accounts from
regulation as investment advisers.
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asset-based fee, instead of commissions,
for its services) became subject to the
Advisers Act with respect to those
accounts; as such, those client
relationships, which had previously
been primarily subject to Exchange Act
and SRO rules, became subject to the
Advisers Act and the fiduciary duty
thereunder. Business practices since
FPA present an example from which to
draw comparative costs and benefits
differences between retail brokerage and
advisory accounts, as well as the cost
and benefit and potential consequences
of imposing a fiduciary standard on
broker-dealers. In 2007, our staff had
estimated that there were over one
million fee-based brokerage accounts,
representing approximately $300
billion, many of which were converted
to advisory accounts 71 or otherwise
were transitioned back to traditional
commission-based brokerage accounts.
Broker-dealers that converted fee-based
brokerage accounts to advisory accounts
(especially those that converted to nondiscretionary advisory accounts) and
retail customers whose accounts were
converted as a result of FPA are in a
position to provide comparative cost
and benefit data for retail brokerage and
advisory accounts (for the firm and/or
the retail customer), and therefore to
provide cost and benefit data on the
imposition of a fiduciary standard
generally.
In addition, we are aware that some
firms have made the decision to convert
their retail brokerage accounts to
advisory accounts outside of the specific
context of FPA. We understand such
account conversions may have occurred
for a variety of reasons, including a
firm’s decision to change its business
model. We similarly believe that firms
that have engaged in such account
conversions and retail customers whose
accounts were converted are in a
position to provide comparative cost
and benefit data for retail brokerage and
advisory accounts (for the firm and/or
the retail customer), and therefore to
provide cost and benefit data on the
imposition of a fiduciary standard
generally.
We recognize that any such data and
other information relating to the
conversion of brokerage accounts to
advisory accounts, and the imposition
of a fiduciary standard will only be an
approximation of the costs and benefits
of the uniform fiduciary standard
described above. Specifically, the
uniform fiduciary standard described
above does not incorporate the entirety
71 Temporary
Rule Regarding Principal Trades
with Certain Advisory Clients, Investment Advisers
Act Release No. 2653 at 4 (Sept. 24, 2007).
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of the Advisers Act, whereas any
brokerage accounts converted to
advisory accounts would be subject to
the Advisers Act as a whole.
Accordingly, to the extent possible, we
request that any such data and other
information exclude costs and benefits
associated with complying with aspects
of the Advisers Act not included within
the uniform fiduciary standard (such as
sections 206(3) and 206(4) and the rules
thereunder) or, if commenters are
unable to exclude such costs, we request
that they indicate that the data and
other information include costs of
complying with such sections and rules.
Similarly, with respect to broker-dealers
that converted fee-based brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts as a result
of FPA, we request that the data
provided exclude to the extent possible,
or at a minimum identify that, such data
include costs (e.g., legal and consulting
fees, other costs) related to the
uncertainty regarding the treatment of
such accounts immediately following
FPA.
We generally request data and other
information on costs and benefits from
or relating to: (1) Broker-dealers that
converted fee-based brokerage accounts
to advisory accounts as a result of FPA;
(2) firms that independently determined
to convert retail brokerage accounts to
advisory accounts outside of the context
of FPA; and (3) retail customers whose
accounts were converted under either of
these scenarios.72 We also request
certain data and other information on
costs and benefits from firms and retail
customers who did not convert
brokerage to advisory accounts as a
result of the FPA decision. In addition
to the specific requests below, when
providing this data and other
information, we request commenters’
responses be made, where possible, in
compliance with the guidelines set forth
in the Appendix, and also request
commenters provide background
information and documentation to
support any economic analysis. We
request commenters separate, if
possible, all data and other information
(including associated retail customer
demographic information on the
accounts) based on whether the account
conversions resulted from FPA or
whether the account conversions were
voluntary.
1. Provide data and other information
describing whether account conversions
were in response to FPA, or to an
independent determination by firms or
72 We reiterate that the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct would not prohibit the receipt
of commissions, or require conversion of accounts
from brokerage to advisory.
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retail customers. If the latter, provide
data and other information describing
factors contributing to the conversion of
brokerage accounts to advisory
accounts. Also provide data and other
information about administrative costs
and customer notifications arising from
the transition from brokerage accounts
to advisory accounts.
2. Provide data and other information
describing retail customer accounts
transitioning from brokerage accounts to
advisory accounts including the amount
of assets and securities held. Also,
provide data and other information
describing factors contributing to retail
customers’ decisions to convert to
advisory accounts, including perceived
costs and benefits of brokerage accounts
and advisory accounts. If possible,
associate retail customer demographic
information with account descriptions.
3. Provide data and other information
describing the factors contributing to
broker-dealers’ decision not to offer feebased accounts, which would be
advisory accounts, in response to FPA.
In addition, provide data and other
information describing retail customer
accounts that were not transitioned from
a brokerage account to an advisory
account in response to FPA when the
firm provided the customer the
opportunity to transition, including the
amount of assets and securities held.
Also, provide data and other
information describing factors
contributing to retail customers’
decisions not to convert to advisory
accounts, including perceived costs and
benefits of brokerage accounts and
advisory accounts. If possible, associate
retail customer demographic
information with account descriptions.
4. Provide data and other information
describing the impact of the account
conversion on the types of services and
securities dual registrants offer to retail
customers transitioning from brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts. Did the
application of the Advisers Act require
a firm, or give a firm an incentive, to
modify or eliminate then-current
business practices? Provide data and
other information describing why the
business practices were so modified or
eliminated. Indicate whether business
practices are transaction-specific,
account-specific, customer specific, or
firm-wide, and differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account
information.
5. Provide data and other information
describing changes, if any, in the
benefits and costs of providing services
to retail customers transitioning from
brokerage accounts to advisory
accounts. Did retail customers
transitioning accounts experience a
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change in costs? If possible, separate
costs by service type, and differentiate
by retail customer demographic and
account information.
6. Provide data and other information
describing changes, if any, to the
security selections of dual registrants
and the types of securities held by retail
customers transitioning from brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts. Also
provide quantitative data and other
information describing changes, if any,
to the security returns (net and gross of
fees) of retail customers transitioning
accounts. If security returns are not
available, describe total account returns,
including changes in account value and
the amount of account inflows/outflows.
If possible, identify whether initial
security ownership took place before the
account transition and whether account
selections were solicited or unsolicited,
and differentiate by retail customer
demographic and account information.
7. Provide data and other information
describing changes, if any, to the ability
of retail customers that transitioned
from brokerage to advisory accounts to
bring claims against their financial
professional with a particular focus on
dollar costs to the retail customer and
the results when claims are brought. We
especially welcome the input of persons
who have arbitrated, litigated, or
mediated claims (as a retail customer,
broker-dealer or investment adviser),
their counsel, and any persons who
presided over such actions. In
particular, describe changes for claims
brought against broker-dealers and
investment advisers with respect to each
of the following:
a. the experience of retail customers,
in general, between bringing a claim
against a broker-dealer as compared to
bringing a claim against an investment
adviser;
b. any legal or practical barriers to
retail customers bringing claims against
broker-dealers or investment advisers;
c. the disposition of claims;
d. the amount of awards;
e. costs related to the claim forum, as
it affects retail customers, firms, and
associated persons of such firms;
f. time to resolution of claims;
g. the types of claims brought against
broker-dealers (we welcome examples of
mediation, arbitration and litigation
claims);
h. the types of claims brought against
investment advisers (we welcome
examples of mediation, arbitration and
litigation claims);
i. the nature of claims brought against
broker-dealers as compared to the
nature of claims brought against
investment advisers (e.g., breach of
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14861
fiduciary duty, suitability, breach of
contract, tort); and
j. the types of defenses raised by
broker-dealers and investment advisers
under each regime.
If possible, differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account
information.
8. Provide data and other information
describing changes, if any, to the
experiences of retail customers that
were transitioned from brokerage to
advisory accounts. Among other things,
did retail customer satisfaction with
their account change? If possible,
control for retail customer demographic
and account information.
9. Provide other data and other
information describing the benefits and
costs, if any, of transitioning retail
customer brokerage accounts to advisory
accounts. If possible, differentiate by
retail customer demographic and
account information. Also, provide data
and other information describing the
benefits and costs to firms or retail
customers from the regulations prior to
account conversion. Lastly, provide
explanations describing why responses
to particular questions are not possible.
IV. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to Potential Areas
for Further Regulatory Harmonization
We seek data and other information
on the nature and extent to which we
should consider harmonizing the
regulatory obligations of broker-dealers
and investment advisers other than their
standard of conduct. As stated above, in
the Study the staff recommended that
the Commission consider harmonizing
certain regulatory requirements of
broker-dealers and investment advisers
where such harmonization appears
likely to add meaningful investor
protection, taking into account the best
elements of each regime. We request
that commenters, in particular, provide
such data and other information
regarding harmonizing some or all such
obligations in situations where a brokerdealer and an investment adviser
perform the same or substantially
similar function, such as the provision
of personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers where
harmonization is consistent with the
mission of the Commission.73 We also
are mindful that we should consider
changes to the standard of conduct of
broker-dealers and investment advisers
within the context of the overall set of
regulatory obligations that apply to
those firms and the potential costs and
benefits that may be associated with
such changes. The extent to which the
73 See
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standard of conduct changes, for
example, could result in certain other
regulatory requirements no longer being
workable in practice, or becoming
unnecessarily duplicative of current
requirements in whole or in part.
Similarly, if we were to adopt a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct for
broker-dealers and investment advisers,
we should consider whether regulatory
obligations that apply today to only one
registrant class or the other would
meaningfully enhance investor
protections if applied uniformly to both.
In the Study, the areas the staff
suggested the Commission consider for
harmonization included advertising and
other communications, supervision,
licensing and registration of firms,
licensing and continuing education
requirements for persons associated
with firms, books and records, and the
use of finders and solicitors. The staff
stated that this listing was not intended
to be a comprehensive or exclusive
listing of potential areas of
harmonization.
We seek data and other information
on these areas of potential
harmonization, including with respect
to the advantages and disadvantages of
engaging in such harmonization. As we
explained in Part I.B above, many of the
areas the staff identified for potential
harmonization are more specific than a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.
Accordingly, we do not provide an
extensive discussion of the various
options available for considering
regulatory harmonization, which could
generally include:
• Applying certain broker-dealer
obligations to investment advisers, or
vice versa;
• Eliminating certain obligations that
apply to broker-dealers but not
investment advisers, or vice versa;
• Creating new obligations that would
apply to both broker-dealers and
investment advisers; or
• Taking no further action at this time
with respect to regulatory
harmonization.
As discussed above, we believe that a
broad consideration of harmonization of
regulatory obligations is important in
helping us assess whether and to what
extent we should consider making
adjustments to the other regulatory
obligations of broker-dealers and
investment advisers. We invite
commenters to provide us with their
views on the benefits and costs for
different approaches for potential
harmonization. For example, we request
comment on the extent to which
regulatory harmonization might address
customer confusion about the
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obligations owed to them by brokerdealers and not investment advisers (or
by investment advisers and not brokerdealers) even if a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct is implemented. We
also request comment on the extent to
which regulatory harmonization might
result in additional investor confusion
or otherwise negatively impact
investors.
A. Potential Areas for Harmonization
In the Study, the staff recommended
that the Commission consider whether
to pursue various options for
harmonizing investment adviser and
broker-dealer regulation. As a
preliminary matter, and in order to
continue to evaluate the potential
impact of harmonization, we are
requesting data and other information
on the potential harmonization of the
non-exhaustive areas set forth below.
These specific areas of potential
harmonization largely reflect the areas
of harmonization recommended by the
staff in the Study. The staff’s
recommendations generally focused on
adopting the existing elements of each
regulatory regime that the staff believed
are most effective in protecting retail
customers, and the discussion below
largely reflects these recommendations.
We request comment on which of these
areas, if any, the Commission should
consider for harmonization, what
harmonization in such areas should
entail in practice, and the benefits and
costs associated with such
harmonization, including the extent to
which such harmonization would
increase or reduce retail customer
confusion about the regulatory
obligations of broker-dealer and
investment advisers. We may consider
harmonization of other areas not
addressed below. Accordingly, we
request comment on which areas, if any,
the Commission should consider for
harmonization, and what such
harmonization should entail.
The identification of these areas
below and the description of how
harmonization may be accomplished are
not intended to suggest a policy view of
the Commission or the ultimate
direction of any proposed action by the
Commission. Indeed, the description of
each area of potential harmonization
below is but one example of many ways
in which the Commission may
harmonize regulation, should the
Commission determine such
harmonization is appropriate. We are
cognizant that the Commission may
decide not to pursue harmonization,
may pursue harmonization in different
areas, or pursue a different approach to
harmonization in the areas identified by
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the Study, and we seek comment on
such areas and approaches, including
the associated benefits and costs.
We also seek comment as to whether
harmonization in each area identified
below or by a commenter as appropriate
for such action should involve changing
the existing standards of one regime to
accomplish harmonization, or whether
an entirely different requirement should
be adopted for both investment advisers
and broker-dealers.
We request data and other
information, including whether
meaningful investor protection would
be enhanced, on the following potential
areas of harmonization where existing
investment adviser and broker-dealer
obligations differ: 74
1. Advertising and Other
Communications: Advertising and other
firm communications can have a
significant impact on retail customers,
as they can persuade customers to enter
into relationships or engage in
transactions. As noted in the Study,
both investment advisers and brokerdealers are subject to general
prohibitions on misleading
communications, but specific content
restrictions differ. The Study concludes
that a significant difference between
investment adviser and broker-dealer
regulation regarding advertisements and
other communications is that, under
certain circumstances, a registered
principal of the broker-dealer must
approve a communication before
distributing it to the public, and certain
communications must be filed for
review with the applicable regulatory
body.75
While the Advisers Act does not
specifically prescribe that a
communication must be approved
before distribution to the public, the
Commission has stated that an adviser’s
compliance policies and procedures, at
a minimum, should address, among
others, the accuracy of disclosures made
to investors, clients, and regulators,
including account statements and
advertisements.76 We request data and
74 For more information about the potential
harmonization areas, see Study at 129–139.
75 For the staff’s discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to
advertising and other communications, see Study at
130–132.
76 See Compliance Programs of Investment
Advisers and Investment Companies, Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 2204 (Dec. 17, 2003)
(adopting Advisers Act Rule 206(4)–7)
(‘‘Compliance Rule’’) (stating that ‘‘[w]e expect that
an adviser’s policies and procedures, at a minimum,
should address the following issues to the extent
that they are relevant to that adviser: [* * *] [t]he
accuracy of disclosures made to investors, clients,
and regulators, including account statements and
advertisements; [* * * and] [m]arketing advisory
services, including the use of solicitors * * *’’). For
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other information on the enhancement
to meaningful investor protection as
well as the benefits and costs of
harmonizing requirements relating to:
a. Advertisements and other customer
communications, generally.
b. Developing similar substantive
advertising and customer
communications rules and/or guidance
for broker-dealers and investment
advisers regarding the content of
advertisements and other customer
communications for similar services?
Please identify any particular rules that
could be applied to both broker-dealers
and investment advisers, and any rules
that would not be appropriate to apply
to both. If a particular rule would not be
appropriate for both, why not?
c. Establishing consistent internal preuse review requirements for investment
adviser and broker-dealer
advertisements, such as by requiring
investment advisers to designate
employees to review and approve
communications and advertisements?
d. Imposing consistent pre- and postuse filing requirements for similar
investment adviser and broker-dealer
advertisements?
2. Use of Finders and Solicitors: The
term ‘‘finder’’ is generally understood
(for purposes of broker-dealer
regulation) to mean an intermediary
who receives a fee for ‘‘finding’’
potential investors for issuers seeking to
sell securities. Similarly, a ‘‘solicitor’ is
an intermediary used by advisers to
‘‘solicit’’ clients and prospective clients
for advisory services. Intermediaries
who ‘‘find’’ investors can have a
significant impact on retail customers,
as they can persuade investors to enter
into relationships or engage in
transactions. The regulation of these
intermediaries differs. One who receives
transaction-based compensation in
connection with the sale of securities,
including a finder, must register as a
broker-dealer unless an exemption from
registration is available. By contrast,
while solicitors may fall within the
definition of ‘‘investment adviser’’
under the Advisers Act, the Commission
has taken the position that a solicitor
who engages in solicitation activities in
accordance with Rule 206(4)–3(a)(2)(iii)
is an associated person of an investment
adviser and is not required to register
with the Commission as an investment
adviser solely as a result of those
this purpose, the Advisers Act requires an adviser
to designate a chief compliance officer (‘‘CCO’’).
The Commission has stated in the Compliance Rule
that the CCO should be knowledgeable about the
Advisers Act and have the authority to develop and
enforce appropriate compliance policies and
procedures for the adviser.
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activities.77 An investment adviser that
uses a solicitor’s services must treat the
solicitor as an associated person to the
extent the solicitor acts as such for the
adviser, and the adviser has a
responsibility to supervise the
solicitation activities.78 In addition, the
Advisers Act regulation focuses on
disclosure to clients of the solicitor’s
material conflicts of interest.79 We
request data and other information on
the enhancement to meaningful investor
protection as well as the benefits and
costs of harmonizing requirements
relating to:
a. Harmonizing the existing regulatory
requirements applicable to finders and
solicitors, generally.
b. Establishing similar disclosure
requirements regarding any conflict
associated with the solicitor’s and
finder’s receipt of compensation for
referring a retail customer to an
investment adviser or broker-dealer?
3. Supervision: Effective supervisory
systems and control procedures are
important investor protection tools, as
they can help firms identify and prevent
abusive practices. As the Study notes,
while both broker-dealers and
investment advisers are required to
supervise persons that act on their
behalf, broker-dealers are subject to
more specific supervisory requirements,
including rules that expressly require
broker-dealers to, among other things,
establish a supervisory system, conduct
periodic inspections of branch offices
and supervise outside business
activities and private securities
transactions of associated persons.80 As
discussed above, investment advisers
are also required to adopt compliance
policies and procedures, which
generally would include policies and
procedures for the supervision of
persons associated with an adviser.81
Further, the Advisers Act code of ethics
77 Requirements Governing Payments of Cash
Referral Fees by Investment Advisers, Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 688 (July 12, 1979).
78 Id. An investment adviser’s supervision
obligations are discussed below.
79 For the staff’s discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to the use of
finders and solicitors, see Study at 132–133.
80 Existing broker-dealer supervisory obligations
generally require firms to, among other things,
establish and maintain a supervisory system for
their business activities and to supervise the
activities of their registered representatives,
principals and other associated persons for
purposes of achieving compliance with applicable
securities regulations, including the rules relating to
principal trades. See NASD Rule 3010. Moreover,
broker-dealers are required to ‘‘establish procedures
for the review and endorsement by a registered
principal in writing * * * of all transactions * * *
of its registered representatives with the public
relating to the investment banking or securities
business of such member.’’ NASD Rule 3010(d)(1).
81 See supra note 77.
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14863
rules (Advisers Act Rule 204A–1)
specifically requires, among other
things, that an investment adviser preapprove acquisitions of securities in any
initial public offerings or in limited
offerings by certain of its investment
advisory personnel. Investment advisers
are also required to disclose to clients
certain material outside business
activities of their supervised persons.82
We request data and other information
on the enhancement to meaningful
investor protection as well as the
benefits and costs of harmonizing
requirements relating to:
a. Harmonizing supervisory
requirements of investment advisers and
broker-dealers, generally.
b. Establishing a single set of
universally applicable requirements
versus scaling requirements based on
the size (e.g., number of employees or a
different metric) and nature of a brokerdealer or an investment adviser? Please
identify any particular requirements
that should apply to both broker-dealers
and investment advisers, and any
requirements that should not apply to
both, and why or why not. If
requirements were scaled, what would
be appropriate metrics and
thresholds? 83
4. Licensing and Registration of Firms:
Broker-dealers and investment advisers
register with the Commission and/or
states using forms that are similar but
separate. In addition, broker-dealers
must, prior to commencing business,
satisfy FINRA’s membership application
process, which aims to fully evaluate
relevant aspects of applicants and to
identify potential weaknesses in their
internal systems, thereby helping to
ensure that successful applicants would
be capable of conducting their business
in compliance with applicable
regulation. Investment advisers are not
subject to this type of review by the
Commission. As stated in the Study,
substantive review of investment
adviser applications could improve
investor protection as it could help
prevent firms that are unprepared to
engage in the advisory business or to
meet the obligations they will be
assuming under the federal securities
laws from entering the advisory
business. We request data and other
information on the enhancement to
meaningful investor protection as well
as the benefits and costs of harmonizing
requirements relating to:
82 See
Part 2A of Form ADV.
the staff’s discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to
supervision, see Study at 135–136.
83 For
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a. Harmonizing the licensing and
registration requirements applicable to
firms, generally.
b. Harmonizing the disclosure
requirements in Form ADV and Form
BD to the extent they address similar
issues.
c. Imposing a substantive review of
investment advisers prior to registration
similar to, or distinct from, the review
applicable to broker-dealers.84
5. Continuing Education
Requirements for Persons Associated
with Broker-Dealers and Investment
Advisers: Associated persons of brokerdealers are required to fulfill continuing
education requirements. No such
requirement exists for investment
adviser personnel at the federal level,
who instead must disclose to clients
their education and business
background. As noted in the Study,
continuing education can help to further
a regulatory goal that investors are
served by professionals that are
knowledgeable in current industry
trends, practices and regulations.85 We
request data and other information on
the enhancement to meaningful investor
protection as well as the benefits and
costs of harmonizing requirements
relating to:
a. Harmonizing the continuing
education requirements applicable to
the associated persons of investment
advisers and broker-dealers, generally.
b. Requiring associated persons of
investment advisers to be subject to
federal qualification examinations and
continuing education requirements?
6. Books and Records: Books and
records are important for firms to
facilitate effective supervision and
compliance, and for regulators to access
information and verify the entity’s
compliance with applicable
requirements. Broker-dealers are
required to retain all communications
received and sent, as well as all written
agreements (or copies thereof), relating
to a firm’s ‘‘business as such,’’ 86
whereas advisers are required to retain
a more limited set of records falling into
specific enumerated categories. As
noted in the Study, ’’[t]hese differences
limit the effectiveness of internal
supervision and compliance structures
and the ability of regulators to access
information and verify the entity’s
compliance with applicable
84 For the staff’s discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to licensing
and registration of firms, see Study at 136–137.
85 For the staff’s discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to
continuing education requirements, see Study at
138.
86 See Exchange Act Rules 17a–4(b)(4) and (b)(7);
17 CFR 240.17a–4(b)(4) and (b)(7).
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requirements.’’ 87 We request data and
other information on the enhancement
to meaningful investor protection as
well as the benefits and costs of
harmonizing requirements relating to:
a. Harmonizing the recordkeeping
requirements applicable to investment
advisers and broker-dealers, generally.
b. Applying the ‘‘business as such’’
record retention standard to investment
advisers?
7. Other Potential Areas for
Harmonization: We request information
and comment on whether there are
other potential areas of harmonization
where the nature of existing investment
adviser and broker-dealer obligations
differ and investor protection would be
meaningfully enhanced. In particular,
we request data and other information
on the enhancement to meaningful
investor protection as well as the
benefits and costs of harmonizing
requirements relating to:
a. Harmonizing a set of business
conduct rules for both broker-dealers
and investment advisers, where relevant
to investment advisers’ businesses.
b. Harmonizing other requirements for
broker-dealers and investment advisers.
c. Establishing a single set of
universally applicable requirements
versus scaling requirements based on
the size (e.g., number of employees or a
different metric) and nature of a brokerdealer or an investment adviser.
For each other potential area of
harmonization addressed, please
identify any particular requirements
that should apply to both broker-dealers
and investment advisers, and any
requirements that should not apply to
both, and why or why not.
B. Request for Data and Other
Information Relating to Changes in the
Marketplace for Personalized
Investment Advice Resulting from
Harmonization
The Commission requests the
following data and other information
relating to changes in the marketplace
for personalized investment advice
about securities for retail customers as
a result of implementing each area of
harmonization described above. In
providing such data and other
information, we request commenters
follow the Guidelines found in the
Appendix to this request for data and
other information including the request
therein for background information.
1. Provide data and other information
on the benefits and costs to firms and
retail customers, including synergies
(i.e., enhanced cost efficiencies for
firms), specific examples of effects on
87 See
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Fmt 4703
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investor protection, and potential
barriers to entry (i.e., cost prohibitions),
which would result from harmonization
of each of the areas identified above.
2. Provide data and other information
about alternative approaches to
harmonization that the Commission
should consider, including options for
reducing costs on broker-dealers and
investment advisers while increasing
the effective protection of retail
customers.
3. Provide data and other information
describing the impact or potential
impact the implementation of the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct,
or any of the alternative approaches
discussed in Part III of this request for
data and other information, would have
on the benefits and costs to firms and to
retail customers of each area of
harmonization. Indicate, for example,
whether harmonization of a particular
area of regulation would impact the
costs or benefits associated with
complying with the uniform fiduciary
standard and each of the alternative
approaches discussed above. Also
provide comment and data on whether
the harmonization of one or more of the
areas described above has any impact
(i.e., whether it enhances, detracts, or
has no impact) on the implementation
of the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct or any of the other approaches
described in Part III of this request for
data and other information.
4. For dual registrants, provide data
and other information on any cost
savings and potential retail customer
benefit of having a consistent set of
standards.
5. Provide data and other information
describing the extent to which
harmonization would increase or reduce
retail customers’ confusion about the
regulatory status of the person from
whom they receive financial services
(i.e., whether the party is a broker-dealer
or an investment adviser) and provide
information describing why. Provide
data and other information describing
the extent to which harmonization
would increase or reduce retail
customers’ confusion about the types of
obligations owed to them and provide
information describing why.
By the Commission.
Dated: March 1, 2013.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
APPENDIX: Suggested Submission
Guidelines for Comments
This Appendix outlines the background
and particular data and other information we
request commenters to provide and the
general guidelines we request commenters to
follow when submitting data and other
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information. While we are particularly
interested in receiving data and other
information that is empirical and quantitative
in nature, we welcome and encourage all
interested parties to submit their comments,
including qualitative and descriptive analysis
of the benefits and costs of potential
approaches and guidance. We ask that
commenters provide only data and other
information that they wish to make publicly
available, and that commenters who may be
concerned about making proprietary or other
highly sensitive data and other information
public may wish to pool their data with that
of others (e.g., through a trade association,
law firm, consulting firm or other group) and
submit aggregated data in response to this
request for data and other information. While
we request commenters to provide enough
data and other information to allow the
Commission to replicate findings,
commenters should remove any personally
identifiable information (e.g., of their
customers) before submitting data and other
information in response to this request.88
Commenters can submit data and other
information using a sample of retail
customers. We ask commenters to sample in
a manner which is independent of retail
customer characteristics, and to describe the
sampling methodology including sample
identification, data collection, and any other
important factor in sample construction.
Also, if possible, provide a description of the
population of retail customers not included
in the sample. We also ask commenters to
provide a variable to allow the Commission
to distinguish among accounts. The variable
should not incorporate personally
identifiable information, and can be as
simple as a random number.
We ask commenters to provide a cover
letter when submitting data files to the
Commission. As part of the cover letter, we
ask commenters to include documentation
describing each field in the data files
including the units of measurement (e.g.,
percent, thousands, thousands of dollars,
millions, millions of dollars), variable name,
general and specific formats (e.g., number,
character, date, length of character field,
format of date), and value if missing (e.g., ‘‘.’’
or ‘‘ ’’). Other important documentation
includes an overall description of the dataset,
the source of the information, and the time
period of observations. We ask commenters
to send the data on a physical storage
medium such as a CD ROM or DVD, either
in plain text or comma-separated values (csv)
files. We also ask commenters to clearly label
the physical storage medium, providing
commenter name, date, and a short
description of the data files. Commenters can
submit more than one dataset if, for instance,
the data is available on different systems or
in different locations. In this case, we ask
commenters to provide a variable in each
dataset that links account information and
that allows the Commission to distinguish
among accounts. We also ask commenters to
submit only one copy of the data files.
88 See
supra note 23.
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A. Commenter Identification and
Background
We request commenters to provide
background information to add context to
submissions and improve our understanding
of the current marketplace:
1. Indicate your status (or the status of your
organization if you are writing on behalf of
an organization), as applicable, as a
Commission-registered broker-dealer,
Commission-registered investment adviser,
associated person of a Commission-registered
broker dealer or Commission-registered
investment adviser, dually registered entity
or individual, retail customer, or other (if
other, please describe).
2. If you are (or are writing on behalf of)
a broker-dealer, investment adviser, or dually
registered investment adviser/broker-dealer,
or associated person thereof, describe the
firm’s business, including number and type
of business segments, sources and total
amount of firm revenue, and the proportion
of firm revenue attributable to retail
customers.
3. If you are (or are writing on behalf of)
a broker-dealer, investment adviser, or dually
registered investment adviser/broker-dealer,
describe the retail customer segment of the
firm’s business, including the number and
type of accounts (brokerage or advisory), total
asset value within each account type, and the
proportion of retail customers to whom the
firm provides personalized investment
advice. If the firm is dually registered, also
indicate the proportion of accounts (based on
the number of accounts and total assets
under management) that are advisory
accounts and the proportion that are
brokerage accounts, and of the advisory
accounts, the proportion that are nondiscretionary accounts. Also, if the firm is
dually registered, indicate the proportion of
retail customer advisory accounts and the
proportion of brokerage accounts receiving
personalized investment advice.
B. Requests for Specific Characteristic
Information
We ask commenters to provide the
following specific characteristics when
providing data and other information
describing retail customer demographics and
accounts; broker-dealer or investment adviser
services offered; securities; and the claims of
retail customers in dispute resolution:
1. Retail customer demographic
information—age, wealth, income, education,
and risk profile.
2. Retail customer account information—
general type (brokerage or advisory), specific
type (e.g., clearing, execution-only, fullservice), amount of assets held,
compensation arrangement (e.g., fees,
commissions) and amount, investment
strategy, the date of account opening, and the
state in which the account is held.
3. Broker-dealer or investment adviser
services offered—type (e.g., include trade
execution; product, transaction, and asset
allocation recommendations; and provision
of customer-specific research and analysis).
4. Securities—type (e.g., stocks, bonds,
funds, options, structured products), CUSIP
number or other standard identifier,
investment rating (if any), and date of initial
retail customer ownership.
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14865
5. Security Positions—long or short
position, number of shares/units held,
position value, and the currency of valuation.
6. Retail customer claims evidence—nature
of claim, forum for claim, time to resolution,
and outcome.
If providing aggregate data and other
information, we ask that commenters fully
describe the sample population, including
the number of retail customers and total
assets under management, retail customer
demographics, account characteristics, and
security characteristics.
C. Submission Guidelines for Economic
Analysis
The market for personalized investment
advice is difficult to analyze because of the
number of factors that empirical tests must
address in order to achieve definitive
conclusions. While some reports and studies
address the market for personalized
investment advice, the difficulty to control
for certain factors and/or insufficient
documentation of the empirical sample and
methodology results in interpretive
difficulties. When submitting qualitative and
quantitative economic analysis, we request
commenters adhere to the following
guidelines:
1. The analysis should focus on nondiscretionary retail customer brokerage and
advisory accounts. To the extent the analysis
focuses on institutional investor accounts or
discretionary accounts, if possible please
specify this.
2. Identify and discuss all underlying
assumptions, including actions that may be
taken in response to a change in regulation.
If providing quantitative analysis also clearly
articulate empirical methodologies leading to
analytical conclusions and provide tests
statistics to validate claims. Isolate the
additional benefits and costs from any
additional assumptions made. If providing
qualitative economic analysis also identify
and discuss all supporting evidence.
3. Identify and distinguish initial benefits
and costs (including those associated with
transitioning from existing standards to
potential new standards of conduct), and ongoing benefits and costs. Also identify
whether certain benefits and costs may
decrease or increase over time. Indicate
whether benefits and costs are transactionspecific, account-specific, business segment
specific, or firm-wide. If possible, separate
the benefits from the costs and isolate by
activity and by account type. When
describing transition costs, describe and
explain any relevant actions that may be
taken in response to a change in regulation,
including possible ways to mitigate costs or
increase benefits.
4. Describe the sample population,
including the number of retail customers and
total assets under management, retail
customer demographics, and account
characteristics. And, if possible, provide a
description of the population of retail
customers not included in the sample.
5. Submit data that would allow the
Commission to replicate findings.
6. Identify which requested quantitative
data, if any, is not possible, or would be
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prohibitively costly, to provide, and explain
why.
[FR Doc. 2013–05222 Filed 3–6–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–69017; File No. SR–CME–
2013–01]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc.;
Notice of Filing and Order Granting
Accelerated Approval of Proposed
Rule Change Regarding an Increase of
CME Corporate Contribution to Interest
Rate Swaps Financial Safeguards
Package
March 1, 2013.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2
notice is hereby given that on March 1,
2013, Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc.
(‘‘CME’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
the proposed rule change described in
Items I and II below, which Items have
been prepared primarily by CME. The
Commission is publishing this notice to
solicit comments on the proposed rule
change from interested persons and to
approve the proposed rule change on an
accelerated basis.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
CME proposes to amend rules related
to its business as a derivatives clearing
organization offering interest rate swap
(‘‘IRS’’) clearing services. More
specifically, CME proposes to increase
CME’s corporate contribution to the
financial safeguards for IRS to
$150,000,000.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with NOTICES
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
CME included statements concerning
the purpose of, and statutory basis for,
the proposed rule change and discussed
any comments it received on the
proposed rule change. The text of these
statements may be examined at the
places specified in Item III below. CME
has prepared summaries, set forth in
sections A, B, and C below, of the most
significant aspects of such statements.
1 15
2 17
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4 .
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A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
CME is registered as a derivatives
clearing organization with the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (‘‘CFTC’’) and currently
offers clearing services for IRS. With
this filing, CME proposes to increase
CME’s corporate contribution to the
financial safeguards for IRS to
$150,000,000. CME proposes to
implement such amendments on March
1, 2013.
CME periodically assesses the
structure of its financial safeguards
packages. In assessing the financial
safeguards available for IRS products,
CME determined that an increase to the
CME corporate contribution is
appropriate. An amendment to CME
Rule 8G802.B.1 is proposed which
would reflect the increase in such
contribution and an amendment to Rule
8G802.H is proposed which would
reflect a conforming change to the CME
contribution during an IRS Cooling Off
Period.
CME notes that it has also submitted
the proposed rule change that is the
subject of this filing to its primary
regulator, the CFTC, in CME Submission
13–045.
CME believes the proposed rule
change is consistent with the
requirements of the Act, including
Section 17A of the Act. The proposed
rule change involves improvements to
CME’s IRS product offering for investors
because it increases the amount of
financial resources available to support
the default of an IRS Clearing member
at CME and as such is designed to
promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities
transactions and derivatives agreements,
contracts and transactions, to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
the clearing agency and, in general, help
to protect investors and the public
interest. Furthermore, the proposed rule
change is limited to the clearing of IRS
(that is, swaps) and thus relate solely to
the CME’s swaps clearing activities
pursuant to its registration as a
derivatives clearing organization under
the Commodity Exchange Act (‘‘CEA’’)
and do not significantly affect any
securities clearing operations of the
clearing agency or any related rights or
obligations of the clearing agency or
persons using such service.
CME further notes that the policies of
the CEA with respect to clearing are
comparable to a number of the policies
underlying the Exchange Act, such as
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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promoting market transparency for overthe-counter derivatives markets,
promoting the prompt and accurate
clearance of transactions and protecting
investors and the public interest.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
CME does not believe that the
proposed rule change will have any
impact, or impose any burden, on
competition.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
CME has not solicited, and does not
intend to solicit, comments regarding
this proposed rule change. CME has not
received any unsolicited written
comments from interested parties.
III. Solicitation of Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit written data, views, and
arguments concerning the foregoing,
including whether the proposed rule
change is consistent with the Act.
Comments may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml) or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–CME–2013–01 on the
subject line.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–CME–2013–01. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 45 (Thursday, March 7, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14848-14866]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-05222]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-69013; IA-3558; File No. 4-606]
Duties of Brokers, Dealers, and Investment Advisers
AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
ACTION: Request for data and other information.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission is requesting data and
other information, in particular quantitative data and economic
analysis, relating to the benefits and costs that could result from
various alternative approaches regarding the standards of conduct and
other obligations of broker-dealers and investment advisers. We intend
to use the comments and data we receive to inform our consideration of
alternative standards of conduct for broker-dealers and investment
advisers when providing personalized investment advice about securities
to retail customers. We also will use this information to inform our
consideration of potential harmonization of certain other aspects of
the regulation of broker-dealers and investment advisers.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before July 5, 2013.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submission:
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/other.shtml); or
Send an email to rule-comments@sec.gov. Please include
File Number 4-606 in the subject line.
Paper Submission:
Send paper submissions in triplicate to Elizabeth M.
Murphy, Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090. All submissions should refer to File
Number 4-606. This file number should be included on the subject line
if email is used. To help us process and review your comments more
efficiently, please use only one method. The Commission will post all
submissions of data on the Commission's Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov). Comments are also available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. All comments received will be posted without
change; we do not edit personal identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only information that you wish to make
available publicly. Please refer to the Appendix at the end of this
release for instructions on submitting data and other information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Marietta-Westberg, Assistant
Director, Matthew Kozora, Financial Economist, Division of Risk,
Strategy and Financial Innovation, at (202) 551-6655; David W. Blass,
Chief Counsel, Lourdes Gonzalez, Assistant Chief Counsel--Sales
Practices, Emily Westerberg Russell, Senior Special Counsel, Daniel
Fisher, Branch Chief, Leila Bham, Special Counsel, Division of Trading
and Markets, at (202) 551-5550; Office of Chief Counsel, at (202) 551-
6825 and Office of Investment Adviser Regulation, at (202) 551-6787,
Division of Investment Management; Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC 20549-1090.
Discussion
I. Introduction
A. Background
Today, broker-dealers and investment advisers routinely provide to
retail customers \1\ many of the same services, and engage in many
similar activities related to providing personalized investment advice
about securities to
[[Page 14849]]
retail customers.\2\ While both investment advisers and broker-dealers
are subject to regulation and oversight designed to protect retail and
other customers, the two regulatory schemes do so through different
approaches notwithstanding the similarity of certain services and
activities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For the purposes of this request for comment, and as noted
in Part III below, the term ``retail customer'' has the same meaning
as in Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act. Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
Specifically, it means ``a natural person, or the legal
representative of such natural person, who (A) receives personalized
investment advice about securities from a broker, dealer or
investment adviser; and (B) uses such advice primarily for personal,
family, or household purposes.'' 15 U.S.C. 80b-11(g)(2).
\2\ In 2006, the SEC retained the RANDCorporation's Institute
for Civil Justice (``RAND'') to conduct a survey, which concluded
that the distinctions between investment advisers and broker-dealers
have become blurred, and that market participants had difficulty
determining whether a financial professional was an investment
adviser or a broker-dealer and instead believed that investment
advisers and broker-dealers offered the same services and were
subject to the same duties. RAND noted, however, that generally
investors they surveyed as part of the study were satisfied with
their financial professional, be it a representative of a broker-
dealer or an investment adviser. Angela A. Hung, et al., RAND
Institute for Civil Justice, Investor and Industry Perspectives on
Investment Advisers and Broker-Dealers (2008) (``RAND Study'').
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Investment advisers are fiduciaries to their clients, and their
regulation under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (``Advisers Act'')
is largely principles-based. In contrast, a broker-dealer is not
uniformly considered a fiduciary to its customers.\3\ Broker-dealer
conduct is subject to comprehensive regulation under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') and the rules of each self-
regulatory organization (``SRO'') to which the broker-dealer belongs.
Both broker-dealers and investment advisers also are subject to
applicable antifraud provisions and rules under the federal securities
laws.
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\3\ A broker-dealer may have a fiduciary duty under certain
circumstances. This duty may arise under state common law, which
varies by state. Generally, courts have found that broker-dealers
that exercise discretion or control over customer assets, or have a
relationship of trust and confidence with their customers, are found
to owe customers a fiduciary duty similar to that of investment
advisers. See, e.g., United States v. Skelly, 442 F.3d 94, 98 (2d
Cir. 2006); United States v. Szur, 289 F.3d 200, 211 (2d Cir. 2002);
Associated Randall Bank v. Griffin, Kubik, Stephens & Thompson,
Inc., 3 F.3d 208, 212 (7th Cir. 1993); MidAmerica Fed. Savings &
Loan Ass'n v. Shearson/American Express Inc., 886 F.2d 1249, 1257
(10th Cir. 1989); Leib v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith,
Inc., 461 F. Supp. 951, 953-954 (E.D. Mich. 1978), aff'd, 647 F.2d
165 (6th Cir. 1981). For the staff's discussion of relevant case law
see Study, infra note 10, at 54-55. See also A Joint Report of the
SEC and the CFTC on Harmonization of Regulation (Oct. 2009),
available at https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2009/cftcjointreport101609.pdf at 8-9 and 67.
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Studies suggest that many retail customers who use the services of
broker-dealers and investment advisers are not aware of the differences
in regulatory approaches for these entities and the differing duties
that flow from them.\4\ Some of these regulatory differences primarily
reflect the different functions and business activities of investment
advisers and broker-dealers (for example, rules regarding underwriting
or market making). Other differences reflect statutory differences,\5\
particularly when broker-dealers and investment advisers engage in the
same or substantially similar activity (for example, providing
personalized investment advice, including recommendations, about
securities to retail customers).
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\4\ See, e.g., RAND Study.
\5\ Advisers Act Section 202(a)(11) defines ``investment
adviser'' to mean ``any person who, for compensation, engages in the
business of advising others, either directly or through publications
or writings, as to the value of securities or as to the advisability
of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities, or who, for
compensation and as part of a regular business, issues or
promulgates analyses or reports concerning securities.'' Advisers
Act Section 202(a)(11)(C) excludes from the investment adviser
definition any broker or dealer (i) whose performance of its
investment advisory services is ``solely incidental'' to the conduct
of its business as a broker or dealer; and (ii) who receives no
``special compensation'' for its advisory services. Broker-dealers
providing investment advice in accordance with this exclusion are
not subject to the fiduciary duty under the Advisers Act.
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Over the decades since the Advisers Act and Exchange Act were
enacted, we have observed that the lines between full-service broker-
dealers and investment advisers have blurred.\6\ Investment advisers
and broker-dealers, for example, provide investment advice both on an
episodic and on an ongoing basis.\7\ We have expressed concern when
specific regulatory obligations depend on the statute under which a
financial intermediary is registered instead of the services
provided.\8\
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\6\ See Certain Broker-Dealers Deemed Not to be Investment
Advisers, Exchange Act Release No. 51523 at 3 and 37 (Apr. 12, 2005)
(``Release 51523''). Many financial services firms may offer both
investment advisory and broker-dealer services. According to data
from the Investment Adviser Registration Depository as of November
1, 2012, approximately 5% of Commission-registered investment
advisers reported that they also were registered as a broker-dealer,
and 22% of Commission-registered investment advisers reported that
they had a related person that was a broker-dealer. As of October
31, 2012, 755 firms registered with FINRA as a broker-dealer, or
approximately 17.4% of broker-dealers registered with FINRA, were
also registered as an investment adviser with either the Commission
or a state. See Letter from Angela Goelzer, FINRA, to Lourdes
Gonzalez, Assistant Chief Counsel, Securities and Exchange
Commission (Nov. 16, 2012). Further, as of mid-November 2012,
approximately 41% of FINRA-registered broker-dealers had an
affiliate engaged in investment advisory activities. Id. Many of
these financial services firms' personnel may also be dually
registered as investment adviser representatives and registered
representatives of broker-dealers. As of October 31, 2012,
approximately 86% of investment adviser representatives were also
registered representatives of a FINRA-registered broker-dealer. Id.
\7\ A broker-dealer that receives special compensation for the
provision of investment advice would not be excluded from the
definition of investment adviser. See supra note 5.
\8\ In Release 51523, we engaged in an analysis and discussion
of the history of the Exchange Act and Advisers Act. We explained
that the Advisers Act was intended to regulate what, at the time
that Act was enacted, was a largely unregulated community of persons
engaged in the business of providing investment advice for
compensation. See Release 51523 at 22.
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In a staff study (the ``Study'') required by Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (the
``Dodd-Frank Act''),\9\ our staff made recommendations to us that the
staff believed would enhance retail customer protections and decrease
retail customers' confusion about the standard of conduct owed to them
when their financial professional provides them personalized investment
advice.\10\ The staff made two primary recommendations in the Study.
The first recommendation was that we engage in rulemaking to implement
a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct for broker-dealers and
investment advisers when providing personalized investment advice about
securities to retail customers. The second recommendation was that we
consider harmonizing certain regulatory requirements of broker-dealers
and investment advisers where such harmonization appears likely to
enhance meaningful investor protection, taking into account the best
elements of each regime.\11\
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\9\ Publci Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376. Section 913 of the Dodd-
Frank Act, among other things, required a study of the effectiveness
of the existing legal or regulatory standards of care that apply
when broker-dealers and investment advisers (and persons associated
with them) provide personalized investment advice and
recommendations about securities to retail customers. It also
required the identification of any legal or regulatory gaps,
shortcomings, or overlaps in legal or regulatory standards in the
protection of retail customers relating to the standards of care for
providing personalized investment advice about securities to retail
customers that should be addressed by rule or statute.
\10\ Staff of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Study
on Investment Advisers and Broker-Dealers As Required by Section 913
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Jan. 2011) (``Study''), available at www.sec.gov/news/studies/2011/913studyfinal.pdf. The views expressed in the Study were those of
the staff and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission
or the individual Commissioners. See also Statement by SEC
Commissioners Kathleen L. Casey and Troy A. Paredes (Jan. 21, 2011)
(``Statement'') (opposing the Study's findings and, among other
things, stating that ``stronger analytical and empirical foundation
than provided by the Study is required before regulatory steps are
taken that would revamp how broker-dealers and investment advisers
are regulated'').
\11\ As discussed in more detail below, we have a variety of
options relating to the staff's recommendations; we could take no
action with regard to either, or could take action to implement one
or both recommendations, either partially or wholly. The choice of
whether and how to take an action with respect to the
recommendations would consider the facts and circumstances of the
marketplace at the time of the potential action, as well as the
regulatory landscape existing at such time (including, if
applicable, any prior or contemporaneous actions which would impact
the recommendations).
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[[Page 14850]]
The staff explained that its recommendations were intended to
address, among other things, retail customer confusion about the
obligations broker-dealers and investment advisers owe to those
customers, and to preserve retail customer choice without decreasing
retail customers' access to existing products, services, service
providers or compensation structures.\12\ The staff stated in the Study
that retail customers should not have to parse legal distinctions to
determine whether the advice they receive from their financial
professional is provided in their best interests, and stated that
retail customers should receive the same or substantially similar
protections when obtaining the same or substantially similar services
from financial professionals.\13\ The staff further noted that the
Commission could consider harmonization as part of the implementation
of the uniform fiduciary standard or as separate initiatives.\14\
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\12\ Study at viii, x, 101, 109, and 166.
\13\ Study at viii and 101.
\14\ Study at 129.
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In preparing the Study's discussion of the benefits and costs of
aspects of the staff's recommendations, the staff, among other things,
considered comment letters that we received in response to an earlier
request, and reiterated this request when meeting with interested
parties, in order to better inform the Study.\15\ Few commenters,
however, provided data regarding the benefits and costs of the current
regulatory regime or the benefits and costs likely to be realized if we
were to exercise the authority granted in Section 913. This may be
because most comments were made in advance of the Study's publication
and could not be informed by the staff's specific recommendations.\16\
Of the relatively few comments received after publication of the Study,
one commenter expressed support for further economic analysis of the
Study's recommendations and other approaches for Commission rulemaking,
and offered to provide data and other information relating to
implementing a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.\17\
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\15\ Study Regarding Obligations of Brokers, Dealers, and
Investment Advisers, Exchange Act Release No. 62577 (July 27, 2010)
(requesting comment from the public to inform the preparation of the
Study). The Commission received over 3,500 comment letters before
and after publication of the Study. The comment letters are
available at www.sec.gov/comments/4-606/4-606.shtml.
\16\ Before the Study was published, we received a comment
describing results of a survey that had been conducted based on
certain assumptions about a potential change in the standard of
conduct, which differ from those set out in this request for
information and data. The survey, for example, assumed that under a
new standard of conduct, broker-dealer firms would no longer charge
commissions and instead would only maintain fee-based accounts. See
Oliver Wyman and Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association, Standard of Care Harmonization Impact Assessment for
SEC (Oct. 27, 2010).
\17\ Comment Letter from Ira D. Hammerman, Senior Managing
Director and General
Counsel, Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
(July 14, 2011) (``SIFMA Letter'') at 2. But see, Comment Letter
from Barbara Roper, Director of Investor Protection, Consumer
Federation of America, et al., (Mar. 28, 2012) (``Roper Letter'')
(asserting adoption of a uniform standard could be implemented in a
way that does not lead to reduced investor choice or product
access).
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The Study recommended that we engage in rulemaking using the
authority provided to us in Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
section grants us discretionary rulemaking authority under the Exchange
Act and Advisers Act to adopt rules establishing a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct for all broker-dealers and investment advisers when
providing personalized investment advice about securities to retail
customers.\18\ That section further provides that such standard of
conduct ``shall be to act in the best interest of the customer without
regard to the financial or other interest of the broker, dealer, or
investment adviser providing the advice'' and that the standard ``shall
be no less stringent than the standard applicable to investment
advisers under Sections 206(1) and 206(2) of the Advisers Act when
providing personalized investment advice about securities.''
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\18\ See Section 15(k) of the Exchange Act and Section 211(g) of
the Advisers Act, each as added by Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank
Act. Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act also added Section 15(l) of
the Exchange Act and Section 211(h) of the Advisers Act to add
discretionary authority to promulgate rules prohibiting or
restricting certain broker-dealer and investment adviser sales
practices, conflicts of interests, and compensation schemes that the
Commission deems contrary to the public interest and the protection
of investors. See Exchange Act each as added by Section 913 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
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The Commission recognizes that Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act
does not mandate that we undertake any such rulemaking, and the
Commission has not yet determined whether to commence a rulemaking. We
expect that the data and other information provided to us in connection
with this request will assist us in determining whether to engage in
rulemaking, and if so, what the nature of that rulemaking ought to be.
Among other considerations, we are sensitive to the fact that changes
in existing legal or regulatory standards could result in economic
costs and benefits and believe that such costs and benefits must be
considered in the economic analysis that would be part of any
rulemaking under the discretionary authority provided by Section 913 of
the Dodd-Frank Act. In considering the options for a potential standard
of conduct applicable to broker-dealers and investment advisers
providing personalized investment advice to retail customers, we will
take into account existing regulatory obligations that apply today to
broker-dealers and investment advisers.
If we determine to engage in rulemaking, furthermore, the
rulemaking process would provide us the opportunity to request further
data and other information on the range of complex considerations
associated with any proposal implementing such a standard, including
any potential costs and benefits associated with the rulemaking. The
rulemaking process would also allow commenters to address the extent to
which any proposal would further the goals highlighted by Section 913,
including (1) preserving retail customer choice with respect to, among
other things, the availability of accounts, products, services, and
relationships with investment advisers and broker-dealers, and (2) not
inadvertently eliminating or otherwise impeding retail customer access
to such accounts, products, services and relationships (for example,
through higher costs). We may also consider reassessing and potentially
harmonizing certain of the other regulatory obligations that apply to
broker-dealers and investment advisers where such harmonization is
consistent with the mission of the Commission.
B. Overview of the Request for Additional Data and Other Information
We are requesting below additional public input to assist us in
evaluating whether and how to address certain of the standards of
conduct for, and regulatory obligations of, broker-dealers and
investment advisers. Since publishing the Study, the staff has
continued to review current information and available data about the
current marketplace for personalized investment advice and the
potential economic impact of the staff's recommendations to inform its
consideration of any potential rulemaking with respect to the Study's
recommendations. While we and our staff have extensive experience in
the regulation of broker-dealers and investment advisers, the public
can provide further data and other information to assist us in
determining whether or not to use the authority
[[Page 14851]]
provided under Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Data and other information from market intermediaries and others
about the potential economic impact of the staff's recommendations,
including information about the potential impact on competition,
capital formation, and efficiency, may particularly help inform any
action we may or may not take in this area. We also especially welcome
the input of retail customers.
We are specifically requesting quantitative and qualitative data
and other information and economic analysis (herein ``data and other
information'') about the benefits and costs of the current standards of
conduct of broker-dealers and investment advisers when providing advice
to retail customers, as well as alternative approaches to the standards
of conduct, including a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
applicable to all investment advisers and broker-dealers when providing
personalized investment advice to retail customers. We recognize that
retail customers are unlikely to have significant empirical and
quantitative information. We welcome any information they can provide.
In this release, we discuss a potential uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct and alternatives to that standard of conduct. A uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct can be understood quite differently by
various parties. In fact, public comments on such a standard have made
widely varying assumptions about what a fiduciary duty would require.
Comments have assumed, for example, that a uniform fiduciary duty would
require all firms to, among other things: provide the lowest cost
alternative; stop offering proprietary products; charge only asset-
based fees, and not commissions; and continuously monitor all
accounts.\19\ These outcomes would not necessarily be the case. By
contrast, many of the rules or other obligations discussed over the
years for potential regulatory harmonization, such as recordkeeping,
advertising, pay to play, and other obligations that currently apply to
broker-dealers and investment advisers, are more specific. Accordingly,
we believe that consideration of a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct would benefit from a set of assumptions and other parameters
that commenters can use and critique in order to generate meaningful
data and other information. The identification of particular
assumptions or parameters, however, does not suggest our policy view or
the ultimate direction of any action proposed by us.
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\19\ See also SIFMA Letter, supra note 17, at 7 and 10
(recommending, among other things, that the Commission articulate a
new uniform standard of conduct, applicable to both broker-dealers
and investment advisers, to ``act in the best interest of the
customer,'' while applying existing case law, guidance, and other
legal precedent developed under Section 206 of the Advisers Act only
to investment advisers, not broker-dealers) compared with the Roper
Letter at 2 (recommending, among other things, that rather than
replacing the current Advisers Act standard with something new and
different, the Commission should extend the existing Advisers Act
standard (currently applicable to investment advisers) to broker-
dealers, while clarifying its applicability in the context of
broker-dealer conduct).
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We also request comment in this release on whether or to what
extent we should consider making other adjustments to the regulatory
obligations of broker-dealers and investment advisers, including
regulatory harmonization. While this release addresses both a potential
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct and regulatory harmonization more
generally, and at times, discusses and requests comment relating to the
potential interrelationship of the two, harmonization beyond a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct could be considered separately. As noted
below, there are a variety of options relating to whether and how to
act with respect to a potential uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
or potential regulatory harmonization, including taking no action,
taking action to implement one (either partially or wholly) and not the
other, or taking action to implement both (again, either partially or
wholly). In order to inform our consideration of all of these options,
this release discusses both a potential uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct and regulatory harmonization and encourages comment on the
potential practical, regulatory, and economic effects that action or
inaction with respect to one or both may have. For example, we request
comment on the extent to which regulatory harmonization might address
customer confusion about the obligations owed to them by broker-dealers
and not investment advisers (or by investment advisers and not broker-
dealers) even if a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct is
implemented. We also request comment on the extent to which regulatory
harmonization might result in additional investor confusion or
otherwise negatively impact investors.
We request data and other information relating to the provision of
personalized investment advice about securities to retail customers to
better understand the relationship between standards of conduct and the
experiences of retail customers. In particular, we seek data and other
information regarding: (a) Investor returns generated under the
existing regulatory regimes; (b) security selections of broker-dealers
and investment advisers as a function of their respective regulatory
regimes; (c) characteristics of investors who invest on the basis of
advice from broker-dealers, invest on the basis of advice from an
investment adviser, or invest utilizing both channels; (d) investor
perceptions of the costs and benefits under each regime; and (e)
investors' ability, and the associated cost to investors, to bring
claims against their broker-dealer or investment adviser under their
respective regulatory regimes.\20\ We are also particularly interested
in the activities, conflicts of interest\21\ and disclosure practices
of investment advisers and broker-dealers, as well as the economics of
the investment advice industry and characteristics of the current
marketplace. We also are asking for data and other information about
the benefits and costs of the current set of regulatory obligations
that apply to broker-dealers and investment advisers, and the benefits
and costs of different approaches to harmonizing particular areas of
broker-dealer and investment adviser regulation.
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\20\ See Statement.
\21\ In this request for information and data, we use the term
``conflict of interest'' to mean a material conflict of interest.
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C. Suggested Guidelines and Considerations for Submissions of Data and
Other Information
The data and other information requested in this document have the
potential to be instructive in our determination of which, if any, new
approach or approaches to consider implementing with respect to the
regulatory obligations of investment advisers and broker-dealers. We
welcome any relevant data and other information, as well as comment, in
response to our inquiries below. Responsive data and other information
would be more useful to us, however, if they are prepared and submitted
in a consistent fashion. We set forth suggested guidelines
(``Guidelines'') in the Appendix to this request for commenters to
follow, where possible, in submitting data and other information. In
particular, through the Guidelines, we request broker-dealers,
investment advisers, and dually registered investment adviser/broker-
dealers submitting comments to provide specific data and other
information describing their businesses, retail customers, and retail
customer
[[Page 14852]]
accounts. We also request that other commenters (e.g., retail
customers, academics, trade associations, and consumer groups) provide
the information requested in the Guidelines to the extent applicable or
appropriate. We especially welcome the input of retail customers.\22\
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\22\ This includes, where possible, information and data
focusing on accounts that receive non-discretionary advice because
they are most likely to be impacted by changes in the standard of
conduct. See Guidelines in the Appendix.
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We are particularly interested in receiving data and other
information that are empirical and quantitative in nature. We encourage
all interested parties, however, to submit their comments, including
qualitative and descriptive analysis of the benefits and costs of
potential approaches and guidance. As stated above, we recognize that
retail customers are unlikely to have significant empirical and
quantitative information. We welcome any information they can provide.
In addition, if commenters prefer to respond to only some of the
requests for comment, they are welcome to do so.
We describe throughout this request for data and other information
a series of assumptions that commenters may use in order to facilitate
our ability to compare, reproduce, and otherwise analyze responses to
our questions in a robust fashion. The discussion of these assumptions
does not suggest our policy view or the ultimate direction of any
proposed action proposed by us. If commenters believe that we should
make additional or different assumptions as a further analytical step
we invite them to do so and explain clearly the additional or different
assumptions made, address why such assumptions are appropriate, and
compare and contrast results obtained under such assumptions with
results obtained under the assumptions specified in this request. If
commenters wish to submit multiple sets of comments resting on
different sets of assumptions, they may do so. Although we seek to
obtain responses that we can compare, reproduce, and otherwise analyze
in a robust fashion, we also wish to emphasize that commenters have
flexibility to provide whatever data and other information they believe
is important to provide.
Examples of data and other information sought include empirical
data, detailed datasets on a particular topic, economic analysis, legal
analysis, statistical data such as survey and focus group results, and
any other observational or descriptive data and other information. Such
data and other information can be quantitative, qualitative, or
descriptive. Again, commenters are invited to provide any other
information that they believe would be useful to us as we consider our
options in this area.
Commenters should only submit data and other information that they
wish to make publicly available. Commenters concerned about making
public proprietary or other highly sensitive data and other information
may wish to pool their data with others (e.g., through a trade
association, law firm, consulting firm or other group) and submit
aggregated data in response to this request. While we request that
commenters provide enough data and other information to allow us to
compare, replicate, and otherwise analyze findings, commenters should
remove any personally identifiable information (e.g., of their
customers) before submitting data and other information in response to
this request.\23\
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\23\ Cf. 17 CFR 248.3(u)(1) (defining for purposes of Regulation
S-P, ``personally identifiable financial information'' as ``any
information: (i) A consumer provides to you to obtain a financial
product or service from you; (ii) About a consumer resulting from
any transaction involving a financial product or service between you
and a consumer; or (iii) You otherwise obtain about a consumer in
connection with providing a financial product or service to that
consumer.'').
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II. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to the Current
Market for Personalized Investment Advice
We are requesting data and other information about the specific
costs and benefits associated with the current regulatory regimes for
broker-dealers and investment advisers\24\ as applied to particular
activities as a baseline for comparison, as described below.
Accordingly, and in addition to the request for data and other
information which follows in Parts III and IV below, we request data
and other information relating to the economics and characteristics of
the current regulatory regime, and other data and other information
relating to investment adviser and broker-dealer conflicts of interest
and the cost and effectiveness of disclosure. Many of the requests ask
commenters to provide data and other information describing retail
customer demographics and accounts; broker-dealer or investment adviser
services offered to retail customers; security selections by or for
retail customers; and the claims of retail customers in dispute
resolution. We request commenters refer to the Appendix for the
specific characteristics of each of these topics that are important to
include when submitting data and other information. We also request
commenters refer to other guidelines in the Appendix, particularly the
request to provide background information and documentation to support
any economic analysis.
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\24\ Please see our staff's discussion in the Study about the
existing regulatory structures for investment advisers and broker-
dealers, and the general differences and similarities between the
regulatory regimes. See Study at 14-46 (discussing investment
adviser obligations) and 46-83 (discussing broker-dealer
obligations).
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To assist us in our analysis, we request that commenters provide
the following:
1. Data and other information, including surveys of retail
customers, describing the characteristics of retail customers who
invest through a broker-dealer as compared to those who invest on the
basis of advice from an investment adviser as well as retail customer
perceptions of the cost/benefit tradeoffs of each regulatory
regime.\25\ Provide information describing retail customer accounts at
broker-dealers and investment advisers, and the manner in which broker-
dealers and investment advisers provide investment advice (e.g.,
frequency, coverage (i.e., account-by-account or relationship), and
solicited or unsolicited). How do firms that offer both brokerage and
advisory accounts advise retail customers about which type of account
they should open? What are the main characteristics of each type of
account? If possible, associate retail customer demographic information
with account descriptions.
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\25\ See Statement.
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2. Data and other information describing the types and availability
of services (including advice) broker-dealers or investment advisers
offer to retail customers, as well as any observed recent changes in
the types of services offered. Provide information as to why services
offered may differ or have changed. Have differences in the standards
of conduct under the two regulatory regimes contributed to differences
in services offered or any observed changes in services offered? If
possible, differentiate by retail customer demographic information.
3. Data and other information describing the extent to which
different rules apply to similar activities of broker-dealers and
investment advisers, and whether this difference is beneficial, harmful
or neutral from the perspectives of retail customers and firms. Also,
provide data and other information describing the facts and
circumstances under which broker-dealers have fiduciary obligations to
retail customers under applicable law, and how frequently such
fiduciary
[[Page 14853]]
obligations arise. If possible, differentiate by retail customer
demographic information.
4. Data and other information describing the types of securities
broker-dealers or investment advisers offer or recommend to retail
customers. To the extent commenters believe that differences in the
standards of conduct under the two regulatory regimes contribute to
differences in the types of securities offered or recommended, provide
data and other information as to why the types of securities offered or
recommended may differ. If possible, differentiate by retail customer
demographic information.
5. Data and other information describing the cost to broker-dealers
and investment advisers of providing personalized investment advice
about securities to retail customers, as well as the cost to retail
customers themselves of receiving personalized investment advice about
securities. Describe costs in terms of dollars paid and/or time spent.
Do differences in the standards of conduct under the two regulatory
regimes contribute to differences in the cost of providing or receiving
services? If possible, separate costs by service type, and
differentiate by retail customer demographic and account information.
6. Data and other information describing and comparing the security
selections of retail customers who are served by financial
professionals subject to the two existing regulatory regimes.\26\ If
possible, associate retail customer demographic and account information
with security selections, and identify whether initial retail customer
ownership took place prior to opening the account and whether security
selections were solicited or unsolicited.
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\26\ Id.
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7. Data and other information describing the extent to which
broker-dealers and investment advisers engage in principal trading with
retail customers, including data and other information regarding the
types of securities bought and sold on a principal basis, the volume,
and other relevant data points. For each type of security, compare
volume and percentage of trades made on a principal basis against the
volume and percentage of trades made on a riskless principal basis.
Also, provide data and other information on the benefits and costs to
broker-dealers and investment advisers of trading securities on a
principal basis with retail customers, as well as the benefits and
costs to retail customers to buying securities from or selling
securities to a broker-dealer or an investment adviser acting in a
principal capacity. To the extent possible, describe costs and benefits
in terms of dollars paid and/or time spent (e.g., any difference in
price for a customer between a principal trade and a trade executed on
an agency basis). Do differences in the two regulatory regimes
contribute to any differences in the cost of trading securities on a
principal basis? If possible, differentiate by retail customer
demographic and account information.
8. Data and other information describing and analyzing retail
customer returns (net and gross of fees, commissions, or other charges
paid to a broker-dealer or investment adviser) generated under the two
existing regulatory regimes.\27\ If possible, provide security returns,
associate retail customer demographic and account information with
security positions, and identify whether the retail customer held these
security positions prior to account opening and identify whether
security selections were solicited or unsolicited. If security returns
are not available, describe the type of securities held in the account
and total account returns, including changes in account value and
account inflows/outflows.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Id.
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9. Data and other information related to the ability of retail
customers to bring claims against their financial professional under
each regulatory regime, with a particular focus on dollar costs to both
firms and retail customers and the results when claims are brought.\28\
We especially welcome the input of persons who have arbitrated,
litigated, or mediated claims (as a retail customer, broker-dealer or
investment adviser), their counsel, and any persons who presided over
such actions. In particular, describe the differences between claims
brought against broker-dealers and investment advisers with respect to
each of the following:
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\28\ Id.
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a. The differences experienced by retail customers, in general,
between bringing a claim against a broker-dealer as compared to
bringing a claim against an investment adviser;
b. any legal or practical barriers to retail customers bringing
claims against broker-dealers or investment advisers;
c. the disposition of claims;
d. the amount of awards, if any;
e. costs related to the claim forum, as it affects retail
customers, firms, and associated persons of such firms;
f. time to resolution of claims;
g. the types of claims brought against broker-dealers (we welcome
examples of mediation, arbitration and litigation claims);
h. the types of claims brought against investment advisers (we
welcome examples of mediation, arbitration and litigation claims);
i. the nature of claims brought against broker-dealers as compared
to the nature of claims brought against investment advisers (e.g.,
breach of fiduciary duty, suitability, breach of contract, tort); and
j. the types of defenses raised by broker-dealers and investment
advisers under each regime.
If possible, differentiate by retail customer demographic and
account information.
10. Data and other information describing the nature and magnitude
of broker-dealer or investment adviser conflicts of interest and the
benefits and costs of these conflicts to retail customers. Also provide
data and other information describing broker-dealer or investment
adviser actions to eliminate, mitigate, or disclose conflicts of
interest. Describe the nature and magnitude of broker-dealer or
investment adviser conflicts of interest with the type and frequency of
activities where conflicts are present, and describe the effect actions
to mitigate conflicts of interest have on firm business and on the
provision of personalized investment advice to retail customers.
11. Data and other information describing broker-dealer or
investment adviser costs from providing mandatory disclosure to retail
customers about products and securities. Describe costs in terms of
dollars and, where cost estimates are not available, estimate time
spent. If possible, differentiate by the form of disclosure (oral or
written) and the amount of information the disclosure presents. Also,
if possible, separate disclosure costs by associated activity.
12. Data and other information describing the effectiveness of
disclosure to inform and protect retail customers from broker-dealer or
investment adviser conflicts of interest. Describe the effectiveness of
disclosure in terms of retail customer comprehension, retail customer
use of disclosure information when making investment decisions, and
retail customer perception of the integrity of the information. Please
provide specific examples. If possible, differentiate by the form of
disclosure (oral or written), the amount of information the disclosure
presents, and retail customer demographic and account information.
Also, if possible, measure disclosure effectiveness by associated
activity.
[[Page 14854]]
13. Identification of differences in state law contributing to
differences in the provision of personalized investment advice to
retail customers. Provide data and other information describing
differences across states with respect to retail customer brokerage or
advisory account characteristics, broker-dealer or investment adviser
services offered and the types of securities they offer or recommend,
and the cost of providing services to retail customers. Do differences
in state law contribute to differences in the recovery of claimants? Do
differences in state law contribute to differences in the mitigation or
elimination of conflicts of interest? Provide information describing
why. If possible, associate retail customer demographic information
with account descriptions.
14. Data and other information describing the extent to which
retail customers are confused about the regulatory status of the person
from whom they receive financial services (i.e., whether the party is a
broker-dealer or an investment adviser). Provide data and other
information describing whether retail customers are confused about the
standard of conduct the person providing them those services owes to
them. Describe the types of services and/or situations that increase or
decrease retail customers' confusion and provide information describing
why. Describe the types of obligations about which retail customers are
confused and provide information describing why.
Provide explanations describing why responses to particular
questions are not possible. Are there operational or cost constraints
that make the data and other information unavailable? If so, please
explain what they are. Also provide data and other information on other
factors important in describing the current market for personalized
investment advice that may aid or guide us in future analysis.
III. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to a Uniform
Fiduciary Standard of Conduct and Alternative Approaches
We discuss below potential alternative approaches to establishing a
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct for broker-dealers and investment
advisers and request data and other information with respect to those
approaches and their potential implications for the marketplace.\29\ To
be clear, the discussion of these potential approaches--including the
identification of particular assumptions or alternatives--does not
suggest our policy view or the ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us. Furthermore, the approaches presented here are non-
exclusive. As discussed above, this description of potential approaches
is instead intended to (1) assist commenters in providing more concrete
empirical data and other information and more precise comment in
response to this request and (2) assist us in more readily comparing,
reproducing, and otherwise analyzing data and other information
provided by commenters.
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\29\ In Part IV, we discuss certain possible approaches for
harmonizing certain other aspects of the regulation of broker-
dealers and investment advisers.
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We recognize that commenters may be able to provide additional data
and other information that may be helpful to us under assumptions and
alternatives that are different from, or in addition to, those
presented under the various approaches described below. We invite
commenters to explain clearly the different or additional assumptions
and alternatives they provide, address why such assumptions and
alternatives are appropriate, and compare and contrast results obtained
under such assumptions and alternatives with results obtained under the
assumptions or alternatives specified in this request.
We intend to use the data and other information provided to inform
us about the current market for personalized investment advice about
securities and how different approaches to establishing a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct on broker-dealers and investment advisers
may impact retail customers, investment advisers and broker-dealers.
A. Initial Clarification and Assumptions
As an initial matter, to provide clarity to commenters and
establish a common baseline of assumptions, we indicate that commenters
should make the assumptions set forth below in considering our
subsequent description of a possible uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct when a broker-dealer or investment adviser provides
personalized investment advice to a retail customer. However, as
described above in the introduction to this Part III, the
identification of particular assumptions does not suggest our policy
view or the ultimate direction of any proposed action by us. We invite
comment based on other assumptions chosen by commenters, and we invite
comparisons between analyses made under assumptions chosen by
commenters and analyses made under the assumptions--particularly
alternatives to Assumption 1 and Assumption 8 below--we have set forth
below.
1. Assume that the term ``personalized investment advice about
securities'' would include a ``recommendation,'' as interpreted under
existing broker-dealer regulation,\30\ and would include any other
actions or communications that would be considered investment advice
about securities under the Advisers Act (such as comparisons of
securities or asset allocation strategies). It would not include
``impersonal investment advice'' as that term is used for purposes of
the Advisers Act.\31\ The term ``personalized investment advice'' would
also not include general investor educational tools, provided those
tools do not constitute a recommendation under current law.\32\
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\30\ See Study at 124-125 (staff's discussion of what
constitutes a ``recommendation'' under the broker-dealer regulatory
regime).
\31\ We have defined ``impersonal investment advice'' for
certain purposes under the Advisers Act to mean ``investment
advisory services provided by means of written material or oral
statements that do not purport to meet the objectives or needs of
specific individuals or accounts.'' 17 CFR 275.203A-3(a)(3)(ii). See
also 17 CFR 275.206(3)-1; Study at 123 (staff's discussion of what
constitutes ``impersonal investment advice'').
\32\ See Study at 125 (staff's discussion of communications that
generally would not constitute a ``recommendation'' under existing
broker-dealer regulation).
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2. Assume that the term ``retail customer'' would have the same
meaning as in Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which is ``a natural
person, or the legal representative of such natural person, who (1)
receives personalized investment advice about securities from a broker
or dealer or investment adviser; and (2) uses such advice primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes.''\33\
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\33\ Sec. 913, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376; 15 U.S.C.
80b-11(g)(2). See also supra note 1.
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3. Assume that any action would apply to all SEC-registered broker-
dealers and SEC-registered investment advisers. To the extent
commenters are of the view that the duty should be limited to a
particular subset of SEC-registered broker-dealers or SEC-registered
investment advisers or expanded to include all broker-dealers or
investment advisers, commenters should explain how and why it should be
limited or expanded, and include any relevant data and other
information to support such an application.
4. Assume that the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct would be
designed to accommodate different business models and fee structures of
firms, and would permit broker-dealers to continue to receive
commissions; firms would not be required to charge an asset-based fee.
As provided in Section 913, ``[t]he receipt of compensation based on
commissions, fees or other standard
[[Page 14855]]
compensation for the sale of securities, for example, would not, in and
of itself, be considered a violation'' of the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct.\34\ Broker-dealers also would continue to be
permitted to engaged in, and receive compensation from, principal
trades. To satisfy the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct, however,
assume that at a minimum a broker-dealer or investment adviser would
need to disclose material conflicts of interest, if any, presented by
its compensation structure.\35\
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\34\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1); 15 U.S.C. 80b-11(g)(1).
We also note that nothing in Section 206(1) and 206(2) of the
Advisers Act prohibits the receipt of transaction-based
compensation, such as commissions. A person engaged in the business
of effecting transactions in securities for the account of others,
would however, absent an available exemption, be required to
register as a broker-dealer. See Exchange Act Sections 3(a)(4) and
15(a); 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(4) and 78o(a). See also SEC v. Hansen, [1984
Transfer Binder] Fed. Sec. L. Rep. (CCH) ] 91,426 (S.D.N.Y. 1984)
(stating that receiving transaction-based compensation is among the
activities that indicate a person may be acting as a broker); Mutual
Fund Distribution Fees; Confirmations, Exchange Act Release No.
62544 (July 21, 2010) (proposing rules governing ongoing mutual fund
asset-based sales charges), n. 168 (``As a form of deferred sales
load, all payments of ongoing sales charges to intermediaries would
constitute transaction-based compensation. Intermediaries receiving
those payments thus would need to register as broker-dealers under
Section 15 of the Exchange Act unless they can avail themselves of
an exception or exemption from registration. Marketing and service
fees paid to an intermediary may similarly require the intermediary
to register under the Exchange Act.'').
\35\ See discussion infra Part III.B.1.
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5. Assume that the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct would not
generally require a broker-dealer or investment adviser to either (i)
have a continuing duty of care or loyalty to a retail customer after
providing him or her personalized investment advice about securities,
\36\ or (ii) provide services to a retail customer beyond those agreed
to between the retail customer and the broker-dealer or investment
adviser. Assume that the question of whether a broker-dealer or
investment adviser might have a continuing duty, as well as the nature
and scope of such duty, would depend on the contractual or other
arrangement or understanding between the retail customer and the
broker-dealer or investment adviser, including the totality of the
circumstances of the relationship and course of dealing between the
customer and the firm, including but not limited to contractual
provisions, disclosure and marketing documents, and reasonable customer
expectations arising from the firm's course of conduct.\37\ Similarly,
the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct would apply within the
context of the scope of services agreed to between the customer and the
broker-dealer or investment adviser, and would not generally require
the broker-dealer or investment adviser to provide services beyond
those agreed to through a contractual or other arrangement or
understanding with the retail customer.
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\36\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1) (``Nothing in this section
[authorizing a uniform standard of conduct for the provision of
personalized investment advice] shall require a broker or dealer or
registered representative to have a continuing duty of care or
loyalty to the customer after providing personalized investment
advice about securities.'').
\37\ We understand that market participants generally have taken
the view that the extent to which a continuing duty of loyalty or
care exists under the Advisers Act depends on the scope of the
relationship with the customer. They believe, for example, that
investment advisers who act as financial planners generally would
not have a continuing duty to a customer after providing the
financial plan.
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6. As discussed below, assume that the offering or recommending of
only proprietary or a limited range of products would not, in and of
itself, be considered a violation of the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct.\38\
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\38\ See 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(2) (``The sale of only proprietary or
other limited range of products by a broker or dealer shall not, in
and of itself, be considered a violation of the [uniform standard of
conduct for the provision of personalized investment advice.]'').
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7. Assume that Section 206(3) and Section 206(4) of the Advisers
Act and the rules thereunder would continue to apply to investment
advisers, and would not apply to broker-dealers.\39\ Assume that to
satisfy its obligations under the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct, however, a broker-dealer would need to disclose any material
conflicts of interest associated with its principal trading practices.
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\39\ Section 206(4) of the Advisers Act makes it unlawful for an
investment adviser to ``engage in any act, practice, or course of
business which is fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative'' and
authorizes the Commission ``by rules and regulations [to] define,
and prescribe means reasonably designed to prevent, such acts,
practices, and courses of business as are fraudulent, deceptive, or
manipulative.'' See also infra the discussion of principal trading
and the inapplicability of Section 206(3) of the Advisers Act in
Part III.B.1.
We have authority to adopt rules for broker-dealers that are
substantially similar to those adopted under Sections 206(3) and
206(4) of the Advisers Act. For purposes of our request for
information and data about a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct,
we request that commenters assume that such rules will not be
incorporated into such a standard of conduct. However, commenters
may wish to express their views on whether the Commission should
engage in rulemaking to impose such rules on broker-dealers as part
of harmonization of the regulatory obligations of broker-dealers and
investment advisers. See discussion infra Part IV.
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8. Assume that existing applicable law and guidance governing
broker-dealers, including SRO rules and guidance, would continue to
apply to broker-dealers.
B. Discussion of a Possible Uniform Fiduciary Standard
Pursuant to Section 913 of the Dodd-Frank Act, ``[t]he Commission
may promulgate rules to provide that the standard of conduct for all
brokers, dealers, and investment advisers, when providing personalized
investment advice about securities to retail customers * * * shall be
to act in the best interest of the customer without regard to the
financial or other interest of the broker, dealer, or investment
adviser providing the advice.'' \40\ We have not yet determined whether
to exercise this authority. Section 913 also provides that any standard
of conduct we adopt shall be no less stringent than the standard
applicable to investment advisers under Sections 206(1) and 206(2) of
the Advisers Act.\41\ The Supreme Court has construed Advisers Act
Sections 206(1) and 206(2) as requiring an investment adviser to fully
disclose to its clients all material information that is intended ``to
eliminate, or at least expose, all conflicts of interest which might
incline an investment adviser--consciously or unconsciously--to render
advice which was not disinterested.'' \42\
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\40\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-11(g)(1); 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1).
\41\ Id.
\42\ SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180,
194 (1963).
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The Study recommended that we should engage in rulemaking to
implement the uniform fiduciary standard described in Section 913 of
the Dodd-Frank Act. The staff recommended that, in implementing the
uniform fiduciary standard, we should address both components of the
uniform fiduciary standard: a duty of loyalty and a duty of care. The
staff also supported extending the existing guidance and precedent
under the Advisers Act regarding fiduciary duty, which has developed
primarily through Commission and staff interpretive pronouncements
under the antifraud provisions of the Advisers Act, as well as through
case law and numerous enforcement actions, to broker-dealers, where
similar facts and circumstances would make the guidance and precedent
relevant and justify a similar outcome.\43\
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\43\ As discussed in more detail below, the Commission
acknowledges that existing guidance and precedent under the Advisers
Act regarding fiduciary duty turn on the specific facts and
circumstances, including the types of services provided and
disclosures made. Accordingly, the existing guidance and precedent
may not directly apply to broker-dealers depending on the facts and
circumstances.
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[[Page 14856]]
We request data and other information on the benefits and costs of
implementing the uniform fiduciary standard (as described below),
entailing two key elements: a duty of loyalty and a duty of care. Our
description below of a potential uniform fiduciary standard is only one
example of how we could implement a uniform fiduciary standard designed
to require broker-dealers and investment advisers to provide advice
that is in the best interest of the customer. The discussion of the
uniform fiduciary standard described below and the potential
alternative approaches does not suggest our policy view or the ultimate
direction of any proposed action by us. To obtain the most comparable
and useful data and other information on a uniform fiduciary standard,
however, we ask commenters to consider the uniform fiduciary standard
as described below. We also discuss certain potential alternative
approaches in the discussion below and request comment on those
alternatives.
We recognize, among other things, that the list of potential
options discussed below--including the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct, potential alternative approaches to the uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct, and taking no action at this time--is not
exhaustive, and that commenters may formulate additional alternative
approaches. To the extent commenters are of the view that we should
consider additional alternative approaches, we request they explain
those approaches, address their reasons for recommending such
approaches, and compare such approaches to the ones specified in detail
below.
1. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct--the Duty of Loyalty
The duty of loyalty is a critical component of a fiduciary duty. As
noted above, Dodd-Frank Section 913(g) addresses the duty of loyalty by
providing: ``[i]n accordance with such rules [that the Commission may
promulgate with respect to the uniform fiduciary standard] * * * any
material conflicts of interest shall be disclosed and may be consented
to by the customer.'' \44\ The uniform fiduciary standard would be
designed to promote advice that is in the best interest of a retail
customer by, at a minimum, requiring an investment adviser or a broker-
dealer providing personalized investment advice to the customer to
fulfill its duty of loyalty. This would be accomplished by eliminating
its material conflicts of interest, or providing full and fair
disclosure to retail customers about those conflict of interest.\45\
Commenters should assume that we would provide specific detail or
guidance, summarized below, about complying with the duty of loyalty
component of the uniform fiduciary duty. As described above in the
introduction to this Part III, the identification of particular
assumptions does not suggest our policy view or the ultimate direction
of any proposed action by us. We invite comment on other assumptions
and comparisons between analyses made under such other assumptions and
analyses made under the assumptions set forth below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ 15 U.S.C. 80b-11(g)(1); 15 U.S.C. 78o(k)(1).
\45\ The staff made a number of recommendations in the Study for
the Commission to consider in implementing a duty of loyalty. First,
the Study recommended that we should facilitate the provision of
uniform, simple and clear disclosures to retail customers about the
terms of their relationships with broker-dealers and investment
advisers, including any material conflicts of interests. The Study
identified a number of potential disclosures that the Commission
should consider (e.g., a general relationship guide akin to the new
Part 2A of Form ADV, the form investment advisers use to register
with the Commission and states, which is provided to advisory
clients). See Study at 114-117. Second, the Study recommended that
we should consider whether rulemaking would be appropriate to
prohibit certain conflicts, to require firms to mitigate conflicts
through specific action, or to impose specific disclosure and
consent requirements. Id. Third, the Study recommended that we
should address through guidance and/or rulemaking how broker-dealers
should fulfill the uniform fiduciary standard when engaging in
principal trading. Id. at 118-120.
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1. Assume that any rule under consideration would expressly impose
certain disclosure requirements. Assume that each broker-dealer and
investment adviser that provides personalized investment advice about
securities to a retail customer would be required to provide the
following to that retail customer:
a. Disclosure of all material conflicts of interest the broker-
dealer or investment adviser has with that retail customer. This
requirement would reflect an overarching, general obligation to
disclose all such conflicts of interest. Depending on the nature of the
conflict and unless otherwise provided, this disclosure largely could
be made through the general relationship guide described below.
b. Disclosure in the form of a general relationship guide similar
to Form ADV Part 2A, to be delivered at the time of entry into a retail
customer relationship.\46\ The relationship guide would contain a
description of, among other things, the firm's services, fees, and the
scope of its services with the retail customer, including: (i) Whether
advice and related duties are limited in time or are ongoing, or are
otherwise limited in scope (e.g., limited to certain accounts or
transactions); (ii) whether the broker-dealer or investment adviser
only offers or recommends proprietary or other limited ranges of
products; (iii) whether, and if so the circumstances in which, the
broker-dealer or investment adviser will seek to engage in principal
trades with a retail customer. It also could include disclosure of
other material conflicts of interest, such as conflicts of interest
presented by compensation structures.\47\
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\46\ We note that FINRA has requested comment on a concept
proposal to require the provision of a disclosure statement for
retail customers at or before commencing a business relationship
that would include many items of information analogous to what is
required in Form ADV Part 2. FINRA Regulatory Notice 10-54,
``Disclosure of Services, Conflicts and Duties'' (Oct. 2010).
Nothing in this request for information and data suggests that FINRA
or any other regulatory body could or could not, or should or should
not adopt rules or requirements that it determines are appropriate
and that meet applicable legal standards.
\47\ A general relationship guide could also include other
disclosures, such as a firm's disciplinary history.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Oral or written disclosure at the time personalized investment
advice is provided of any new material conflicts of interest or any
material change of an existing conflict.
2. Assume that any rule under consideration would treat conflicts
of interest arising from principal trades the same as other conflicts
of interest. Assume that such a rule would make clear that it would not
incorporate the transaction-by-transaction disclosure and consent
requirements of Section 206(3) of the Advisers Act for principal
trading.\48\ At a minimum, as with other conflicts of interest, the
broker-dealer would be required to disclose material conflicts of
interest arising from principal trades with retail customers.\49\
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\48\ Assume that the rule would not relieve an investment
adviser from its obligations under Advisers Act Section 206(3). We
note that we have the authority to apply similar requirements to
broker-dealers. Also assume that the rule would not relieve an
investment adviser who is also registered as a broker-dealer from
its obligations to comply with Advisers Act Section 206(3) or the
rules thereunder. See 17 CFR 275.206(3)-3T.
As stated above, we request that, for purposes of our request
for information and data about a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct, commenters assume that we will not incorporate these
obligations into the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct. However,
commenters may wish to express their views, on whether the
Commission should engage in rulemaking to impose such rules on
broker-dealers as part of harmonization of the regulatory
obligations of broker-dealers and investment advisers. See
discussion infra Part IV.
\49\ SRO rules currently impose requirements on broker-dealers
when broker-dealers engage in principal trading. See, e.g., NASD
Rule 2440 (Fair Prices and Commissions); IM-2440-1 (Mark-Up Policy);
IM-2440-2 (Mark-Up Policy for Debt Securities); NASD Rule 2310
(Suitability) (effective until July 9, 2012, when replaced by FINRA
Rule 2111); NASD Rule 3010 (Supervision); NASD Rule 3012
(Supervisory Control System). As noted above, these requirements
would continue to apply to a broker-dealer under a uniform fiduciary
standard of conduct.
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[[Page 14857]]
3. Assume that the rule would prohibit certain sales contests. The
rule would prohibit the receipt or payment of non-cash compensation
(e.g., trips and prizes) in connection with the provision of
personalized investment advice about the purchase of securities.
2. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct--the Duty of Care
The duty of care is another critical component of the uniform
fiduciary standard. We would specify, through the duty of care, certain
minimum professional obligations of broker-dealers and investment
advisers,\50\ which would be designed to promote advice that is in the
best interests of the retail customer. Commenters should assume, for
purposes of this request for data and other information, that we would
implement the duty of care by imposing on a broker-dealer or investment
adviser, when providing personalized advice to a retail customer about
securities, the uniform obligations described below. As described above
in the introduction to this Part III, the identification of particular
assumptions does not suggest our policy view or the ultimate direction
of any proposed action by us. We invite comment based on other
assumptions chosen by commenters, and we invite comparisons between
analyses made under assumptions chosen by commenters and analyses made
under the assumptions we have set forth below.
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\50\ The staff stated in the Study that the Commission could
articulate and harmonize such professional standards by referring
to, and expanding upon, as appropriate, the explicit minimum
standards of conduct relating to the duty of care currently
applicable to broker-dealers (e.g., suitability (including product-
specific suitability), best execution, and fair pricing and
compensation requirements) under applicable rules. See Study at 50-
53.
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1. Suitability obligations: A duty to have a reasonable basis to
believe that its securities and investment strategy recommendations are
suitable for at least some customer(s) as well as for the specific
retail customer to whom it makes the recommendation in light of the
retail customer's financial needs, objectives and circumstances; \51\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\51\ See Study at 27-28 and 61-64 (discussing investment adviser
and broker-dealer suitability obligations, respectively).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Product-specific requirements: Specific disclosure, due
diligence, or suitability requirements for certain securities products
recommended (such as penny stocks, options, debt securities and bond
funds, municipal securities, mutual fund share classes, interests in
hedge funds and structured products);\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\52\ See id. at 65-66 (discussing relevant rules imposing
specific disclosure, diligence and suitability requirements for
certain securities products).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Duty of best execution: A duty on a broker-dealer and an
investment adviser (where the investment adviser has the responsibility
to select broker-dealers to execute client trades) to seek to execute
customer trades on the most favorable terms reasonably available under
the circumstances; \53\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\53\ See id. at 28-29 and 69-70 (describing investment adviser
and broker-dealer duties of best execution).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Fair and reasonable compensation: A requirement that broker-
dealers and investment advisers receive compensation for services that
is fair and reasonable, taking into consideration all relevant
circumstances.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ See id. at 66-69 (describing broker-dealer obligations to
charge fair prices, commissions, and other charges and fees).
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3. Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct--Application of Prior Guidance
and Precedent Regarding Investment Adviser Fiduciary Duty
In the interests of increasing investor protection and reducing
investor confusion, the staff recommended in the Study that the uniform
fiduciary standard be no less stringent than the existing fiduciary
standard for investment advisers under Advisers Act Sections 206(1) and
206(2).\55\ Accordingly, the staff recommended that existing guidance
and precedent under the Advisers Act regarding fiduciary duty should
continue to apply to investment advisers and be extended to broker-
dealers, as applicable, under a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ As explained above, guidance and precedent under Sections
206(3) and 206(4) of the Advisers Act, and the rules adopted under
those sections, would not be part of the uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Application of this guidance and precedent turns on the specific
facts and circumstances, including the types of services provided and
disclosures made. We understand, accordingly, that existing guidance
and precedent may not directly apply to broker-dealers depending on the
facts and circumstances. Therefore, to aid commenters, we have
identified below certain fiduciary principles that commenters should
assume would continue to apply to investment advisers and be extended
to broker-dealers. We also request commenters to identify specific
citations to any case law and enforcement actions and other guidance
under the Advisers Act regarding the fiduciary duty that they believe
should or should not apply to broker-dealers when providing
personalized investment advice about securities to retail customers.
For purposes of this request for data and other information,
commenters should make the assumptions below regarding the application
of prior guidance and precedent under a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct. As described above in the introduction to this Part III, the
identification of particular assumptions does not suggest our policy
view or the ultimate direction of any proposed action by us. We invite
comment based on other assumptions chosen by commenters, and we invite
comparisons between analyses made under assumptions chosen by
commenters and analyses made under the assumptions we have set forth
below.
1. Allocation of investment opportunities: A fiduciary's duty of
loyalty generally would require a firm to disclose to a retail customer
how it would allocate investment opportunities among its customers,\56\
and between customers and the firm's own account; \57\ for example,
this disclosure could include, among other things, the firm's method of
allocating shares of initial public offerings, as well as its method
(e.g., pro rata, ``first in, first out'') of allocating out of its
principal account to its customers when agency orders are placed on a
riskless principal basis.
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\56\ The Commission has brought numerous enforcement actions
alleging that investment advisers unfairly allocated client trades
to preferred clients without making adequate disclosure. See, e.g.,
Alpine Woods Capital Investors, LLC and Samuel A. Lieber, Admin.
Proc. File No. 3-14233 (Feb. 7, 2011) (finding the investment
adviser violated Advisers Act Section 206(2) when it
disproportionately allocated shares from an initial public offering
to the advantage of the firm's two smallest mutual funds); Nevis
Capital Mgmt., LLC, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2214 (Feb.
9, 2004) (settled order); The Dreyfus Corp., et al., Investment
Advisers Act Release No. 1870 (May 10, 2000) (settled order);
Account Mgmt. Corp., Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1529 (Sept.
29, 1995) (settled order).
\57\ The Commission has brought numerous enforcement actions
alleging that investment advisers unfairly allocated trades to their
own accounts and allocated less favorable or unprofitable trades to
their clients' accounts. See, e.g., Nicholas-Applegate Capital
Mgmt., Investment Advisers Act Release No. 1741 (Aug. 12, 1998)
(settled order); Timothy J. Lyons, Investment Advisers Act Release
No. 1882 (June 20, 2000) (settled order); SEC v. Lyons, 57 SE.C. 99
(2003); SEC v. Alan Brian Bond, et al., Litigation Release No. 18923
(Civil Action No. 99-12092 (S.D.N.Y.) (Oct. 7, 2004).
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2. Aggregation of orders: A firm may aggregate or ``bunch'' orders
on behalf of two or more of its retail customers, so long as the firm
does not favor one
[[Page 14858]]
customer over another.\58\ A firm would need to disclose whether and
under what conditions it aggregates orders; \59\ if the firm does not
aggregate orders when it has the opportunity to do so, the firm would
need to explain its practice and describe the costs to customers of not
aggregating.\60\
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\58\ The staff takes the position that an investment adviser,
when directing orders for the purchase or sale of securities, may
aggregate or ``bunch'' those orders on behalf of two or more of its
accounts, so long as the bunching is done for the purpose of
achieving best execution, and no customer is disadvantaged or
advantaged by the bundling. See SMC Capital, Inc., SEC No-Action
Letter (Sept. 5, 1995).
\59\ The staff understands that, consistent with applicable law,
broker-dealers currently only aggregate orders in limited
circumstances, such as when orders are received outside of normal
trading hours and aggregated in anticipation of execution when the
market re-opens, or when the broker-dealer has discretion over the
trade. Similarly, the staff recognizes that aggregation of orders
may not occur frequently with regard to non-discretionary advisory
accounts.
\60\ See Item 12 of Form ADV Part 2A.
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C. Alternative Approaches to the Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct
We identify below alternative approaches to the uniform fiduciary
standard discussed above. In considering the alternatives, it would be
helpful to obtain information about whether and, if so, how each
alternative meets the goals of enhancing retail customer protections
and decreasing retail customers' confusion about the standard of
conduct owed to them when their financial professional provides them
personalized investment advice. It would also be helpful to obtain
information about the relative costs and benefits of these
alternatives, including the extent to which one alternative may provide
(1) greater benefits for the same or lower cost than other alternatives
or (2) lower benefits for the same or higher cost than other
alternatives. The identification of particular alternatives does not
suggest our policy view or the ultimate direction of any proposed
action by us.
Keeping in mind these goals, we request comment on the following
alternative approaches, including the costs and benefits of each
approach, as well as other approaches. We could:
1. Apply a uniform requirement for broker-dealers and investment
advisers to provide disclosure about (a) key facets of the services
they offer and the types of products or services they offer or have
available to recommend; and (b) material conflicts they may have with
retail customers, without imposing a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct.
2. Apply the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct discussed above
on broker-dealers and investment advisers, but without extending to
broker-dealers the existing guidance and precedent under the Advisers
Act regarding fiduciary duty.\61\ The existing guidance and precedent
under the Advisers Act regarding fiduciary duty would continue to apply
to investment advisers.
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\61\ The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
suggested this approach. See SIFMA Letter, supra note 17.
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3. Without modifying the regulation of investment advisers, apply
the uniform fiduciary standard discussed above, or parts thereof, to
broker-dealers. This ``broker-dealer-only'' standard could involve
establishing a ``best interest'' standard of conduct for broker-
dealers, which would be no less stringent than that currently applied
to investment advisers under Advisers Act Sections 206(1) and 206(2),
when they provide personalized investment advice about securities to
retail customers.
4. Without modifying the regulation of broker-dealers, specify
certain minimum professional obligations under an investment adviser's
duty of care (which are currently not specified by rule). As discussed
above, any rules or guidance would take into account Advisers Act
fiduciary principles, such as the duty to provide suitable investment
advice (e.g., with respect to specific recommendations and the client's
portfolio as a whole) and to seek best execution where the adviser has
the responsibility to select broker-dealers to execute client trades.
These requirements could be similar to those rules currently applicable
to broker-dealers, as described further in the Study.\62\
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\62\ For a more detailed description of such requirements, see
the Study at 61-70.
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5. Consider following models set by regulators in other countries.
For instance, the United Kingdom's Financial Services Authority (FSA)
requires persons providing personalized investment advice to a retail
client to act in the client's best interests, and has set limits on how
investment advisers charge for their services, including prohibiting
(a) the receipt of ongoing charges unless there are ongoing services,
and (b) the receipt of commissions from those providing the investment
advice.\63\ Similarly, the Treasury of Australia imposed a best
interest obligation on persons providing personal advice that would (a)
require the provider of the advice to place a retail client's interests
before its own,\64\ and (b) prohibit the receipt of ``conflicted''
remuneration, such as commission payments relating to the provision of
advice.\65\ Further, the European Securities and Markets Authority
(ESMA) published guidelines to clarify the application of certain
aspects of its current Markets in Financial Instruments Directive
(MiFID) suitability requirements (arising from both MiFID and the MiFID
Implementing Directive).\66\
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\63\ See Financial Services Authority Handbook, Conduct of
Business Sourcebook (``COBS''), 2.1.1, available at https://fsahandbook.info/FSA/html/handbook/COBS/2/1 (FSA's ``client best
interest rule''). See also COBS, 9.2.1(1), (2); COBS, 9.2.2
(requiring that a firm's recommendations be suitable and reasonable
based on the client's risk profile). Effective in 2012, the FSA will
require firms to disclose to retail clients the type (either
``independent'' or ``restricted'') and breadth of advice being
offered (e.g., limited to certain products or a comprehensive, fair
and unbiased analysis of the relevant market). See COBS, 6.2A.5R,
6.2A.6R, available at https://fsahandbook.info/FSA/html/handbook/COBS. The Adviser Charging rules, also going into effect in 2012,
will prohibit receipt of any remuneration for advice that is not
disclosed and agreed upon in advance of the recommendation. See
COBS, 6.1A.
\64\ See The Corporations Amendment (Further Future of Financial
Advice Measures) Act 2012, (``Financial Advice Measures''),
available at https://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/download/legislation/bills/r4739_aspassed/toc_pdf/11270b01.pdf;fileType=application%2Fpdf. See also Australian
Securities & Investments Commission, Regulatory Guide 175:
Licensing: Financial Product Advisers--Conduct and Disclosure 15
(2011), available at https://www.asic.gov.au/asic/pdflib.nsf/
LookupByFileName/rg175-010411.pdf/$file/rg175-010411.pdf (discussing
the implied warranty, under the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission Act 2001, to render advice through ``due care
and skill'').
\65\ See Financial Advice Measures.
\66\ See Guidelines on certain aspects of the MiFID suitability
requirements, ESMA, 2012, 387 (July 6, 2012), available at https://www.esma.europa.eu/system/files/2012-387.pdf.
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As described above in Part III.B, we invite comment on other
potential alternative approaches not specified in this request for data
and other information and comparisons between those alternative
approaches and the potential uniform fiduciary standard of conduct and
alternatives we describe above.
D. Preserving Current Standard of Conduct Obligations
Consistent with our discretionary authority under Section 913, we
could also determine to take no further action at this time with
respect to the standards of conduct applicable to broker-dealers and
investment advisers; existing regulatory requirements would continue to
apply. We request data and other information relating to the current
market for personalized investment advice in Part II above. It
generally would be helpful to obtain information about how taking no
action would compare to a uniform fiduciary standard
[[Page 14859]]
of conduct and the alternative approaches described above. In
particular, it would be helpful to obtain information about the costs
and benefits of the current regulatory regime as compared to the
uniform fiduciary standard of conduct and the alternative approaches
described above. Such comparisons would be particularly helpful as
commenters consider providing data and other information in connection
with the requests specified in Part III.E below.
E. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to Changes in the
Marketplace for Personalized Investment Advice Resulting from the
Uniform Fiduciary Standard of Conduct and Alternative Approaches
The Commission requests the following data and other information
relating to changes in the marketplace for personalized investment
advice for retail customers that might occur as a result of
implementing the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct and the
alternative approaches described above. As noted above, in providing
this data and other information, the Commission believes it would be
useful to also obtain information about the benefits and costs of
continuing the current regulatory regime, as requested in Part II
above, as a baseline for comparing the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct and the alternative approaches. Accordingly, to the extent
applicable, the Commission requests commenters to provide such
comparisons. As in Part II, many of the requests ask commenters to
provide data and other information describing retail customer
demographics and accounts; broker-dealer or investment adviser services
offered; financial securities; and the claims of retail customers in
dispute resolution. We request commenters to refer to the Appendix for
the specific characteristics of each of these topics that are important
to include when submitting data and other information. We also request
commenters refer to other guidelines in the Appendix, particularly the
request to provide background information and documentation to support
any economic analysis.
1. Commenters have highlighted several activities of broker-dealers
and investment advisers that are most likely to be impacted by a
uniform fiduciary standard for the provision of personalized investment
advice about securities to retail customers: \67\
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\67\ The inclusion of activities in this list does not
necessarily reflect the Commission's belief that these activities
will be impacted by a uniform fiduciary standard, see the discussion
of clarifications and assumptions in the introductions to Part III
and Part III.A.
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Recommending proprietary products and products of
affiliates;
Engaging in principal trades with respect to a recommended
security (e.g., fixed income products);
Recommending a limited range of products and/or services;
Recommending a security underwritten by the firm or a
broker-dealer affiliate, including initial public offerings;
Allocating investment opportunities among retail customers
(e.g., IPO allocation);
Advising on a trading strategy involving concentrated
positions;
Receiving third-party compensation in connection with
securities transactions or distributions (e.g., sales loads, ongoing
asset-based fees, or revenue sharing); and
Providing ongoing, episodic or one-time advice.
a. Provide comment on this list of activities. Does this list
capture the activities of broker-dealers and investment advisers that
would be most impacted by a uniform fiduciary standard of conduct when
providing personalized investment advice about securities to retail
customers?
b. Provide data and other information describing the likely
benefits and costs for firms and retail customers from firms engaging
in these activities under the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct and
each of the alternative approaches discussed above. In particular,
describe the cost to broker-dealers and investment advisers in terms of
dollars and time spent from providing these activities to retail
customers under the uniform fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches. Also provide data and other information
describing the benefits and costs to firms and retail customers likely
to result from voluntary actions firms may take that are not
necessarily mandated by the relevant standard. If possible, separate
costs by service type, and differentiate by retail customer demographic
and account information.
c. Provide data and other information related to the nature and
magnitude of conflicts of interest when firms engage in these
activities under the uniform fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches discussed above. How would the uniform fiduciary
standard or each of the alternative approaches increase or decrease
broker-dealer or investment adviser conflicts of interest?
2. Provide data and other information describing the types and
availability of services (including advice) and securities that broker-
dealers or investment advisers would offer or recommend to retail
customers under the uniform fiduciary standard and each of the
alternative approaches discussed above. Would the application of a
particular approach discussed above require a firm, or give a firm an
incentive, to modify or eliminate current business practices? What
would be the impact or potential impact of each approach discussed
above on retail customer cost and access to personalized investment
advice and to security offerings? How could such impact or costs be
mitigated? Provide data and other information describing why the
business practices would be so modified or eliminated, and whether
retail customer access would change. Indicate whether business
practices are transaction-specific, account-specific, customer-
specific, or firm-wide. If possible, separate costs by service type and
differentiate by retail customer demographic and account information.
3. Provide data and other information describing the security
selections of retail customers under the uniform fiduciary standard and
each of the alternative approaches discussed above. If possible,
associate retail customer demographic and account information with
security selections.
4. Provide data and other information related to the ability of
retail customers to bring claims against their financial professional
under the uniform fiduciary standard and each of the alternative
approaches discussed above, with a particular focus on alternative
forums and dollar costs to both firms and retail customers and the
results when claims are brought. Describe disposition of claims, costs
related to claim forum, time to resolution, and awards if any. If
possible, differentiate by retail customer demographic and account
information.\68\
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\68\ See supra Item 9(a)-(j) in Part II of this request for
information and data.
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5. Provide information, data and comment on the extent to which the
uniform fiduciary standard and each of the alternative approaches
discussed above affect investor protection and confusion investors have
about the standard of conduct applicable to their financial
professionals when providing personalized investment advice about
securities.\69\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\69\ See supra note 2.
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6. Provide information, data and comment on the costs and benefits
to investment advisers and broker-dealers associated with implementing
the uniform fiduciary standard and each of
[[Page 14860]]
the alternative approaches discussed above. Discuss any changes
investment advisers and broker-dealers would need to make to, among
others, their customer documentation, internal controls, and training
programs, as well as other changes they would need to make, and why.
7. Provide data and other information describing to what extent
firms would rely on disclosure to comply with the uniform fiduciary
standard and each of the alternative approaches detailed above. How
would retail customers be expected to react to changes in practice and
changes in disclosure? How do retail customers choose between a firm
with disclosed conflicts and a firm whose business model does not
involve the same conflict(s)?
8. Provide data and other information on how other aspects of the
market for personalized investment advice would change if we adopt any
of the alternative approaches discussed above. In particular, provide
data about how the alternatives described above would impact the costs
to retail customers and any associated effect on access to products and
services. As stated above, specific information about the potential
economic impact of the staff's recommendations, including information
about the potential impact on competition, capital formation and
efficiency, may particularly help inform any action we may take in this
area.
9. Provide data and other information describing the benefits and
costs related to alternative approaches to the standards of conduct
other than those specified in this request for data and other
information. Additional approaches and standards of conduct for persons
providing personalized investment advice include but are not limited to
those standards established under the laws of other countries.
10. Provide explanations describing why responses to particular
questions are not possible.
F. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to Account
Conversions
In 2007, as a result of the court decision in Financial Planning
Association v. SEC \70\ (``FPA''), broker-dealers offering fee-based
brokerage accounts (i.e., brokerage accounts in which the broker-dealer
charged a single asset-based fee, instead of commissions, for its
services) became subject to the Advisers Act with respect to those
accounts; as such, those client relationships, which had previously
been primarily subject to Exchange Act and SRO rules, became subject to
the Advisers Act and the fiduciary duty thereunder. Business practices
since FPA present an example from which to draw comparative costs and
benefits differences between retail brokerage and advisory accounts, as
well as the cost and benefit and potential consequences of imposing a
fiduciary standard on broker-dealers. In 2007, our staff had estimated
that there were over one million fee-based brokerage accounts,
representing approximately $300 billion, many of which were converted
to advisory accounts \71\ or otherwise were transitioned back to
traditional commission-based brokerage accounts. Broker-dealers that
converted fee-based brokerage accounts to advisory accounts (especially
those that converted to non-discretionary advisory accounts) and retail
customers whose accounts were converted as a result of FPA are in a
position to provide comparative cost and benefit data for retail
brokerage and advisory accounts (for the firm and/or the retail
customer), and therefore to provide cost and benefit data on the
imposition of a fiduciary standard generally.
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\70\ Financial Planning Association v. SEC, 482 F.3d 481 (DC
Cir. 2007). The court vacated Rule 202(a)(11)-1 under the Advisers
Act which excepted broker-dealers from being classified as
investment advisers based solely on their receipt of asset-based
fees and in effect, exempted broker-dealers that offered these fee-
based accounts from regulation as investment advisers.
\71\ Temporary Rule Regarding Principal Trades with Certain
Advisory Clients, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2653 at 4
(Sept. 24, 2007).
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In addition, we are aware that some firms have made the decision to
convert their retail brokerage accounts to advisory accounts outside of
the specific context of FPA. We understand such account conversions may
have occurred for a variety of reasons, including a firm's decision to
change its business model. We similarly believe that firms that have
engaged in such account conversions and retail customers whose accounts
were converted are in a position to provide comparative cost and
benefit data for retail brokerage and advisory accounts (for the firm
and/or the retail customer), and therefore to provide cost and benefit
data on the imposition of a fiduciary standard generally.
We recognize that any such data and other information relating to
the conversion of brokerage accounts to advisory accounts, and the
imposition of a fiduciary standard will only be an approximation of the
costs and benefits of the uniform fiduciary standard described above.
Specifically, the uniform fiduciary standard described above does not
incorporate the entirety of the Advisers Act, whereas any brokerage
accounts converted to advisory accounts would be subject to the
Advisers Act as a whole. Accordingly, to the extent possible, we
request that any such data and other information exclude costs and
benefits associated with complying with aspects of the Advisers Act not
included within the uniform fiduciary standard (such as sections 206(3)
and 206(4) and the rules thereunder) or, if commenters are unable to
exclude such costs, we request that they indicate that the data and
other information include costs of complying with such sections and
rules. Similarly, with respect to broker-dealers that converted fee-
based brokerage accounts to advisory accounts as a result of FPA, we
request that the data provided exclude to the extent possible, or at a
minimum identify that, such data include costs (e.g., legal and
consulting fees, other costs) related to the uncertainty regarding the
treatment of such accounts immediately following FPA.
We generally request data and other information on costs and
benefits from or relating to: (1) Broker-dealers that converted fee-
based brokerage accounts to advisory accounts as a result of FPA; (2)
firms that independently determined to convert retail brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts outside of the context of FPA; and (3)
retail customers whose accounts were converted under either of these
scenarios.\72\ We also request certain data and other information on
costs and benefits from firms and retail customers who did not convert
brokerage to advisory accounts as a result of the FPA decision. In
addition to the specific requests below, when providing this data and
other information, we request commenters' responses be made, where
possible, in compliance with the guidelines set forth in the Appendix,
and also request commenters provide background information and
documentation to support any economic analysis. We request commenters
separate, if possible, all data and other information (including
associated retail customer demographic information on the accounts)
based on whether the account conversions resulted from FPA or whether
the account conversions were voluntary.
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\72\ We reiterate that the uniform fiduciary standard of conduct
would not prohibit the receipt of commissions, or require conversion
of accounts from brokerage to advisory.
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1. Provide data and other information describing whether account
conversions were in response to FPA, or to an independent determination
by firms or
[[Page 14861]]
retail customers. If the latter, provide data and other information
describing factors contributing to the conversion of brokerage accounts
to advisory accounts. Also provide data and other information about
administrative costs and customer notifications arising from the
transition from brokerage accounts to advisory accounts.
2. Provide data and other information describing retail customer
accounts transitioning from brokerage accounts to advisory accounts
including the amount of assets and securities held. Also, provide data
and other information describing factors contributing to retail
customers' decisions to convert to advisory accounts, including
perceived costs and benefits of brokerage accounts and advisory
accounts. If possible, associate retail customer demographic
information with account descriptions.
3. Provide data and other information describing the factors
contributing to broker-dealers' decision not to offer fee-based
accounts, which would be advisory accounts, in response to FPA. In
addition, provide data and other information describing retail customer
accounts that were not transitioned from a brokerage account to an
advisory account in response to FPA when the firm provided the customer
the opportunity to transition, including the amount of assets and
securities held. Also, provide data and other information describing
factors contributing to retail customers' decisions not to convert to
advisory accounts, including perceived costs and benefits of brokerage
accounts and advisory accounts. If possible, associate retail customer
demographic information with account descriptions.
4. Provide data and other information describing the impact of the
account conversion on the types of services and securities dual
registrants offer to retail customers transitioning from brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts. Did the application of the Advisers Act
require a firm, or give a firm an incentive, to modify or eliminate
then-current business practices? Provide data and other information
describing why the business practices were so modified or eliminated.
Indicate whether business practices are transaction-specific, account-
specific, customer specific, or firm-wide, and differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account information.
5. Provide data and other information describing changes, if any,
in the benefits and costs of providing services to retail customers
transitioning from brokerage accounts to advisory accounts. Did retail
customers transitioning accounts experience a change in costs? If
possible, separate costs by service type, and differentiate by retail
customer demographic and account information.
6. Provide data and other information describing changes, if any,
to the security selections of dual registrants and the types of
securities held by retail customers transitioning from brokerage
accounts to advisory accounts. Also provide quantitative data and other
information describing changes, if any, to the security returns (net
and gross of fees) of retail customers transitioning accounts. If
security returns are not available, describe total account returns,
including changes in account value and the amount of account inflows/
outflows. If possible, identify whether initial security ownership took
place before the account transition and whether account selections were
solicited or unsolicited, and differentiate by retail customer
demographic and account information.
7. Provide data and other information describing changes, if any,
to the ability of retail customers that transitioned from brokerage to
advisory accounts to bring claims against their financial professional
with a particular focus on dollar costs to the retail customer and the
results when claims are brought. We especially welcome the input of
persons who have arbitrated, litigated, or mediated claims (as a retail
customer, broker-dealer or investment adviser), their counsel, and any
persons who presided over such actions. In particular, describe changes
for claims brought against broker-dealers and investment advisers with
respect to each of the following:
a. the experience of retail customers, in general, between bringing
a claim against a broker-dealer as compared to bringing a claim against
an investment adviser;
b. any legal or practical barriers to retail customers bringing
claims against broker-dealers or investment advisers;
c. the disposition of claims;
d. the amount of awards;
e. costs related to the claim forum, as it affects retail
customers, firms, and associated persons of such firms;
f. time to resolution of claims;
g. the types of claims brought against broker-dealers (we welcome
examples of mediation, arbitration and litigation claims);
h. the types of claims brought against investment advisers (we
welcome examples of mediation, arbitration and litigation claims);
i. the nature of claims brought against broker-dealers as compared
to the nature of claims brought against investment advisers (e.g.,
breach of fiduciary duty, suitability, breach of contract, tort); and
j. the types of defenses raised by broker-dealers and investment
advisers under each regime.
If possible, differentiate by retail customer demographic and
account information.
8. Provide data and other information describing changes, if any,
to the experiences of retail customers that were transitioned from
brokerage to advisory accounts. Among other things, did retail customer
satisfaction with their account change? If possible, control for retail
customer demographic and account information.
9. Provide other data and other information describing the benefits
and costs, if any, of transitioning retail customer brokerage accounts
to advisory accounts. If possible, differentiate by retail customer
demographic and account information. Also, provide data and other
information describing the benefits and costs to firms or retail
customers from the regulations prior to account conversion. Lastly,
provide explanations describing why responses to particular questions
are not possible.
IV. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to Potential Areas
for Further Regulatory Harmonization
We seek data and other information on the nature and extent to
which we should consider harmonizing the regulatory obligations of
broker-dealers and investment advisers other than their standard of
conduct. As stated above, in the Study the staff recommended that the
Commission consider harmonizing certain regulatory requirements of
broker-dealers and investment advisers where such harmonization appears
likely to add meaningful investor protection, taking into account the
best elements of each regime. We request that commenters, in
particular, provide such data and other information regarding
harmonizing some or all such obligations in situations where a broker-
dealer and an investment adviser perform the same or substantially
similar function, such as the provision of personalized investment
advice about securities to retail customers where harmonization is
consistent with the mission of the Commission.\73\ We also are mindful
that we should consider changes to the standard of conduct of broker-
dealers and investment advisers within the context of the overall set
of regulatory obligations that apply to those firms and the potential
costs and benefits that may be associated with such changes. The extent
to which the
[[Page 14862]]
standard of conduct changes, for example, could result in certain other
regulatory requirements no longer being workable in practice, or
becoming unnecessarily duplicative of current requirements in whole or
in part. Similarly, if we were to adopt a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct for broker-dealers and investment advisers, we should consider
whether regulatory obligations that apply today to only one registrant
class or the other would meaningfully enhance investor protections if
applied uniformly to both.
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\73\ See Study at 129-139.
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In the Study, the areas the staff suggested the Commission consider
for harmonization included advertising and other communications,
supervision, licensing and registration of firms, licensing and
continuing education requirements for persons associated with firms,
books and records, and the use of finders and solicitors. The staff
stated that this listing was not intended to be a comprehensive or
exclusive listing of potential areas of harmonization.
We seek data and other information on these areas of potential
harmonization, including with respect to the advantages and
disadvantages of engaging in such harmonization. As we explained in
Part I.B above, many of the areas the staff identified for potential
harmonization are more specific than a uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct. Accordingly, we do not provide an extensive discussion of the
various options available for considering regulatory harmonization,
which could generally include:
Applying certain broker-dealer obligations to investment
advisers, or vice versa;
Eliminating certain obligations that apply to broker-
dealers but not investment advisers, or vice versa;
Creating new obligations that would apply to both broker-
dealers and investment advisers; or
Taking no further action at this time with respect to
regulatory harmonization.
As discussed above, we believe that a broad consideration of
harmonization of regulatory obligations is important in helping us
assess whether and to what extent we should consider making adjustments
to the other regulatory obligations of broker-dealers and investment
advisers. We invite commenters to provide us with their views on the
benefits and costs for different approaches for potential
harmonization. For example, we request comment on the extent to which
regulatory harmonization might address customer confusion about the
obligations owed to them by broker-dealers and not investment advisers
(or by investment advisers and not broker-dealers) even if a uniform
fiduciary standard of conduct is implemented. We also request comment
on the extent to which regulatory harmonization might result in
additional investor confusion or otherwise negatively impact investors.
A. Potential Areas for Harmonization
In the Study, the staff recommended that the Commission consider
whether to pursue various options for harmonizing investment adviser
and broker-dealer regulation. As a preliminary matter, and in order to
continue to evaluate the potential impact of harmonization, we are
requesting data and other information on the potential harmonization of
the non-exhaustive areas set forth below. These specific areas of
potential harmonization largely reflect the areas of harmonization
recommended by the staff in the Study. The staff's recommendations
generally focused on adopting the existing elements of each regulatory
regime that the staff believed are most effective in protecting retail
customers, and the discussion below largely reflects these
recommendations. We request comment on which of these areas, if any,
the Commission should consider for harmonization, what harmonization in
such areas should entail in practice, and the benefits and costs
associated with such harmonization, including the extent to which such
harmonization would increase or reduce retail customer confusion about
the regulatory obligations of broker-dealer and investment advisers. We
may consider harmonization of other areas not addressed below.
Accordingly, we request comment on which areas, if any, the Commission
should consider for harmonization, and what such harmonization should
entail.
The identification of these areas below and the description of how
harmonization may be accomplished are not intended to suggest a policy
view of the Commission or the ultimate direction of any proposed action
by the Commission. Indeed, the description of each area of potential
harmonization below is but one example of many ways in which the
Commission may harmonize regulation, should the Commission determine
such harmonization is appropriate. We are cognizant that the Commission
may decide not to pursue harmonization, may pursue harmonization in
different areas, or pursue a different approach to harmonization in the
areas identified by the Study, and we seek comment on such areas and
approaches, including the associated benefits and costs.
We also seek comment as to whether harmonization in each area
identified below or by a commenter as appropriate for such action
should involve changing the existing standards of one regime to
accomplish harmonization, or whether an entirely different requirement
should be adopted for both investment advisers and broker-dealers.
We request data and other information, including whether meaningful
investor protection would be enhanced, on the following potential areas
of harmonization where existing investment adviser and broker-dealer
obligations differ: \74\
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\74\ For more information about the potential harmonization
areas, see Study at 129-139.
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1. Advertising and Other Communications: Advertising and other firm
communications can have a significant impact on retail customers, as
they can persuade customers to enter into relationships or engage in
transactions. As noted in the Study, both investment advisers and
broker-dealers are subject to general prohibitions on misleading
communications, but specific content restrictions differ. The Study
concludes that a significant difference between investment adviser and
broker-dealer regulation regarding advertisements and other
communications is that, under certain circumstances, a registered
principal of the broker-dealer must approve a communication before
distributing it to the public, and certain communications must be filed
for review with the applicable regulatory body.\75\
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\75\ For the staff's discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to advertising and other
communications, see Study at 130-132.
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While the Advisers Act does not specifically prescribe that a
communication must be approved before distribution to the public, the
Commission has stated that an adviser's compliance policies and
procedures, at a minimum, should address, among others, the accuracy of
disclosures made to investors, clients, and regulators, including
account statements and advertisements.\76\ We request data and
[[Page 14863]]
other information on the enhancement to meaningful investor protection
as well as the benefits and costs of harmonizing requirements relating
to:
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\76\ See Compliance Programs of Investment Advisers and
Investment Companies, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 2204 (Dec.
17, 2003) (adopting Advisers Act Rule 206(4)-7) (``Compliance
Rule'') (stating that ``[w]e expect that an adviser's policies and
procedures, at a minimum, should address the following issues to the
extent that they are relevant to that adviser: [* * *] [t]he
accuracy of disclosures made to investors, clients, and regulators,
including account statements and advertisements; [* * * and]
[m]arketing advisory services, including the use of solicitors * *
*''). For this purpose, the Advisers Act requires an adviser to
designate a chief compliance officer (``CCO''). The Commission has
stated in the Compliance Rule that the CCO should be knowledgeable
about the Advisers Act and have the authority to develop and enforce
appropriate compliance policies and procedures for the adviser.
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a. Advertisements and other customer communications, generally.
b. Developing similar substantive advertising and customer
communications rules and/or guidance for broker-dealers and investment
advisers regarding the content of advertisements and other customer
communications for similar services? Please identify any particular
rules that could be applied to both broker-dealers and investment
advisers, and any rules that would not be appropriate to apply to both.
If a particular rule would not be appropriate for both, why not?
c. Establishing consistent internal pre-use review requirements for
investment adviser and broker-dealer advertisements, such as by
requiring investment advisers to designate employees to review and
approve communications and advertisements?
d. Imposing consistent pre- and post-use filing requirements for
similar investment adviser and broker-dealer advertisements?
2. Use of Finders and Solicitors: The term ``finder'' is generally
understood (for purposes of broker-dealer regulation) to mean an
intermediary who receives a fee for ``finding'' potential investors for
issuers seeking to sell securities. Similarly, a ``solicitor' is an
intermediary used by advisers to ``solicit'' clients and prospective
clients for advisory services. Intermediaries who ``find'' investors
can have a significant impact on retail customers, as they can persuade
investors to enter into relationships or engage in transactions. The
regulation of these intermediaries differs. One who receives
transaction-based compensation in connection with the sale of
securities, including a finder, must register as a broker-dealer unless
an exemption from registration is available. By contrast, while
solicitors may fall within the definition of ``investment adviser''
under the Advisers Act, the Commission has taken the position that a
solicitor who engages in solicitation activities in accordance with
Rule 206(4)-3(a)(2)(iii) is an associated person of an investment
adviser and is not required to register with the Commission as an
investment adviser solely as a result of those activities.\77\ An
investment adviser that uses a solicitor's services must treat the
solicitor as an associated person to the extent the solicitor acts as
such for the adviser, and the adviser has a responsibility to supervise
the solicitation activities.\78\ In addition, the Advisers Act
regulation focuses on disclosure to clients of the solicitor's material
conflicts of interest.\79\ We request data and other information on the
enhancement to meaningful investor protection as well as the benefits
and costs of harmonizing requirements relating to:
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\77\ Requirements Governing Payments of Cash Referral Fees by
Investment Advisers, Investment Advisers Act Release No. 688 (July
12, 1979).
\78\ Id. An investment adviser's supervision obligations are
discussed below.
\79\ For the staff's discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to the use of finders and
solicitors, see Study at 132-133.
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a. Harmonizing the existing regulatory requirements applicable to
finders and solicitors, generally.
b. Establishing similar disclosure requirements regarding any
conflict associated with the solicitor's and finder's receipt of
compensation for referring a retail customer to an investment adviser
or broker-dealer?
3. Supervision: Effective supervisory systems and control
procedures are important investor protection tools, as they can help
firms identify and prevent abusive practices. As the Study notes, while
both broker-dealers and investment advisers are required to supervise
persons that act on their behalf, broker-dealers are subject to more
specific supervisory requirements, including rules that expressly
require broker-dealers to, among other things, establish a supervisory
system, conduct periodic inspections of branch offices and supervise
outside business activities and private securities transactions of
associated persons.\80\ As discussed above, investment advisers are
also required to adopt compliance policies and procedures, which
generally would include policies and procedures for the supervision of
persons associated with an adviser.\81\ Further, the Advisers Act code
of ethics rules (Advisers Act Rule 204A-1) specifically requires, among
other things, that an investment adviser pre-approve acquisitions of
securities in any initial public offerings or in limited offerings by
certain of its investment advisory personnel. Investment advisers are
also required to disclose to clients certain material outside business
activities of their supervised persons.\82\ We request data and other
information on the enhancement to meaningful investor protection as
well as the benefits and costs of harmonizing requirements relating to:
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\80\ Existing broker-dealer supervisory obligations generally
require firms to, among other things, establish and maintain a
supervisory system for their business activities and to supervise
the activities of their registered representatives, principals and
other associated persons for purposes of achieving compliance with
applicable securities regulations, including the rules relating to
principal trades. See NASD Rule 3010. Moreover, broker-dealers are
required to ``establish procedures for the review and endorsement by
a registered principal in writing * * * of all transactions * * * of
its registered representatives with the public relating to the
investment banking or securities business of such member.'' NASD
Rule 3010(d)(1).
\81\ See supra note 77.
\82\ See Part 2A of Form ADV.
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a. Harmonizing supervisory requirements of investment advisers and
broker-dealers, generally.
b. Establishing a single set of universally applicable requirements
versus scaling requirements based on the size (e.g., number of
employees or a different metric) and nature of a broker-dealer or an
investment adviser? Please identify any particular requirements that
should apply to both broker-dealers and investment advisers, and any
requirements that should not apply to both, and why or why not. If
requirements were scaled, what would be appropriate metrics and
thresholds? \83\
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\83\ For the staff's discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to supervision, see Study at
135-136.
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4. Licensing and Registration of Firms: Broker-dealers and
investment advisers register with the Commission and/or states using
forms that are similar but separate. In addition, broker-dealers must,
prior to commencing business, satisfy FINRA's membership application
process, which aims to fully evaluate relevant aspects of applicants
and to identify potential weaknesses in their internal systems, thereby
helping to ensure that successful applicants would be capable of
conducting their business in compliance with applicable regulation.
Investment advisers are not subject to this type of review by the
Commission. As stated in the Study, substantive review of investment
adviser applications could improve investor protection as it could help
prevent firms that are unprepared to engage in the advisory business or
to meet the obligations they will be assuming under the federal
securities laws from entering the advisory business. We request data
and other information on the enhancement to meaningful investor
protection as well as the benefits and costs of harmonizing
requirements relating to:
[[Page 14864]]
a. Harmonizing the licensing and registration requirements
applicable to firms, generally.
b. Harmonizing the disclosure requirements in Form ADV and Form BD
to the extent they address similar issues.
c. Imposing a substantive review of investment advisers prior to
registration similar to, or distinct from, the review applicable to
broker-dealers.\84\
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\84\ For the staff's discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to licensing and registration
of firms, see Study at 136-137.
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5. Continuing Education Requirements for Persons Associated with
Broker-Dealers and Investment Advisers: Associated persons of broker-
dealers are required to fulfill continuing education requirements. No
such requirement exists for investment adviser personnel at the federal
level, who instead must disclose to clients their education and
business background. As noted in the Study, continuing education can
help to further a regulatory goal that investors are served by
professionals that are knowledgeable in current industry trends,
practices and regulations.\85\ We request data and other information on
the enhancement to meaningful investor protection as well as the
benefits and costs of harmonizing requirements relating to:
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\85\ For the staff's discussion regarding potential
harmonization of requirements related to continuing education
requirements, see Study at 138.
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a. Harmonizing the continuing education requirements applicable to
the associated persons of investment advisers and broker-dealers,
generally.
b. Requiring associated persons of investment advisers to be
subject to federal qualification examinations and continuing education
requirements?
6. Books and Records: Books and records are important for firms to
facilitate effective supervision and compliance, and for regulators to
access information and verify the entity's compliance with applicable
requirements. Broker-dealers are required to retain all communications
received and sent, as well as all written agreements (or copies
thereof), relating to a firm's ``business as such,'' \86\ whereas
advisers are required to retain a more limited set of records falling
into specific enumerated categories. As noted in the Study, ''[t]hese
differences limit the effectiveness of internal supervision and
compliance structures and the ability of regulators to access
information and verify the entity's compliance with applicable
requirements.'' \87\ We request data and other information on the
enhancement to meaningful investor protection as well as the benefits
and costs of harmonizing requirements relating to:
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\86\ See Exchange Act Rules 17a-4(b)(4) and (b)(7); 17 CFR
240.17a-4(b)(4) and (b)(7).
\87\ See Study at 139.
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a. Harmonizing the recordkeeping requirements applicable to
investment advisers and broker-dealers, generally.
b. Applying the ``business as such'' record retention standard to
investment advisers?
7. Other Potential Areas for Harmonization: We request information
and comment on whether there are other potential areas of harmonization
where the nature of existing investment adviser and broker-dealer
obligations differ and investor protection would be meaningfully
enhanced. In particular, we request data and other information on the
enhancement to meaningful investor protection as well as the benefits
and costs of harmonizing requirements relating to:
a. Harmonizing a set of business conduct rules for both broker-
dealers and investment advisers, where relevant to investment advisers'
businesses.
b. Harmonizing other requirements for broker-dealers and investment
advisers.
c. Establishing a single set of universally applicable requirements
versus scaling requirements based on the size (e.g., number of
employees or a different metric) and nature of a broker-dealer or an
investment adviser.
For each other potential area of harmonization addressed, please
identify any particular requirements that should apply to both broker-
dealers and investment advisers, and any requirements that should not
apply to both, and why or why not.
B. Request for Data and Other Information Relating to Changes in the
Marketplace for Personalized Investment Advice Resulting from
Harmonization
The Commission requests the following data and other information
relating to changes in the marketplace for personalized investment
advice about securities for retail customers as a result of
implementing each area of harmonization described above. In providing
such data and other information, we request commenters follow the
Guidelines found in the Appendix to this request for data and other
information including the request therein for background information.
1. Provide data and other information on the benefits and costs to
firms and retail customers, including synergies (i.e., enhanced cost
efficiencies for firms), specific examples of effects on investor
protection, and potential barriers to entry (i.e., cost prohibitions),
which would result from harmonization of each of the areas identified
above.
2. Provide data and other information about alternative approaches
to harmonization that the Commission should consider, including options
for reducing costs on broker-dealers and investment advisers while
increasing the effective protection of retail customers.
3. Provide data and other information describing the impact or
potential impact the implementation of the uniform fiduciary standard
of conduct, or any of the alternative approaches discussed in Part III
of this request for data and other information, would have on the
benefits and costs to firms and to retail customers of each area of
harmonization. Indicate, for example, whether harmonization of a
particular area of regulation would impact the costs or benefits
associated with complying with the uniform fiduciary standard and each
of the alternative approaches discussed above. Also provide comment and
data on whether the harmonization of one or more of the areas described
above has any impact (i.e., whether it enhances, detracts, or has no
impact) on the implementation of the uniform fiduciary standard of
conduct or any of the other approaches described in Part III of this
request for data and other information.
4. For dual registrants, provide data and other information on any
cost savings and potential retail customer benefit of having a
consistent set of standards.
5. Provide data and other information describing the extent to
which harmonization would increase or reduce retail customers'
confusion about the regulatory status of the person from whom they
receive financial services (i.e., whether the party is a broker-dealer
or an investment adviser) and provide information describing why.
Provide data and other information describing the extent to which
harmonization would increase or reduce retail customers' confusion
about the types of obligations owed to them and provide information
describing why.
By the Commission.
Dated: March 1, 2013.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
APPENDIX: Suggested Submission Guidelines for Comments
This Appendix outlines the background and particular data and
other information we request commenters to provide and the general
guidelines we request commenters to follow when submitting data and
other
[[Page 14865]]
information. While we are particularly interested in receiving data
and other information that is empirical and quantitative in nature,
we welcome and encourage all interested parties to submit their
comments, including qualitative and descriptive analysis of the
benefits and costs of potential approaches and guidance. We ask that
commenters provide only data and other information that they wish to
make publicly available, and that commenters who may be concerned
about making proprietary or other highly sensitive data and other
information public may wish to pool their data with that of others
(e.g., through a trade association, law firm, consulting firm or
other group) and submit aggregated data in response to this request
for data and other information. While we request commenters to
provide enough data and other information to allow the Commission to
replicate findings, commenters should remove any personally
identifiable information (e.g., of their customers) before
submitting data and other information in response to this
request.\88\ Commenters can submit data and other information using
a sample of retail customers. We ask commenters to sample in a
manner which is independent of retail customer characteristics, and
to describe the sampling methodology including sample
identification, data collection, and any other important factor in
sample construction. Also, if possible, provide a description of the
population of retail customers not included in the sample. We also
ask commenters to provide a variable to allow the Commission to
distinguish among accounts. The variable should not incorporate
personally identifiable information, and can be as simple as a
random number.
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\88\ See supra note 23.
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We ask commenters to provide a cover letter when submitting data
files to the Commission. As part of the cover letter, we ask
commenters to include documentation describing each field in the
data files including the units of measurement (e.g., percent,
thousands, thousands of dollars, millions, millions of dollars),
variable name, general and specific formats (e.g., number,
character, date, length of character field, format of date), and
value if missing (e.g., ``.'' or `` ''). Other important
documentation includes an overall description of the dataset, the
source of the information, and the time period of observations. We
ask commenters to send the data on a physical storage medium such as
a CD ROM or DVD, either in plain text or comma-separated values
(csv) files. We also ask commenters to clearly label the physical
storage medium, providing commenter name, date, and a short
description of the data files. Commenters can submit more than one
dataset if, for instance, the data is available on different systems
or in different locations. In this case, we ask commenters to
provide a variable in each dataset that links account information
and that allows the Commission to distinguish among accounts. We
also ask commenters to submit only one copy of the data files.
A. Commenter Identification and Background
We request commenters to provide background information to add
context to submissions and improve our understanding of the current
marketplace:
1. Indicate your status (or the status of your organization if
you are writing on behalf of an organization), as applicable, as a
Commission-registered broker-dealer, Commission-registered
investment adviser, associated person of a Commission-registered
broker dealer or Commission-registered investment adviser, dually
registered entity or individual, retail customer, or other (if
other, please describe).
2. If you are (or are writing on behalf of) a broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or dually registered investment adviser/broker-
dealer, or associated person thereof, describe the firm's business,
including number and type of business segments, sources and total
amount of firm revenue, and the proportion of firm revenue
attributable to retail customers.
3. If you are (or are writing on behalf of) a broker-dealer,
investment adviser, or dually registered investment adviser/broker-
dealer, describe the retail customer segment of the firm's business,
including the number and type of accounts (brokerage or advisory),
total asset value within each account type, and the proportion of
retail customers to whom the firm provides personalized investment
advice. If the firm is dually registered, also indicate the
proportion of accounts (based on the number of accounts and total
assets under management) that are advisory accounts and the
proportion that are brokerage accounts, and of the advisory
accounts, the proportion that are non-discretionary accounts. Also,
if the firm is dually registered, indicate the proportion of retail
customer advisory accounts and the proportion of brokerage accounts
receiving personalized investment advice.
B. Requests for Specific Characteristic Information
We ask commenters to provide the following specific
characteristics when providing data and other information describing
retail customer demographics and accounts; broker-dealer or
investment adviser services offered; securities; and the claims of
retail customers in dispute resolution:
1. Retail customer demographic information--age, wealth, income,
education, and risk profile.
2. Retail customer account information--general type (brokerage
or advisory), specific type (e.g., clearing, execution-only, full-
service), amount of assets held, compensation arrangement (e.g.,
fees, commissions) and amount, investment strategy, the date of
account opening, and the state in which the account is held.
3. Broker-dealer or investment adviser services offered--type
(e.g., include trade execution; product, transaction, and asset
allocation recommendations; and provision of customer-specific
research and analysis).
4. Securities--type (e.g., stocks, bonds, funds, options,
structured products), CUSIP number or other standard identifier,
investment rating (if any), and date of initial retail customer
ownership.
5. Security Positions--long or short position, number of shares/
units held, position value, and the currency of valuation.
6. Retail customer claims evidence--nature of claim, forum for
claim, time to resolution, and outcome.
If providing aggregate data and other information, we ask that
commenters fully describe the sample population, including the
number of retail customers and total assets under management, retail
customer demographics, account characteristics, and security
characteristics.
C. Submission Guidelines for Economic Analysis
The market for personalized investment advice is difficult to
analyze because of the number of factors that empirical tests must
address in order to achieve definitive conclusions. While some
reports and studies address the market for personalized investment
advice, the difficulty to control for certain factors and/or
insufficient documentation of the empirical sample and methodology
results in interpretive difficulties. When submitting qualitative
and quantitative economic analysis, we request commenters adhere to
the following guidelines:
1. The analysis should focus on non-discretionary retail
customer brokerage and advisory accounts. To the extent the analysis
focuses on institutional investor accounts or discretionary
accounts, if possible please specify this.
2. Identify and discuss all underlying assumptions, including
actions that may be taken in response to a change in regulation. If
providing quantitative analysis also clearly articulate empirical
methodologies leading to analytical conclusions and provide tests
statistics to validate claims. Isolate the additional benefits and
costs from any additional assumptions made. If providing qualitative
economic analysis also identify and discuss all supporting evidence.
3. Identify and distinguish initial benefits and costs
(including those associated with transitioning from existing
standards to potential new standards of conduct), and on-going
benefits and costs. Also identify whether certain benefits and costs
may decrease or increase over time. Indicate whether benefits and
costs are transaction-specific, account-specific, business segment
specific, or firm-wide. If possible, separate the benefits from the
costs and isolate by activity and by account type. When describing
transition costs, describe and explain any relevant actions that may
be taken in response to a change in regulation, including possible
ways to mitigate costs or increase benefits.
4. Describe the sample population, including the number of
retail customers and total assets under management, retail customer
demographics, and account characteristics. And, if possible, provide
a description of the population of retail customers not included in
the sample.
5. Submit data that would allow the Commission to replicate
findings.
6. Identify which requested quantitative data, if any, is not
possible, or would be
[[Page 14866]]
prohibitively costly, to provide, and explain why.
[FR Doc. 2013-05222 Filed 3-6-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P