Extension of Transition Period and Delay of Applicability Dates; Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016-01); Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (PTE 84-24), 41365-41376 [2017-18520]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 168 / Thursday, August 31, 2017 / Proposed Rules
to assist that office in processing your
request. See the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section for electronic
access to the draft guidance.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jenny Scott, Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition (HFS–300), Food and
Drug Administration, 5001 Campus Dr.,
College Park, MD 20740, 240–402–2166.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Background
The FDA Food Safety Modernization
Act (FSMA) (Pub. L. 111–353) enables
FDA to better protect public health by
helping to ensure the safety and security
of the food supply. It enables FDA to
focus more on preventing food safety
problems rather than relying primarily
on reacting to problems after they occur.
FSMA recognizes the important role
industry plays in ensuring the safety of
the food supply, including the adoption
of modern systems of preventive
controls in food production.
Section 103 of FSMA amended the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(FD&C Act), in section 418 of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 350g), by adding
requirements for hazard analysis and
risk-based preventive controls for
establishments that are required to
register as food facilities under our
regulations, in 21 CFR part 1, subpart H,
in accordance with section 415 of the
FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 350d). We have
established regulations to implement
these requirements within part 117 (21
CFR part 117).
In the Federal Register of August 24,
2016 (81 FR 57816), we announced the
availability of several chapters of a
multichapter draft guidance for industry
entitled ‘‘Hazard Analysis and RiskBased Preventive Controls for Human
Food.’’ We now are announcing the
availability of an additional draft
chapter of this multichapter guidance
for industry. We are issuing the draft
guidance consistent with our good
guidance practices regulation (21 CFR
10.115). The draft guidance, when
finalized, will represent the current
thinking of FDA on this topic. It does
not establish any rights for any person
and is not binding on FDA or the public.
You can use an alternate approach if it
satisfies the requirements of the
applicable statutes and regulations. This
guidance is not subject to Executive
Order 12866.
The multichapter draft guidance for
industry is intended to explain our
current thinking on how to comply with
the requirements for hazard analysis
and risk-based preventive controls
under part 117, principally in subparts
C and G. The chapter that we are
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announcing in this document is entitled
‘‘Chapter Six—Use of Heat Treatments
as a Process Control.’’
We intend to announce the
availability for public comment of
additional chapters of the draft guidance
as we complete them.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This draft guidance refers to
previously approved collections of
information found in FDA regulations.
These collections of information are
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520). The collections
of information in part 117 have been
approved under OMB control number
0910–0751.
III. Electronic Access
Persons with access to the Internet
may obtain the draft guidance at either
https://www.fda.gov/FoodGuidances or
https://www.regulations.gov. Use the
FDA Web site listed in the previous
sentence to find the most current
version of the guidance.
Dated: August 22, 2017.
Anna K. Abram,
Deputy Commissioner for Policy, Planning,
Legislation, and Analysis.
[FR Doc. 2017–18464 Filed 8–30–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security
Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D–11712; D–11713;
D–11850]
ZRIN 1210–ZA27
Extension of Transition Period and
Delay of Applicability Dates; Best
Interest Contract Exemption (PTE
2016–01); Class Exemption for
Principal Transactions in Certain
Assets Between Investment Advice
Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit
Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016–02);
Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84–
24 for Certain Transactions Involving
Insurance Agents and Brokers,
Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, and Investment Company
Principal Underwriters (PTE 84–24)
Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed amendments
to PTE 2016–01, PTE 2016–02, and PTE
84–24.
AGENCY:
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41365
This document proposes to
extend the special transition period
under sections II and IX of the Best
Interest Contract Exemption and section
VII of the Class Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs. This
document also proposes to delay the
applicability of certain amendments to
Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84–
24 for the same period. The primary
purpose of the proposed amendments is
to give the Department of Labor the time
necessary to consider possible changes
and alternatives to these exemptions.
The Department is particularly
concerned that, without a delay in the
applicability dates, regulated parties
may incur undue expense to comply
with conditions or requirements that it
ultimately determines to revise or
repeal. The present transition period is
from June 9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.
The new transition period would end on
July 1, 2019. The proposed amendments
to these exemptions would affect
participants and beneficiaries of plans,
IRA owners and fiduciaries with respect
to such plans and IRAs.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before September 15, 2017.
ADDRESSES: All written comments
should be sent to the Office of
Exemption Determinations by any of the
following methods, identified by RIN
1210–AB82:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov at Docket ID
number: EBSA–2017–0004. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Email to:
EBSA.FiduciaryRuleExamination@
dol.gov.
Mail: Office of Exemption
Determinations, EBSA, (Attention: D–
11712, 11713, 11850), U.S. Department
of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210.
Hand Delivery/Courier: OED, EBSA
(Attention: D–11712, 11713, 11850),
U.S. Department of Labor, 122 C St.
NW., Suite 400, Washington, DC 20001.
Comments will be available for public
inspection in the Public Disclosure
Room, EBSA, U.S. Department of Labor,
Room N–1513, 200 Constitution Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20210. Comments
will also be available online at
www.regulations.gov, at Docket ID
number: EBSA–2017–0004 and
www.dol.gov/ebsa, at no charge. Do not
include personally identifiable
information or confidential business
information that you do not want
publicly disclosed. Comments online
can be retrieved by most Internet search
engines.
SUMMARY:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Shiker, telephone (202) 693–8824,
Office of Exemption Determinations,
Employee Benefits Security
Administration.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Procedural Background
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ERISA and the 1975 Regulation
Section 3(21)(A)(ii) of the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
as amended (ERISA), in relevant part
provides that a person is a fiduciary
with respect to a plan to the extent he
or she renders investment advice for a
fee or other compensation, direct or
indirect, with respect to any moneys or
other property of such plan, or has any
authority or responsibility to do so.
Section 4975(e)(3)(B) of the Internal
Revenue Code (‘‘Code’’) has a parallel
provision that defines a fiduciary of a
plan (including an individual retirement
account or annuity (IRA)). The
Department of Labor (‘‘the Department’’)
in 1975 issued a regulation establishing
a five-part test under this section of
ERISA. See 29 CFR 2510.3–21(c)(1)
(2015).1 The Department’s 1975
regulation also applied to the definition
of fiduciary in the Code.
The New Fiduciary Rule and Related
Exemptions
On April 8, 2016, the Department
replaced the 1975 regulation with a new
regulatory definition (the ‘‘Fiduciary
Rule’’). The Fiduciary Rule defines who
is a ‘‘fiduciary’’ of an employee benefit
plan under section 3(21)(A)(ii) of ERISA
as a result of giving investment advice
to a plan or its participants or
beneficiaries. The Fiduciary Rule also
applies to the definition of a ‘‘fiduciary’’
of a plan in the Code. The Fiduciary
Rule treats persons who provide
investment advice or recommendations
for a fee or other compensation with
respect to assets of a plan or IRA as
fiduciaries in a wider array of advice
relationships than was true under the
1975 regulation. On the same date, the
Department published two new
administrative class exemptions from
the prohibited transaction provisions of
ERISA (29 U.S.C. 1106) and the Code
(26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(1)): The Best Interest
Contract Exemption (BIC Exemption)
and the Class Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs
(Principal Transactions Exemption), as
well as amendments to previously
granted exemptions (collectively
1 The 1975 Regulation was published as a final
rule at 40 FR 50842 (Oct. 31, 1975).
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referred to as ‘‘PTEs,’’ unless otherwise
indicated). The Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs had an original applicability date
of April 10, 2017.
Presidential Memorandum
By Memorandum dated February 3,
2017, the President directed the
Department to prepare an updated
analysis of the likely impact of the
Fiduciary Rule on access to retirement
information and financial advice. The
President’s Memorandum was
published in the Federal Register on
February 7, 2017, at 82 FR 9675. On
March 2, 2017, the Department
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking that proposed a 60-day
delay of the applicability date of the
Rule and PTEs. The proposal also
sought public comments on the
questions raised in the Presidential
Memorandum and generally on
questions of law and policy concerning
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.2 The
Department received nearly 200,000
comment and petition letters expressing
a wide range of views on the proposed
60-day delay. Approximately 15,000
commenters and petitioners supported a
delay of 60 days or longer, with some
requesting at least 180 days and some
up to 240 days or a year or longer
(including an indefinite delay or repeal);
178,000 commenters and petitioners
opposed any delay whatsoever at that
time.
First Delay of Applicability Dates
On April 7, 2017, the Department
promulgated a final rule extending the
applicability date of the Fiduciary Rule
by 60 days from April 10, 2017, to June
9, 2017 (‘‘April Delay Rule’’).3 It also
extended from April 10 to June 9, the
applicability dates of the BIC Exemption
and Principal Transactions Exemption
and required investment advice
fiduciaries relying on these exemptions
to adhere only to the Impartial Conduct
Standards as conditions of those
exemptions during a transition period
from June 9, 2017, through January 1,
2018. The April Delay Rule also delayed
the applicability of amendments to an
existing exemption, Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 84–24 (PTE 84–
24), until January 1, 2018, other than the
Impartial Conduct Standards, which
became applicable on June 9, 2017.
Lastly, the April Delay Rule extended
for 60 days, until June 9, 2017, the
applicability dates of amendments to
other previously granted exemptions.
The 60-day delay was considered
appropriate by the Department at that
2 82
3 82
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FR 16902.
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time, including for the Impartial
Conduct Standards in the BIC
Exemption and Principal Transactions
Exemption, while compliance with
other conditions for transactions
covered by these exemptions, such as
requirements to make specific
disclosures and representations of
fiduciary compliance in written
communications with investors, was
postponed until January 1, 2018, by
which time the Department intended to
complete the examination and analysis
directed by the Presidential
Memorandum.
Request for Information
On July 6, 2017, the Department
published in the Federal Register a
Request for Information (RFI). 82 FR
31278. The purpose of the RFI was to
augment some of the public
commentary and input received in
response to the March 2, 2017, request
for comments on issues raised in the
Presidential Memorandum. In
particular, the RFI sought public input
that could form the basis of new
exemptions or changes to the Rule and
PTEs. The RFI also specifically sought
input regarding the advisability of
extending the January 1, 2018,
applicability date of certain provisions
in the BIC Exemption, the Principal
Transactions Exemption, and PTE 84–
24. Comments relating to extension of
the January 1, 2018, applicability date of
certain provisions were requested by
July 21, 2017. All other comments were
requested by August 7, 2017. As of July
21, the Department had received
approximately 60,000 comment and
petition letters expressing a wide range
of views on whether the Department
should grant an additional delay and
what should be the duration of any such
delay. These comments are discussed in
Section C, below, in connection with
the proposed amendments.
B. Current Transition Period
BIC Exemption (PTE 2016–01) and
Principal Transactions Exemption (PTE
2016–02)
Although the Fiduciary Rule, BIC
Exemption, and Principal Transactions
Exemption first became applicable on
June 9, 2017, transition relief is
provided throughout the current
Transition Period, which runs from June
9, 2017, through January 1, 2018.
‘‘Financial Institutions’’ and
‘‘Advisers,’’ as defined in the
exemptions, who wish to rely on these
exemptions for covered transactions
during this period must adhere to the
‘‘Impartial Conduct Standards’’ only. In
general, this means that Financial
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Institutions and Advisers must give
prudent advice that is in retirement
investors’ best interest, charge no more
than reasonable compensation, and
avoid misleading statements.4
The remaining conditions of the BIC
Exemption would become applicable on
January 1, 2018, absent a further delay
of their applicability. This includes the
requirement, for transactions involving
IRA owners, that the Financial
Institution enter into an enforceable
written contract with the retirement
investor. The contract would include an
enforceable promise to adhere to the
Impartial Conduct Standards, an express
acknowledgement of fiduciary status,
and a variety of disclosures related to
fees, services, and conflicts of interest.
IRA owners, who do not have statutory
enforcement rights under ERISA, would
be able to enforce their contractual
rights under state law. Also, as of
January 1, 2018, the exemption requires
Financial Institutions to adopt policies
and procedures that meet specified
conflict-mitigation criteria. In particular,
the policies and procedures must be
reasonably and prudently designed to
ensure that Advisers adhere to the
Impartial Conduct Standards and must
provide that neither the Financial
Institution nor (to the best of its
knowledge) its affiliates or related
entities will use or rely on quotas,
appraisals, performance or personnel
actions, bonuses, contests, special
awards, differential compensation, or
other actions or incentives that are
intended or would reasonably be
expected to cause advisers to make
recommendations that are not in the
best interest of the retirement investor.5
Financial Institutions would also be
required at that time to provide
disclosures, both to the individual
4 In the Principal Transactions Exemption, the
Impartial Conduct Standards specifically refer to
the fiduciary’s obligation to seek to obtain the best
execution reasonably available under the
circumstances with respect to the transaction,
rather than to receive no more than ‘‘reasonable
compensation.’’
5 During the Transition Period, the Department
expects financial institutions to adopt such policies
and procedures as they reasonably conclude are
necessary to ensure that advisers comply with the
impartial conduct standards. During that period,
however, the Department does not require firms and
advisers to give their customers a warranty
regarding their adoption of specific best interest
policies and procedures, nor does it insist that they
adhere to all of the specific provisions of Section
IV of the BIC Exemption as a condition of
compliance. Instead, financial institutions retain
flexibility to choose precisely how to safeguard
compliance with the impartial conduct standards,
whether by tamping down conflicts of interest
associated with adviser compensation, increased
monitoring and surveillance of investment
recommendations, or other approaches or
combinations of approaches.
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retirement investor on a transaction
basis, and on a Web site.
Similarly, while the Principal
Transactions Exemption is conditioned
solely on adherence to the Impartial
Conduct Standards during the current
Transition Period, its remaining
conditions also will become applicable
on January 1, 2018, absent a further
delay of their applicability. The
Principal Transactions Exemption
permits investment advice fiduciaries to
sell to or purchase from plans or IRAs
investments in ‘‘principal transactions’’
and ‘‘riskless principal transactions’’—
transactions involving the sale from or
purchase for the Financial Institution’s
own inventory. Conditions scheduled to
become applicable on January 1, 2018,
include a contract requirement and a
policies and procedures requirement
that mirror the requirements in the BIC
Exemption. The Principal Transactions
Exemption also includes some
conditions that are different from the
BIC Exemption, including credit and
liquidity standards for debt securities
sold to plans and IRAs pursuant to the
exemption and additional disclosure
requirements.
PTE 84–24
PTE 84–24, which applies to advisory
transactions involving insurance and
annuity contracts and mutual fund
shares, was most recently amended in
2016 in conjunction with the
development of the Fiduciary Rule, BIC
Exemption, and Principal Transactions
Exemption.6 Among other changes, the
amendments included new definitional
terms, added the Impartial Conduct
Standards as requirements for relief, and
revoked relief for transactions involving
fixed indexed annuity contracts and
variable annuity contracts, effectively
requiring those Advisers who receive
conflicted compensation for
recommending these products to rely
upon the BIC Exemption. However,
except for the Impartial Conduct
Standards, which were applicable
beginning June 9, 2017, the remaining
amendments are not applicable until
January 1, 2018. Thus, because the
amendment revoking the availability of
PTE 84–24 for fixed indexed annuities
is not applicable until January 1, 2018,
affected parties (including insurance
intermediaries) may rely on PTE 84–24,
subject to the existing conditions of the
exemption and the Impartial Conduct
Standards, for recommendations
involving all annuity contracts during
the Transition Period.
6 81
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C. Comments and Proposed
Amendments
Question 1 of the RFI specifically
asked whether a delay in the January 1,
2018, applicability date of the
provisions in the BIC Exemption,
Principal Transactions Exemption and
amendments to PTE 84–24 would
reduce burdens on financial services
providers and benefit retirement
investors by allowing for more efficient
implementation responsive to recent
market developments. This question
also made inquiry into risks,
advantages, and costs and benefits
associated with such a delay.
Many commenters supported delaying
the January 1, 2018, applicability dates
of these PTEs. For example, one
commenter stated that there is ‘‘no
question that the comprehensive
reexamination directed by the President
cannot be completed by January 1, 2018,
especially where the record is replete
with evidence that the result of that
review will be required revisions to the
Rule and exemptions, all of which take
time.’’ 7 In addition, another commenter
stated that it believes ‘‘a thorough and
thoughtful re-assessment of the
Fiduciary Rule, with appropriate
coordination with other regulators, will
take months’’ and that if the Department
does not delay the applicability date
during this review period, ‘‘the industry
has no choice but to continue preparing
for the Fiduciary Rule in a form that
may never become effective leading to
significant wasted expenses that
benefits no one.’’ 8 Other commenters
disagreed, however, asserting that full
application of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs were necessary to protect
retirement investors from conflicts of
interests and that the applicability dates
should not have been delayed from
April, 2017, and that the January 1,
2018, date should not be further
delayed.9 At the same time, still others
stated their view that the Fiduciary Rule
and PTEs should be repealed and
replaced, either with the original 1975
regulation or with a substantially
revised rule.10
7 Comment Letter #109 (Securities Industry and
Financial Markets Association).
8 Comment Letter #181 (Voya Financial).
9 See, e.g., Comment Letter #273 (National
Employment Law Project) (‘‘Because these workers
need the protections afforded by the full set of
Conditions as soon as possible, NELP strongly
opposes further delay of the application of any of
the Conditions. NELP also disagrees with the
Department’s decision to even consider an
additional delay in the applicability date of the
Conditions.’’).
10 See, e.g., Comment Letter #316 (Aeon Wealth
Management) (‘‘The current Fiduciary Rule should
not be amended or extended in any way. IT
FR 21147 (April 8, 2016).
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41367
Continued
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Among the commenters supporting a
delay, some suggested a fixed length of
time and others suggested a more openended delay. Of those commenters
suggesting a fixed length delay, there
was no consensus among them
regarding the appropriate length, but the
range generally was 1 to 2 years from
the current applicability date of January
1, 2018.11 Those commenters suggesting
a more open-ended framework for
measuring the length of the delay
generally recommended that the
applicability date be delayed for at least
as long as it takes the Department to
finish the reexamination directed by the
President. These commenters suggested
that the length of the delay should be
measured from the date the Department,
after finishing the reexamination, either
decided that there will be no new
amendments or exemptions or the date
the Department publishes a new
exemption or major revisions to the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.12
SHOULD BE COMPLETELY ELIMINATED! It is the
first step towards the government taking control of
everyone’s personal retirement assets.’’).
11 See, e.g., Comment Letter #25 (National
Federation of Independent Business (delay at least
until January 1, 2019); Comment Letter #159 (Davis
& Harman) (delay until at least September 1, 2019);
Comment Letter #183 (Morgan Stanley) (at least 18
months); Comment Letter #196 (American Council
of Life Insurers) (one year); Comment Letter #208
(Capital Group) (at least January 1, 2019); Comment
Letter #246 (Ameriprise Financial) (supports a twoyear delay of the January 1, 2018 compliance date
of the Rule); Comment Letter #258 (Wells Fargo)
(delay at least 24 months); Comment Letter #290
(Annexus and other entities/Drinker, Biddle&Reath)
(delay at least until January 1, 2019); Comment
Letter #291 (Farmers Financial Solutions) (delay
until April 2019).
12 See, e.g., Comment Letter #134 (Insured
Retirement Institute (delay until January 1, 2020, or
the date that is 18 months after the Department
takes final action on the Fiduciary Rule); Comment
Letter #229 (Investment Company Institute) (one
year after finalization of modified rule); Comment
Letter #109 (Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association) (a minimum of 24 months
after completion of the review and publication of
final rules); Comment Letter #266 (Edward D. Jones
& Co.) (later of July 1, 2019 or one year after the
promulgation of any material amendments);
Comment Letter #251 (Teachers Insurance and
Annuity Association of America) (at least one year
after the Department has promulgated changes to
the Rule and PTEs); Comment Letter #196
(Prudential Financial) (at least 12 months with new
applicability dates in conjunction with proposed
changes); Comment Letter #212 (American Bankers
Association) (at least twelve months after the
effective date of any changes or revisions);
Comment Letter #211 (Transamerica) (meaningful
period following promulgation of changes to the
Fiduciary Rule); Comment Letter #239 (Great-West
Financial) (provide no less than a 12 month notice
of existing/newly proposed exemptions; and no less
than a 12 month notice following any DOL–SEC
standards prior to their effective date); Comment
Letter #281 (Bank of New York Mellon) (delay for
a reasonable period that will allow Department to
complete review, finalize changes, and for firms to
implement the processes); Comment Letter #259
(Fidelity Investments) (delay the requirements for 6
months following notice if there are no changes to
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Regardless of whether advocating for
a fixed or open-ended delay, many
commenters focused on the uncertain
fate of the PTEs. A significant number
of industry commenters, for example,
stated that because the Department, as
part of its ongoing examination under
the Presidential Memorandum, has
indicated that it is actively considering
changes or alternatives to the BIC
Exemption, the January 1, 2018,
applicability date should be delayed at
least until such changes or alternatives
are finalized, with a reasonable period
beyond that date for compliance.
Otherwise, according to these
commenters, costly systems changes to
comply with the BIC Exemption by
January 1, 2018, must commence or
conclude immediately, and these costs
could prove unnecessary in whole or in
part depending on the eventual
regulatory outcome. Industry
commenters stated that it is widely
expected within the financial industry
that there will be certain change(s) to
the Rule or to the exemption pursuant
to the Presidential Memorandum.
Industry commenters also expressed
concerns that uncertainty concerning
expected changes is likely to lead to
consumer confusion and inefficient
industry development. Several industry
commenters indicated their concern
that, without additional delays,
compliance efforts may prove to be a
waste of time and money.13
the rule; if there are changes, sufficient additional
time in light of the changes); Comment Letter #248
(Bank of America) (delay the applicability date until
the DOL finalizes its work and financial firms have
a reasonable opportunity to implement its
requirements); Comment Letter #222 (Vanguard) (at
least 12 to 18 months from the date that the
Department publishes its amended Final Rule,
including exemptions, or confirms that there will be
no other amendments or exemptions).
13 See Comment Letter #180 (TD Ameritrade). See
also Comment Letter #212 (American Bankers
Association) (‘‘it is difficult for institutions to
determine where to allocate resources for
compliance when the Department itself is in the
process of re-examining the Fiduciary Rule’s scope
and content.’’); Comment Letter #211
(Transamerica) (‘‘[f]ailure to extend the January 1
applicability date will result in: (a) Companies such
as Transamerica continuing to incur costs and
business model changes to prepare for and
implement a regulatory regime that might differ
materially from the regime that results from the
Rule in effect today. . ..’’); See Comment Letter
#109 (Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association); Comment Letter #293 (the SPARK
Institute, Inc.) (‘‘[u]ntil we know whether the
Department intends to make changes to avoid the
Regulation’s negative impacts, and what those
changes will be, our implementation efforts will be
chasing a moving target. That approach not only
results in significant inefficiencies, it also may
result in potentially duplicative and unnecessary
compliance costs if the Department modifies the
Regulation. If the Department is seriously
considering ways to reduce those burdens, it must
delay the January 1, 2018 applicability date.
Otherwise, firms will be forced to continue
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Many commenters argued that, in
spite of the level of uncertainty
surrounding the ultimate fate of the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, the
Department will need to at least
partially modify the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs. These commenters cite the
President’s Memorandum dated
February 3, 2017, requiring the
Department to prepare an updated
analysis of the likely impact of the
Fiduciary Rule on access to retirement
information and financial advice, and
predict that this analysis will affirm
their view that regulatory changes are
necessary to avoid adverse impacts on
advice, access, costs, and litigation.
Many commenters argue that a delay
in the January 1, 2018, applicability date
is needed in order for the Department
and Secretary of Labor Acosta to
coordinate with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) under the
new leadership of Chairman Clayton.
These commenters assert that
meaningful coordination simply is not
possible between now and January 1,
2018, on the many important issues
affecting retirement investors raised by
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, including
the potential confusion for investors
caused by different rules and
regulations applying to different types
of investment accounts. One commenter
suggested that, absent a delay in the
January 1, 2018, applicability date, there
will be no genuine opportunity for the
Department to coordinate with the SEC
under the new leadership regimes. The
full Fiduciary Rule would become
applicable before the SEC had done its
own rulemaking, leaving the SEC no
choice except to apply the standards in
the Fiduciary Rule to all of those
investments subject to SEC jurisdiction,
write a different rule, which would
exacerbate the current confusion and
inconsistencies, or to do nothing,
according to one commenter.14 On June
1, 2017, the Chairman of the SEC issued
a statement seeking public comments on
the standards of conduct for investment
advisers and broker dealers when they
provide investment advice to retail
investors. One commenter asserted that
coordination ‘‘suggests that the
Department of Labor should await the
SEC’s receipt and evaluation of
information.’’ 15 At least one commenter
preparing for a rule that may never go into effect
as currently drafted.’’).
14 Comment Letter #159 (Davis & Harman).
15 Comment Letter #18 (T. Rowe Price
Associates). See also Comment Letter #72 (National
Association of Insurance and Financial Advisors).
([C]oordination with the SEC, which currently is
undertaking a parallel public comment process, is
essential.’’) Other commenters mentioned the need
to coordinate with FINRA, state insurance and other
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believes that the outcome of such
coordination should be that the SEC
adopts the concept of the Impartial
Conduct Standards, as contained in the
PTEs, as a universal standard of care
applicable to both brokerage and
advisory relationships.16
With respect to recent and ongoing
market developments, many
commenters stated that a delay would
allow for more efficient implementation
responsive to these innovations, thereby
reducing burdens on financial services
providers and benefiting retirement
investors. For instance, one industry
commenter asserted that a delay in the
applicability date would provide
financial institutions with the necessary
time to develop ‘‘clean shares’’
programs and minimize disruption for
retirement investors. The commenter
stated that ‘‘[w]ithout a delay in the
applicability date, a broker-dealer firm
that believes the direction of travel is
towards the clean share will be forced
to either eliminate access to
commissionable investment advice or
make the fundamental business changes
required by the Best Interest Contract
Exemption in order to continue offering
traditional commissionable mutual
funds. Both approaches would be
incredibly disruptive for investors who
could have little choice but to either
move to a fee-based advisory program in
order to maintain access to advice or
enter into a Best Interest Contract only
to be transitioned into a clean shares
program shortly thereafter, and would
make it less likely that firms will evolve
to clean shares.’’ 17 A different industry
commenter noted that serious
consideration is being given to the use
of mutual fund clean share classes in
both fee-based and commissionable
account arrangements, but that certain
enumerated obstacles prevent their
regulators in addition to the SEC. See, e.g.,
Comment Letter #196 (Prudential Financial)
(‘‘assess, in conjunction with the SEC and the
appropriate state regulatory bodies that also have
jurisdiction with regard to investment advice
retirement investors, the appropriate alignment of
regulatory responsibility and oversight’’); Comment
Letter #266 (Edward D. Jones and Co.); Comment
Letter #134 (Insured Retirement Institute). See also
Comment Letter #212 American Bankers
Association (mentioning the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve,
and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation).
16 See Comment Letter #375 (Stifel Financial)
(‘‘As the SEC and DOL consider and coordinate on
developing appropriate standards of conduct for
retail retirement and taxable accounts, I propose a
simple solution: the SEC adopt a principles-based
standard of care for Brokerage and Advisory
Accounts that incorporates the ‘Impartial Conduct
Standards’’ as set forth in the DOL’s Best Interest
Contract Exemption.’’ And to achieve consistency
between retirement and taxable accounts, ‘‘[t]he
additional provisions of the Best Interest Contract
should be eliminated.’’).
17 Comment Letter #208 (Capital Group).
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rapid adoption, stating that ‘‘even
absent any changes to the rule, more
time is needed to develop clean shares
and other long-term solutions to
mitigate conflicts of interest.’’ 18
Consumer commenters expressed a
concern with using recent and ongoing
market developments as a basis for a
blanket delay. It was asserted that if the
Department decides to move forward
with a delay, it should only allow firms
to take advantage of the delay if they
affirmatively show they have already
taken concrete steps to harness recent
market developments for their
compliance plans. For example, one
commenter contends that if a brokerdealer has decided that it is more
efficient to move straight to clean shares
rather than implementing the rule using
T shares, the broker-dealer should, as a
condition of delay, be required to
provide evidence to the Department of
the steps that it already has taken to
distribute clean shares, including, for
example, providing evidence of efforts
to negotiate sellers agreements with
funds that are offering clean shares. This
commenter stated that the Department
‘‘should not provide a blanket delay to
all firms, including those firms that
have not taken any meaningful, concrete
steps to harness recent market
developments and have no plans to do
so. This narrowly tailored approach has
the advantage of benefitting only those
firms and, in turn, their customers that
are using the delay productively rather
than providing an undue benefit to
firms that are merely looking for reasons
to further stall implementation.’’ 19
With respect to risks to retirement
investors from a delay, many industry
commenters argue that the risks of a
delay are very minimal, as they have
largely been mitigated by the existing
regulatory structure and the
applicability of the Impartial Conduct
Standards. For instance, regarding
potential additional costs to retirement
investors associated with any further
delay, many industry commenters stated
that these concerns have been mitigated,
and indeed addressed by the
Department, through the imposition of
the Impartial Conduct Standards
18 Comment Letter #229 (Investment Company
Institute).
19 Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of
America). See also Comment Letter #235 (Better
Markets) (‘‘In short, it would be arbitrary and
capricious for the DOL to deprive millions of
American workers and retirees the full protections
and remedies provided by the Rule and the
exemptions simply because the DOL may conclude
that some adjustments to the Rule would be
appropriate, or because some members of industry
claim they need additional time to develop new
products to help them more profitably navigate the
Rule and the exemptions.’’).
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beginning on June 9, 2017. Various
commenters indicated that Financial
Institutions have, in fact, taken steps to
ensure compliance with the Impartial
Conduct Standards. Commenters have
also pointed to the SEC and FINRA
regulatory regimes as a means to ensure
consumers are appropriately protected.
It is the position of these commenters
that there is little, if any, risk that
consumers will be harmed by a delay of
the January 1, 2018 applicability date.20
By contrast, many commenters
representing consumers believe there is
risk to consumers in further delaying
these PTEs from becoming fully
applicable on January 1, 2018. One
commenter, for example, focused on the
contract provision of the exemption,
and expressed concern that delaying
that provision would significantly
undermine the protections and
effectiveness of the rule.21 Other
commenters pointed to the number of
covered transactions happening every
day and emphasized the compounding
nature of the harm if the applicability
date is further delayed.22 According to
these commenters, retirement savings
face undue risk without all of the
protections of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs. One commenter asserted that
‘‘absent the contract requirement and
the legal enforcement mechanism that
goes with it, firms would no longer have
a powerful incentive to comply with the
Impartial Conduct Standards,
implement effective anti-conflict
policies and procedures, or carefully
police conflicts of interest. It could be
too easy for firms to claim they are
complying with the PTEs, but still pay
advisers in ways that encourage and
reward them not to.’’ 23
Many commenters asserted that a
delay would be advantageous both to
retirement investors and firms; and,
conversely, that rigid adherence to the
20 See Comment Letter #147 (American
Retirement Association); Comment Letter #222
(Vanguard) (‘‘there is no need to rush to apply the
remaining provisions of the Rule to protect
investors because the Impartial Conduct Standards
that are already applicable will provide sufficient
protection for them during the 12–18 month
implementation period we propose.’’); Comment
Letter #180 (TD Ameritrade); Comment Letters #111
and #131 (BARR Financial Services); Comment
Letter #134 (Insured Retirement Institute).
21 See Comment Letter #284 (Coalition of 20
Signatories, including AFGE, AFL–CIO, AFSCME,
SEIU, NAEFE, Fund Democracy, and others); see
also Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of
America).
22 See Comment Letter #213 (AARP). See also
Comment Letter #216 (American Association for
Justice) (‘‘As we previously stressed, the earlier
delays have harmed investors, and any further
delay would augment this problem rather than
alleviating it.’’).
23 Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of
America).
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January 1, 2018, applicability date
would be harmful to both groups. With
respect to firms, it was argued by many
that the harm in terms of capital
expenditures and outlays to meet PTE
requirements (such as contract,
warranty, policies and procedures, and
disclosures) that are actively under
consideration by the Department and
that could change (or even be repealed)
should be obvious to the Department.24
With respect to harm to retirement
investors from not delaying the
applicability date, on the other hand,
one commenter stated that ‘‘the
stampede to fee-based arrangements will
leave many small and mid-sized
investors without access to advice . . .’’
and that ‘‘retirement investors are losing
access to some retirement products they
need to ensure guaranteed lifetime
incomes, including variable annuities,
whose usage has plummeted. These
market developments will cause more
leakage and reduce already inadequate
retirement resources for millions of
retirement savers.’’ 25 A different
commenter stated that ‘‘some firms
announced that retirement investors
seeking advice would be prohibited
from commission-based accounts or
would be barred from purchasing
certain products, such as mutual funds
and ETFs, in commission-based
accounts’’ and that ‘‘[u]ntil the industry,
with the assistance of regulators, is able
to resolve availability of accounts and
products previously available to
retirement investors, and the
mechanisms for payment for advice
services, there will be disruption both to
the industry and to retirement plans and
investors seeking advice.’’26 Another
commenter stated that ‘‘it is easy to see
24 See, e.g., Comment Letter #229 (Investment
Company Institute) (‘‘a delay would result in
substantial cost-savings for financial institutions by
allow them to avoid the significant and burdensome
costs of implementation that will likely ultimately
prove unnecessary.’’); Comment Letter #251
(Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of
America) (‘‘we are very concerned that continuing
to make significant staff and financial investments
to satisfy the January 1 applicability date will
ultimately prove both a considerable waste of
resources and a source of confusion for retirement
investors.’’); Comment Letter #109 (Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association)
(‘‘[d]espite the uncertainties, our members have
spent hundreds of millions of dollars thus far;
causing them to spend still more without certainty
of the ultimate requirements is not responsible.’’);
See also Comment Letter #196 (Prudential
Financial), Comment Letter #169 (Madison Avenue
Securities), Comment Letter #280 (Guardian Life
Insurance Company of America) and Comment
Letter #231 (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance
Company).
25 Comment Letter #256 (Jackson National Life
Insurance Company). See also Comment Letter #211
(Transamerica) (pointing to reduced annuity sales).
26 Comment Letter #18 (T. Rowe Price
Associates).
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how the average client will be confused
by correspondence announcing changes
to their investment products and
business relationship (if the Rule
becomes applicable), followed by
correspondence announcing additional
changes being made for yet another new
regulatory scheme (if the Rule is
rescinded or revised).’’ 27
Many commenters drew attention to
pending litigation challenging the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. In this regard,
a commenter stated that ‘‘[i]t would be
poor process for DOL to allow the
remaining requirements . . . to take
effect on January 1, 2018, without
providing detailed and clear guidance
on critical open legal issues generated
entirely by the DOL’s own regulatory
actions. ’’ 28 Another commenter
similarly suggested that ‘‘[a]t the very
least, an extension is needed to ensure
that the regulation accurately reflects
the Department’s position in litigation’’
regarding the limitation on arbitration.29
Regarding the contract and warranty
requirements, a significant number of
commenters remain divided on these
provisions, with many expressing
concern about potential negative
implications for access to advice and
investor costs. Many financial service
providers have expressed particular
concern about the potential for class
litigation and firm liability, and that
absent a delay of those provisions, there
will be a reduction in advice and
services to consumers, particularly
those with small accounts who may be
most in need of good investment
advice.30 They have suggested that
27 Comment
Letter #90 (True Capital Advisors).
Letter #256 (Jackson National Life
Insurance Company).
29 Comment Letter #8 (U.S. Chamber of
Commerce).
30 See, e.g., Comment Letter #293 (SPARK
Institute, Inc.) (‘‘[i]n response to the new definition
of fiduciary investment advice that became
applicable on June 9, 2017, some retirement
investors have already been cut off from certain
retirement products, offerings, and information.
Smaller plans are losing access to information and
guidance from their service providers. Also,
because of increased litigation risk associated with
the [PTEs] provisions set to become applicable on
January 1, 2018, this contraction in retirement
services will only become worse if the Department
fails to delay the upcoming applicability date and
materially revise the [Fiduciary Rule and PTEs].’’).
See also Comment Letter #289 (Sorrento Pacific
Financial) (‘‘We believe an extension of the Rule’s
January 1, 2018 applicability date necessary for the
Department to thoroughly examine the Rule for
adverse impacts on Americans’ access to retirement
investment advice and assistance, as required by
the President’s Memorandum. We are deeply
concerned that the Rule will cause significant harm
to retirement investors by restricting their access to
retirement investment advice and services and
subjecting firms to meritless litigation due to overly
broad definitions contained in the Rule, and so we
strongly support the Department in considering a
28 Comment
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alternative approaches might promote
the Department’s interest in compliance
with fiduciary standards, while
minimizing the risk that firms restrict
access to valuable advice and products
based on liability concerns. These
commenters argue that a delay of the
applicability date is needed to allow the
Department an opportunity to review
the RFI responses and develop
alternatives to these requirements. For
instance, one commenter stated that
‘‘the Department should further delay
the January 1, 2018 applicability date of
the contract, disclosure and warranty
requirements of the BICE, Principal
Transactions Exemption, and
amendments to PTE 84–24, due to the
high level of controversy surrounding
the increased liabilities associated with
these requirements—particularly when
their incremental benefits are weighed
against their harm to the retirement
savings product marketplace.’’ 31
Based on its review and evaluation of
the public comments, the Department is
proposing to extend the Transition
Period in the BIC Exemption and
Principal Transaction Exemption for 18
months until July 1, 2019, and to delay
the applicability date of certain
amendments to PTE 84–24 for the same
period. The same rules and standards in
effect now would remain in effect
throughout the duration of the extended
Transition Period, if adopted. Thus,
Financial Institutions and Advisers
would have to give prudent advice that
is in retirement investors’ best interest,
charge no more than reasonable
compensation, and avoid misleading
statements. It is based on the continued
adherence to these fundamental
protections that the Department,
pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 1108, would
consider granting the proposed
extension until July 1, 2019.32
The Department believes a delay may
be necessary and appropriate for
multiple reasons. To begin with, the
Department has not yet completed the
reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs, as directed by the President on
further delay of the Rule and undertaking this
examination.’’).
31 Comment Letter #267 (American Council of
Life Insurers).
32 On May 22, 2017, the Department issued a
temporary enforcement policy covering the
transition period between June 9, 2017, and January
1, 2018, during which the Department will not
pursue claims against investment advice fiduciaries
who are working diligently and in good faith to
comply with their fiduciary duties and to meet the
conditions of the PTEs, or otherwise treat those
investment advice fiduciaries as being in violation
of their fiduciary duties and not compliant with the
PTEs. See Field Assistance Bulletin 2017–02 (May
22, 2017). Comments are solicited on whether to
extend this policy for the same period covered by
the proposed extension of the Transition Period.
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February 3, 2017. More time is needed
to carefully and thoughtfully review the
substantial commentary received in
response to the March 2, 2017,
solicitation for comments and to honor
the President’s directive to take a hard
look at any potential undue burden.
Whether, and to what extent, there will
be changes to the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs as a result of this reexamination is
unknown until its completion. The
examination will help identify any
potential alternative exemptions or
conditions that could reduce costs and
increase benefits to all affected parties,
without unduly compromising
protections for retirement investors. The
Department anticipates that it will have
a much clearer image of the range of
such alternatives once it carefully
reviews the responses to the RFI. The
Department also anticipates it will
propose in the near future a new and
more streamlined class exemption built
in large part on recent innovations in
the financial services industry.
However, neither such a proposal nor
any other changes or modifications to
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, if any,
realistically could be implemented by
the current January 1, 2018,
applicability date. Nor would that
timeframe accommodate the
Department’s desire to coordinate with
the SEC in the development of any such
proposal or changes. The Chairman of
the SEC has recently published a
Request for Information seeking input
on the ‘‘standards of conduct for
investment advisers and brokerdealers,’’ and has welcomed the
Department’s invitation to engage
constructively as the Commission
moves forward with its examination of
the standards of conduct applicable to
investment advisers and broker-dealers,
and related matters. Absent the
proposed delay, however, Financial
Institutions and Advisers would feel
compelled to ready themselves for the
provisions that become applicable on
January 1, 2018, despite the possibility
of alternatives on the horizon.
Accordingly, the proposed delay avoids
obligating financial services providers to
incur costs to comply with conditions,
which may be revised, repealed, or
replaced, as well as attendant investor
confusion.
Based on the evidence before it at this
time while it continues to conduct this
examination, the Department is
proposing a time-certain delay of 18
months. The Department is also
interested in an alternative approach
raised by several commenters to the RFI,
however—that the Department institute
a delay that would end a specified
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period after a certain action on the part
of the Department, e.g., a delay lasting
until 12 months after the Department
concludes its review as directed by the
Presidential Memorandum. The
Department is concerned that this type
of delay would provide insufficient
certainty to Financial Institutions and
other market participants who are
working to comply with the full range
of conditions under the relevant PTEs.
Further, the Department is concerned
that this type of delay would
unnecessarily harm consumers by
adding uncertainty and confusion to the
market. Nevertheless, the Department
requests comments on whether it could
structure the delay in a way that could
be beneficial to retirement investors and
to market participants. If commenters
think that such a structure would be
beneficial, the Department requests
comments regarding what event or
action on the part of the Department
should begin the period by which the
end of the delay is measured (e.g., the
end of the Department’s examination
pursuant to the Presidential
Memorandum, issuance of a proposed
or final new PTEs or a statement that the
Department does not intend any further
changes or revisions).
Separately, the Department also
requests comments on whether it would
be beneficial to adopt a tiered approach.
For example, this could be a final rule
that delayed the Transition Period until
the earlier or the later of (a) a date
certain or (b) the end of a period
following the occurrence of a defined
event. The Department is particularly
interested in comments as to whether
such a tiered approach would provide
sufficient certainty to be beneficial, and
how best it could communicate with
stakeholders the determination that one
date or the other would trigger
compliance. The Department is
interested in comments that provide
insight as to any relative benefits or
harms of these three different delay
approaches: (1) A delay set for a time
certain, including the 18-months
proposed by this document, (2) a delay
that ends a specified period after the
occurrence of a specific event, and (3)
a tiered approach where the delay is set
for the earlier of or the later of (a) a time
certain and (b) the end of a specified
period after the occurrence of a specific
event.
Finally, several commenters suggested
that the Department condition any delay
of the Transition Period on the behavior
of the entity seeking relief under the
Transition Period. These commenters
suggested generally that any delay
should be conditioned, for example, on
a Financial Institution’s showing that it
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has, or a promise that it will, take steps
to harness recent innovations in
investment products and services, such
as ‘‘clean shares.’’ Conditions of this
type generally seem more relevant in the
context of considering the development
of additional and more streamlined
exemption approaches that take into
account recent marketplace innovations
and less appropriate and germane in the
context of a decision whether to extend
the Transition Period. Although this
proposal, therefore, does not adopt this
approach, the Department solicits
comments on this approach, in
particular the benefits and costs of this
suggestion, and ways in which the
Department could ensure the
workability of such an approach.
D. Regulatory Impact Analysis
The Department expects that this
proposed transition period extension
would produce benefits that justify
associated costs. The proposed
extension would avert the possibility of
a costly and disorderly transition from
the Impartial Conduct Standards to full
compliance with the exemption
conditions, and thereby reduce some
compliance costs. As stated above, the
Department currently is engaged in the
process of reviewing the Fiduciary Rule
and PTEs as directed in the Presidential
Memorandum and reviewing comments
received in response to the RFI. As part
of this process, the Department will
determine whether further changes to
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs are
necessary. Although many firms have
taken steps to ensure that they are
meeting their fiduciary obligations and
satisfying the Impartial Conduct
Standards of the PTEs, they are
encountering uncertainty regarding the
potential future revision or possible
repeal of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.
Therefore, as reflected in the comments,
many financial firms have slowed or
halted their efforts to prepare for full
compliance with the exemption
conditions that currently are scheduled
to become applicable on January 1,
2018, because they are concerned about
committing resources to comply with
PTE conditions that ultimately could be
modified or repealed. This proposed
applicability date extension will assure
stakeholders that they will not be
subject to the other exemption
conditions in the BIC and the Principal
Transaction PTEs until at least July 1,
2019. Of course, the benefits of
extending the transition period
generally will be proportionately larger
for those firms that currently have
committed fewer resources to comply
with the full exemption conditions. The
Department’s objective is to complete its
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review pursuant to the President’s
Memorandum, analyze comments
received in response to the RFI, and
propose and finalize any changes to the
Rule or PTEs sufficiently before July 1,
2019, to provide firms with sufficient
time to design and implement an
orderly transition process.
The Department believes that investor
losses from the proposed transition
period extension could be relatively
small. Because the Fiduciary Rule and
the Impartial Conduct Standards
became applicable on June 9, 2017, the
Department believes that firms already
have made efforts to adhere to the rule
and those standards. Thus, the
Department believes that relative to
deferring all of the provisions of the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, a substantial
portion of the investor gains predicted
in the Department’s 2016 regulatory
impact analysis of the Fiduciary Rule
and PTEs (2016 RIA) would remain
intact for the proposed extended
transition period.
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1. Executive Order 12866 Statement
This proposal is an economically
significant action within the meaning of
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866,
because it would likely have an effect
on the economy of $100 million in at
least one year. Accordingly, the
Department has considered the costs
and benefits of the proposal, which has
been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
a. Investor Gains
The Department’s 2016 RIA estimated
a portion of the potential gains for IRA
investors at between $33 billion and $36
billion over the first 10 years for one
segment of the market and category of
conflicts of interest. It predicted, but did
not quantify, additional gains for both
IRA and ERISA plan investors.
With respect to this proposal, the
Department considered whether
investor losses might result. Beginning
on June 9, 2017, Financial Institutions
and Advisers generally are required to
(1) make recommendations that are in
their client’s best interest (i.e., IRA
recommendations that are prudent and
loyal), (2) avoid misleading statements,
and (3) charge no more than reasonable
compensation for their services. If they
fully adhere to these requirements, the
Department expects that affected
investors will generally receive a
significant portion of the estimated
gains. However, because the PTE
conditions are intended to support and
provide accountability mechanisms for
such adherence (e.g., conditions
requiring advisers to provide a written
acknowledgement of their fiduciary
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status and adherence to the Impartial
Conduct Standards and enter into
enforceable contracts with IRA
investors) the Department acknowledges
that the proposed delay of the PTE
conditions may result in deferral of
some of the estimated investor gains.
One RFI commenter suggested that an
additional one-year extension of the
transition period during which the full
PTE conditions would not apply would
reduce the incentive for mutual fund
companies to market lower-cost and
higher-performing funds, which will
reduce consumer access to such
products, resulting in consumer losses.
This commenter argued that in the case
of IRA rollovers, the consumer losses
from continued conflicted advice and
reduced access to more consumerfriendly investment products could
compound for decades.
Advisers who presently are ERISAplan fiduciaries are especially likely to
satisfy fully the PTEs’ Impartial Conduct
Standards before July 1, 2019, because
they are subject to ERISA standards of
prudence and loyalty and thus would be
subject to claims for civil liability under
ERISA if they violate their fiduciary
obligations or fail to satisfy the Impartial
Conduct Standards if they use an
exemption. Moreover, fiduciary advisers
who do not provide impartial advice as
required by the Rule and PTEs in the
IRA market would violate the prohibited
transaction rules of the Code and
become subject to the prohibited
transaction excise tax. Even though
advisers currently are not specifically
required by the terms of these PTEs to
notify retirement investors of the
Impartial Conduct Standards and to
acknowledge their fiduciary status,
many investors expect they are entitled
to advice that adheres to a fiduciary
standard because of the publicity the
final rule and PTEs have received from
the Department and media, and the
Department understands that many
advisers notified consumers voluntarily
about the imposition of the standard
and their adherence to that standard as
a best practice.
Comments received by the
Department indicate that many financial
institutions already have completed or
largely completed work to establish
policies and procedures necessary to
make many of the business structure
and practice shifts necessary to support
compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and
Impartial Conduct Standards (e.g.,
drafting and implementing training for
staff, drafting client correspondence and
explanations of revised product and
service offerings, negotiating changes to
agreements with product manufacturers
as part of their approach to compliance
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with the PTEs, changing employee and
agent compensation structures, and
designing product offerings that mitigate
conflicts of interest). The Department
believes that many financial institutions
are using this compliance infrastructure
to ensure that they currently are meeting
the requirements of the Fiduciary Rule
and Impartial Conduct Standards,
which the Department believes will
largely protect the investor gains
estimated in the 2016 RIA.33
b. Cost Savings
Based on comments received in
response to the RFI that are discussed in
Section C, above, the Department
believes firms that are fiduciaries under
the Fiduciary Rule have committed
resources to implementing procedures
to support compliance with their
fiduciary obligations. This may include
changing their compensation structures
and monitoring the practices and
procedures of their advisers to ensure
that conflicts of interest do not cause
violations of the Fiduciary Rule and
Impartial Conduct Standards of the
PTEs and maintaining sufficient records
to corroborate that they are complying
with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.
These firms have considerable
flexibility to choose precisely how they
will achieve compliance with the PTEs
during the proposed extended transition
period. The Department does not have
sufficient data to estimate such costs;
therefore, they are not quantified.
Some commenters have asserted that
the proposed transition period
extension could result in cost savings
for firms compared to the costs that
were estimated in the Department’s
2016 RIA to the extent that the
requirements of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTE conditions are modified in a way
that would result in less expensive
compliance costs. However, the
Department generally believes that startup costs not yet incurred for
requirements now scheduled to become
applicable on January 1, 2018, should
not be included, at this time, as a cost
savings associated with this proposal
because the proposal would merely
delay the full implementation of certain
conditions in the PTEs until July 1,
2019, while the Department considers
whether to propose changes and
alternatives to the exemptions. The
Department would be required to
assume for purposes of this regulatory
33 The Department’s baseline for this RIA
includes all current rules and regulations governing
investment advice including those that would
become applicable on January 1, 2018, absent this
proposed delay. The RIA did not quantify
incremental gains by each particular aspect of the
rule and PTEs.
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 168 / Thursday, August 31, 2017 / Proposed Rules
impact analysis that those start-up costs
that have not been incurred generally
would be delayed rather than avoided
unless or until the Department acts to
modify the compliance obligations of
firms and advisers to make them more
efficient. Nonetheless, even based on
that assumption, there may be some cost
savings that could be quantified as
arising from the delay being proposed in
this document because some ongoing
costs would not be incurred until July
1, 2019. The Department has taken two
approaches to quantifying the savings
resulting from the delay in incurring
ongoing costs: (1) Quantifying the costs
based on a shift in the time horizon of
the costs (i.e., comparing the present
value of the costs of complying over a
ten year period beginning on January 1,
2018 with the costs of complying,
instead, over a ten year period
beginning on July 1, 2019); and (2)
quantifying the reduced costs during the
18 month period of delay from January
1, 2018 to July 1, 2019, during which
regulated parties would otherwise have
had to comply with the full conditions
of the BIC Exemption and Principal
Transaction Exemption but for the
delay.
The first of the two approaches
reflects the time value of money (i.e., the
idea that money available at the present
time is worth more than the same
amount of money in the future, because
that money can earn interest). The
deferral of ongoing costs by 18 months
will allow the regulated community to
use money they would have spent on
ongoing compliance costs for other
purposes during that time period. The
Department estimates that the ten-year
present value of the cost savings arising
from this 18 month deferral of ongoing
compliance costs, and the regulated
community’s resulting ability to use the
money for other purposes is $551.6
million using a three percent discount
rate 34 and $1.0 billion using a seven
percent discount rate.35
The second of the two approaches
simply estimates the expenses foregone
during the period from January 1, 2018
to July 1, 2019 as a result of the delay.
When the Department published the
2016 Final Rule and accompanying
PTEs, it calculated that the total ongoing
compliance costs of the rule and PTEs
were $1.5 billion annually. Therefore,
the Department estimates the ten-year
present value of the cost savings of firms
not being required to incur ongoing
compliance costs during an 18 month
delay would be approximately $2.2
billion using a three percent discount
34 Annualized
35 Annualized
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to $143.9 million per year.
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rate 36 and $2.0 billion using a seven
percent discount rate.37 38
Based on its progress thus far with the
review and reexamination directed by
the President, however, the Department
believes there may be evidence of
alternatives that reduce costs and
increase benefits to all affected parties,
while maintaining protections for
retirement investors. The Department
anticipates that it will have a much
clearer image of the range of such
alternatives once it completes a careful
review of the data and evidence
submitted in response to the RFI.
The Department also cannot
determine at this time to what degree
the infrastructure that affected firms
have already established to ensure
compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs exemptions would be sufficient to
facilitate compliance with the Fiduciary
Rule and PTEs conditions if they are
modified in the future.
c. Alternatives Considered
While the Department considered
several alternatives that were informed
by public comments, this proposal
likely would yield the most desirable
outcome including avoidance of costly
market disruptions and investor losses.
In weighing different options, the
Department took numerous factors into
account. The Department’s objective
was to avoid unnecessary confusion and
uncertainty in the investment advice
market, facilitate continued marketplace
innovation, and minimize investor
losses.
The Department considered not
proposing any extension of the
transition period, which would mean
that the remaining conditions in the
PTEs would become applicable on
January 1, 2018. The Department is not
pursuing this alternative, however,
because it would not provide sufficient
time for the Department to complete its
ongoing review of, or propose and
finalize any changes to the Fiduciary
Rule and PTEs. Moreover, absent the
proposed extension of the transition
period, Financial Institutions and
Advisers would feel compelled to
prepare for full compliance with PTE
conditions that become applicable on
January 1, 2018, the applicability date of
the additional PTE conditions despite
36 Annualized
to $252.1 million per year.
to $291.1 million per year.
38 The Department notes that firms may be
incurring some costs to comply with the impartial
conduct standards; however, it has no data to
enable it to estimate these costs. The Department
solicits comments on the costs of complying with
the impartial conduct standards, and how these
costs interact with the costs of all other facets of
compliance with the conditions of the PTEs.
37 Annualized
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the possibility that the Department
could adopt more efficient alternatives.
This could lead to unnecessary
compliance costs and market
disruptions. As compared to a shorter
delay with the possibility of consecutive
additional delays, if needed, this
proposal would provide more certainty
for affected stakeholders because it sets
a firm date for full compliance, which
would allow for proper planning and
reliance. The Department’s objective
would be to complete its review of the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs pursuant to
the President’s Memorandum and the
RFI responses sufficiently in advance of
July 1, 2019, to provide firms with
enough time to prepare for whatever
action is prompted by the review. As
discussed above, the Department
believes that investor losses associated
with this proposed extension would be
relatively small. The fact that the
Fiduciary Rule and the Impartial
Conduct Standards are now in effect
makes it likely that retirement investors
will experience much of the potential
gains from a higher conduct standard
and minimizes the potential for an
undue reduction in those gains as
compared to the full protections of all
the PTE conditions as discussed in the
2016 Regulatory Impact Analysis.
2. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
(44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.) prohibits
federal agencies from conducting or
sponsoring a collection of information
from the public without first obtaining
approval from the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB). See 44 U.S.C. 3507.
Additionally, members of the public are
not required to respond to a collection
of information, nor be subject to a
penalty for failing to respond, unless
such collection displays a valid OMB
control number. See 44 U.S.C. 3512.
OMB has previously approved
information collections contained in the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. The
Department now is proposing to extend
the transition period for the full
conditions of the PTEs associated with
its Fiduciary Rule until July 1, 2019.
The Department is not proposing to
modify the substance of the information
collections at this time; however, the
current OMB approval periods of the
information collection requests (ICRs)
expire prior to the new proposed
applicability date for the full conditions
of the PTEs as they currently exist.
Therefore, many of the information
collections will remain inactive for the
remainder of the current ICR approval
periods. The ICRs contained in the
exemptions are discussed below.
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PTE 2016–01, the Best Interest
Contract Exemption: The information
collections in PTE 2016–01, the BIC
Exemption, are approved under OMB
Control Number 1210–0156 through
June 30, 2019. The exemption requires
disclosure of material conflicts of
interest and basic information relating
to those conflicts and the advisory
relationship (Sections II and III),
contract disclosures, contracts and
written policies and procedures (Section
II), pre-transaction (or point of sale)
disclosures (Section III(a)), web-based
disclosures (Section III(b)),
documentation regarding
recommendations restricted to
proprietary products or products that
generate third party payments (Section
(IV), notice to the Department of a
Financial Institution’s intent to rely on
the PTE, and maintenance of records
necessary to prove that the conditions of
the PTE have been met (Section V).
Although the start-up costs of the
information collections as they are set
forth in the current PTE may not be
incurred prior to June 30, 2019 due to
uncertainty around the Department’s
ongoing consideration of whether to
propose changes and alternatives to the
exemptions, they are reflected in the
revised burden estimate summary
below. The ongoing costs of the
information collections will remain
inactive through the remainder of the
current approval period.
For a more detailed discussion of the
information collections and associated
burden of this PTE, see the
Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR
21002, 21071.
PTE 2016–02, the Prohibited
Transaction Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs
(Principal Transactions Exemption):
The information collections in PTE
2016–02, the Principal Transactions
Exemption, are approved under OMB
Control Number 1210–0157 through
June 30, 2019. The exemption requires
Financial Institutions to provide
contract disclosures and contracts to
Retirement Investors (Section II), adopt
written policies and procedures (Section
IV), make disclosures to Retirement
Investors and on a publicly available
Web site (Section IV), maintain records
necessary to prove they have met the
PTE conditions (Section V). Although
the start-up costs of the information
collections as they are set forth in the
current PTE may not be incurred prior
to June 30, 2019 due to uncertainty
around the Department’s ongoing
consideration of whether to propose
changes and alternatives to the
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15:12 Aug 30, 2017
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exemptions, they are reflected in the
revised burden estimate summary
below. The ongoing costs of the
information collections will remain
inactive through the remainder of the
current approval period.
For a more detailed discussion of the
information collections and associated
burden of this PTE, see the
Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR
21089, 21129.
Amended PTE 84–24: The
information collections in Amended
PTE 84–24 are approved under OMB
Control Number 1210–0158 through
June 30, 2019. As amended, Section
IV(b) of PTE 84–24 requires Financial
Institutions to obtain advance written
authorization from an independent plan
fiduciary or IRA holder and furnish the
independent fiduciary or IRA holder
with a written disclosure in order to
receive commissions in conjunction
with the purchase of insurance and
annuity contracts. Section IV(c) of PTE
84–24 requires investment company
Principal Underwriters to obtain
approval from an independent fiduciary
and furnish the independent fiduciary
with a written disclosure in order to
receive commissions in conjunction
with the purchase by a plan of securities
issued by an investment company
Principal Underwriter. Section V of PTE
84–24, as amended, requires Financial
Institutions to maintain records
necessary to demonstrate that the
conditions of the PTE have been met.
The proposal delays the applicability
date of amendments to PTE 84–24 until
July 1, 2019, except that the Impartial
Conduct Standards became applicable
on June 9, 2017. The Department does
not have sufficient data to estimate that
number of respondents that will use
PTE 84–24 with the inclusion of
Impartial Conduct Standards but
delayed applicability date of
amendments. Therefore, the Department
has not revised its burden estimate.
For a more detailed discussion of the
information collections and associated
burden of this PTE, see the
Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR
21147, 21171.
These paperwork burden estimates,
which comprise start-up costs that will
be incurred prior to the July 1, 2019
effective date (and the June 30, 2019
expiration date of the current approval
periods), are summarized as follows:
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Titles: (1) Best Interest Contract
Exemption and (2) Final Investment
Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210–0156.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profits; not for profit institutions.
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Estimated Number of Respondents:
19,890 over the three year period;
annualized to 6,630 per year.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 34,046,054 over the three
year period; annualized to 11,348,685
per year.
Frequency of Response: When
engaging in exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 2,125,573 over the three year
period; annualized to 708,524 per year.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$2,468,487,766 during the three year
period; annualized to $822,829,255 per
year.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction
Exemption for Principal Transactions in
Certain Assets between Investment
Advice Fiduciaries and Employee
Benefit Plans and IRAs and (2) Final
Investment Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210–0157.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profits; not for profit institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
6,075 over the three year period;
annualized to 2,025 per year.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 2,463,802 over the three year
period; annualized to 821,267 per year.
Frequency of Response: When
engaging in exempted transaction;
Annually.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 45,872 over the three year
period; annualized to 15,291 per year.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$1,955,369,661 over the three year
period; annualized to $651,789,887 per
year.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction
Exemption (PTE) 84–24 for Certain
Transactions Involving Insurance
Agents and Brokers, Pension
Consultants, Insurance Companies and
Investment Company Principal
Underwriters and (2) Final Investment
Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210–0158.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profits; not for profit institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
21,940.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 3,306,610.
Frequency of Response: Initially,
Annually, When engaging in exempted
transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 172,301 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
$1,319,353.
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3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
certain requirements with respect to
Federal Rules that are subject to the
notice and comment requirements of
section 553(b) of the Administrative
Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) or
any other laws. Unless the head of an
agency certifies that a proposed rule is
not likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities, section 603 of the RFA requires
that the agency present an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA)
describing the Rule’s impact on small
entities and explaining how the agency
made its decisions with respect to the
application of the Rule to small entities.
Small entities include small businesses,
organizations and governmental
jurisdictions.
This proposal merely extends the
transition period for the PTEs associated
with the Department’s 2016 Final
Fiduciary Rule. Accordingly, pursuant
to section 605(b) of the RFA, the Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the Employee
Benefits Security Administration hereby
certifies that the proposal will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
4. Congressional Review Act
This proposal is subject to the
Congressional Review Act (CRA)
provisions of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and will be
transmitted to Congress and the
Comptroller General for review if
finalized. The proposal is a ‘‘major rule’’
as that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 804,
because it is likely to result in an annual
effect on the economy of $100 million
or more.
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5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4)
requires each Federal agency to prepare
a written statement assessing the effects
of any Federal mandate in a proposed or
final agency rule that may result in an
expenditure of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation with the
base year 1995) in any one year by State,
local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector. For
purposes of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act, as well as Executive Order
12875, this proposal does not include
any federal mandate that we expect
would result in such expenditures by
State, local, or tribal governments, or the
private sector. The Department also
does not expect that the proposed delay
will have any material economic
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impacts on State, local or tribal
governments, or on health, safety, or the
natural environment.
6. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs
Executive Order 13771, titled
Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January
30, 2017. Section 2(a) of Executive
Order 13771 requires an agency, unless
prohibited by law, to identify at least
two existing regulations to be repealed
when the agency publicly proposes for
notice and comment, or otherwise
promulgates, a new regulation. In
furtherance of this requirement, section
2(c) of Executive Order 13771 requires
that the new incremental costs
associated with new regulations shall, to
the extent permitted by law, be offset by
the elimination of existing costs
associated with at least two prior
regulations.
The impacts of this proposal are
categorized consistently with the
analysis of the original Fiduciary Rule
and PTEs, and the Department has also
concluded that the impacts identified in
the Regulatory Impact Analysis
accompanying the 2016 final rule may
still be used as a basis for estimating the
potential impacts of that final rule. It
has been determined that, for purposes
of E.O. 13771, the impacts of the
Fiduciary Rule that were identified in
the 2016 analysis as costs, and that are
presently categorized as cost savings (or
negative costs) in this proposal, and
impacts of the Fiduciary Rule that were
identified in the 2016 analysis as a
combination of transfers and positive
benefits are categorized as a
combination of (opposite-direction)
transfers and negative benefits in this
proposal. Accordingly, OMB has
determined that this proposal, if
finalized as proposed, would be an E.O.
13771 deregulatory action.
E. List of Proposed Amendments to
Prohibited Transaction Exemptions
The Secretary of Labor has
discretionary authority to grant
administrative exemptions under ERISA
and the Code on an individual or class
basis, but only if the Secretary first finds
that the exemptions are (1)
administratively feasible, (2) in the
interests of plans and their participants
and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
(3) protective of the rights of the
participants and beneficiaries of such
plans and IRA owners. 29 U.S.C.
1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2).
Under this authority, and based on
the reasons set forth above, the
Department is proposing to amend the:
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(1) Best Interest Contract Exemption
(PTE 2016–01); (2) Class Exemption for
Principal Transactions in Certain Assets
Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs
(PTE 2016–02); and (3) Prohibited
Transaction Exemption 84–24 (PTE 84–
24) for Certain Transactions Involving
Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension
Consultants, Insurance Companies, and
Investment Company Principal
Underwriters, as set forth below. These
amendments would be effective on the
date of publication in the Federal
Register of final amendments or January
1, 2018, whichever is earlier.
1. The BIC Exemption (PTE 2016–01)
would be amended as follows:
A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ would
be deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted
in its place in the introductory DATES
section.
B. Section II(h)(4)—Level Fee
Fiduciaries provides streamlined
conditions for ‘‘Level Fee Fiduciaries.’’
The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ would be
deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in
its place. Thus, for Level Fee Fiduciaries
that are robo-advice providers, and
therefore not eligible for Section IX
(pursuant to Section IX(c)(3)), the
Impartial Conduct Standards in Section
II(h)(2) are applicable June 9, 2017, but
the remaining conditions of Section II(h)
would be applicable July 1, 2019, rather
than January 1, 2018.
C. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the
amendment of existing contracts by
negative consent. The date ‘‘January 1,
2018’’ would be deleted where it
appears in this section, including in the
definition of ‘‘Existing Contract,’’ and
‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in its place.
D. Section IX—Transition Period for
Exemption. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’
would be deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’
inserted in its place. Thus, the
Transition Period identified in Section
IX(a) would be extended from June 9,
2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June
9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.
2. The Class Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE
2016–02), would be amended as
follows:
A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ would
be deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted
in its place in the introductory DATES
section.
B. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the
amendment of existing contracts by
negative consent. The date ‘‘January 1,
2018’’ would be deleted where it
appears in this section, including in the
definition of ‘‘Existing Contract,’’ and
‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in its place.
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C. Section VII—Transition Period for
Exemption. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’
would be deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’
inserted in its place. Thus, the
Transition Period identified in Section
VII(a) would be extended from June 9,
2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June
9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.
3. Prohibited Transaction Exemption
84–24 for Certain Transactions
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers,
Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, and Investment Company
Principal Underwriters, would be
amended as follows:
A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ would
be deleted where it appears in the
introductory DATES section and ‘‘July 1,
2019’’ inserted in its place.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 28th day of
August 2017.
Timothy D. Hauser,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program
Operations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration, Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2017–18520 Filed 8–30–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R05–OAR–2016–0397; FRL–9967–19–
Region 5]
Air Plan Approval; Illinois; Rule Part
225, Control of Emissions From Large
Combustion Sources
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is proposing to approve
a revision to the Illinois state
implementation plan (SIP) to amend
requirements applicable to certain coalfired electric generating units (EGUs).
These amendments require the Will
County 3 and Joliet 6, 7, and 8 EGUs to
permanently cease combusting coal;
allow other subject EGUs to cease
combusting coal as an alternative means
of compliance with mercury emission
standards; exempt the Will County 4
EGU from sulfur dioxide (SO2) control
technology requirements; require all
subject EGUs to comply with a group
annual nitrogen oxide (NOX) emission
rate; and require only those subject
EGUs that combust coal to comply with
a group annual SO2 emission rate.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before October 2, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R05–
OAR–2016–0397 at https://
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SUMMARY:
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www.regulations.gov or via email to
blakley.pamela@epa.gov. For comments
submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from
Regulations.gov. For either manner of
submission, EPA may publish any
comment received to its public docket.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. EPA will generally not consider
comments or comment contents located
outside of the primary submission (i.e.
on the web, cloud, or other file sharing
system). For additional submission
methods, please contact the person
identified in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section. For the
full EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles Hatten, Environmental
Engineer, Control Strategy Section, Air
Programs Branch (AR–18J), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 5, 77 West Jackson Boulevard,
Chicago, Illinois 60604, (312) 886–6031,
hatten.charles@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us,’’ or ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
EPA. This supplementary information
section is arranged as follows:
I. Background
II. Discussion of the State’s Submittal
A. Rule Revisions That EPA Is Proposing
To Approve
B. Rule Revisions for Which EPA Is Taking
No Action
C. Analysis of the State’s Submittal
III. What action is EPA taking?
IV. Incorporation by Reference
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background
On June 24, 2011, Illinois EPA
submitted to EPA state rules to address
the visibility protection requirements of
Section 169A of the Clean Air Act
(CAA) and the regional haze rule, as
codified in 40 CFR 51.308. This
submission included the following
provisions contained in Title 35 of the
Illinois Administrative Code (IAC), Part
225 (Part 225): sections 225.291,
225.292, 225.293, 225.295 and 225.296
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(except for 225.296(d)), and Appendix A
to Part 225. On July 6, 2012, EPA
approved these provisions (77 FR
39943).
On June 23, 2016, Illinois submitted
revisions to these rules and on January
9, 2017, Illinois submitted additional
information explaining the revisions.1
These rules are known as the
‘‘Combined Pollutant Standard,’’ and
are codified at 35 IAC Part 225, Subpart
B, titled ‘‘Control of Emissions from
Large Combustion Sources’’ (CPS or Part
225 rules). The CPS provides certain
EGUs an alternative means of
compliance with the mercury emission
standards in 35 IAC 225.230(a).2 The
CPS applies to EGUs at six power
plants, which are identified in
Appendix A to the CPS. Illinois is
revising the CPS to address the
conversion of certain EGUs to fuel other
than coal.
II. Discussion of the State’s Submittal
A. Rule Revisions That EPA Is Proposing
To Approve
EPA is proposing to approve the
following revisions as part of Illinois’
SIP:
Section 225.291 Combined Pollutant
Standard: Purpose
SIP Section 225.291 sets forth the
purpose of the CPS, which is to allow
an alternate means of compliance with
the emissions standards for mercury in
35 IAC 225.230(a) for specified EGUs
through permanent shutdown, the
installation of an activated carbon
injection system, or the application of
pollution control technology for NOX,
SO2, and particulate matter (PM)
emissions that also reduce mercury
emissions as a co-benefit.
Illinois revised section 225.291 by
stating as its purpose the conversion of
an EGU to a fuel other than coal (such
as natural gas or distillate fuel oil with
sulfur content no greater than 15 parts
per million (ppm)) as an additional
alternative means of compliance with
the mercury emission standards under
the CPS.
1 Illinois’ final rule amended other state
regulations, Parts 214 (Sulfur limitations), and Part
217(Nitrogen oxide emissions), and other portions
of Part 225, that are not part of the Illinois SIP, and
were not submitted to EPA as part of this action.
Illinois stated in its statement of reasons for the
final rule that these revisions are proposed to
control emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) in and
around areas designated as nonattainment with
respect to the 2010 National Ambient Air Quality
Standard (NAAQS), and are intended to aid Illinois’
attainment planning efforts for the 2010 SO2
NAAQS.
2 35 IAC 225.230 contains Illinois’ mercury
emission standards for EGUs, and is not part of the
federally enforceable SIP.
E:\FR\FM\31AUP1.SGM
31AUP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 168 (Thursday, August 31, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 41365-41376]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-18520]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration
29 CFR Part 2550
[Application Number D-11712; D-11713; D-11850]
ZRIN 1210-ZA27
Extension of Transition Period and Delay of Applicability Dates;
Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016-01); Class Exemption for
Principal Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice
Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02);
Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (PTE 84-24)
AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.
ACTION: Notice of proposed amendments to PTE 2016-01, PTE 2016-02, and
PTE 84-24.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document proposes to extend the special transition period
under sections II and IX of the Best Interest Contract Exemption and
section VII of the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in
Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee
Benefit Plans and IRAs. This document also proposes to delay the
applicability of certain amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemption
84-24 for the same period. The primary purpose of the proposed
amendments is to give the Department of Labor the time necessary to
consider possible changes and alternatives to these exemptions. The
Department is particularly concerned that, without a delay in the
applicability dates, regulated parties may incur undue expense to
comply with conditions or requirements that it ultimately determines to
revise or repeal. The present transition period is from June 9, 2017,
to January 1, 2018. The new transition period would end on July 1,
2019. The proposed amendments to these exemptions would affect
participants and beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners and fiduciaries
with respect to such plans and IRAs.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before September 15, 2017.
ADDRESSES: All written comments should be sent to the Office of
Exemption Determinations by any of the following methods, identified by
RIN 1210-AB82:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov at Docket ID
number: EBSA-2017-0004. Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
Email to: EBSA.FiduciaryRuleExamination@dol.gov.
Mail: Office of Exemption Determinations, EBSA, (Attention: D-
11712, 11713, 11850), U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue
NW., Suite 400, Washington, DC 20210.
Hand Delivery/Courier: OED, EBSA (Attention: D-11712, 11713,
11850), U.S. Department of Labor, 122 C St. NW., Suite 400, Washington,
DC 20001.
Comments will be available for public inspection in the Public
Disclosure Room, EBSA, U.S. Department of Labor, Room N-1513, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210. Comments will also be
available online at www.regulations.gov, at Docket ID number: EBSA-
2017-0004 and www.dol.gov/ebsa, at no charge. Do not include personally
identifiable information or confidential business information that you
do not want publicly disclosed. Comments online can be retrieved by
most Internet search engines.
[[Page 41366]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Shiker, telephone (202) 693-
8824, Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits Security
Administration.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Procedural Background
ERISA and the 1975 Regulation
Section 3(21)(A)(ii) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974, as amended (ERISA), in relevant part provides that a person is
a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent he or she renders
investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect,
with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan, or has any
authority or responsibility to do so. Section 4975(e)(3)(B) of the
Internal Revenue Code (``Code'') has a parallel provision that defines
a fiduciary of a plan (including an individual retirement account or
annuity (IRA)). The Department of Labor (``the Department'') in 1975
issued a regulation establishing a five-part test under this section of
ERISA. See 29 CFR 2510.3-21(c)(1) (2015).\1\ The Department's 1975
regulation also applied to the definition of fiduciary in the Code.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The 1975 Regulation was published as a final rule at 40 FR
50842 (Oct. 31, 1975).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The New Fiduciary Rule and Related Exemptions
On April 8, 2016, the Department replaced the 1975 regulation with
a new regulatory definition (the ``Fiduciary Rule''). The Fiduciary
Rule defines who is a ``fiduciary'' of an employee benefit plan under
section 3(21)(A)(ii) of ERISA as a result of giving investment advice
to a plan or its participants or beneficiaries. The Fiduciary Rule also
applies to the definition of a ``fiduciary'' of a plan in the Code. The
Fiduciary Rule treats persons who provide investment advice or
recommendations for a fee or other compensation with respect to assets
of a plan or IRA as fiduciaries in a wider array of advice
relationships than was true under the 1975 regulation. On the same
date, the Department published two new administrative class exemptions
from the prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA (29 U.S.C. 1106)
and the Code (26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(1)): The Best Interest Contract
Exemption (BIC Exemption) and the Class Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (Principal Transactions Exemption),
as well as amendments to previously granted exemptions (collectively
referred to as ``PTEs,'' unless otherwise indicated). The Fiduciary
Rule and PTEs had an original applicability date of April 10, 2017.
Presidential Memorandum
By Memorandum dated February 3, 2017, the President directed the
Department to prepare an updated analysis of the likely impact of the
Fiduciary Rule on access to retirement information and financial
advice. The President's Memorandum was published in the Federal
Register on February 7, 2017, at 82 FR 9675. On March 2, 2017, the
Department published a notice of proposed rulemaking that proposed a
60-day delay of the applicability date of the Rule and PTEs. The
proposal also sought public comments on the questions raised in the
Presidential Memorandum and generally on questions of law and policy
concerning the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.\2\ The Department received
nearly 200,000 comment and petition letters expressing a wide range of
views on the proposed 60-day delay. Approximately 15,000 commenters and
petitioners supported a delay of 60 days or longer, with some
requesting at least 180 days and some up to 240 days or a year or
longer (including an indefinite delay or repeal); 178,000 commenters
and petitioners opposed any delay whatsoever at that time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 82 FR 12319.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Delay of Applicability Dates
On April 7, 2017, the Department promulgated a final rule extending
the applicability date of the Fiduciary Rule by 60 days from April 10,
2017, to June 9, 2017 (``April Delay Rule'').\3\ It also extended from
April 10 to June 9, the applicability dates of the BIC Exemption and
Principal Transactions Exemption and required investment advice
fiduciaries relying on these exemptions to adhere only to the Impartial
Conduct Standards as conditions of those exemptions during a transition
period from June 9, 2017, through January 1, 2018. The April Delay Rule
also delayed the applicability of amendments to an existing exemption,
Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 (PTE 84-24), until January 1,
2018, other than the Impartial Conduct Standards, which became
applicable on June 9, 2017. Lastly, the April Delay Rule extended for
60 days, until June 9, 2017, the applicability dates of amendments to
other previously granted exemptions. The 60-day delay was considered
appropriate by the Department at that time, including for the Impartial
Conduct Standards in the BIC Exemption and Principal Transactions
Exemption, while compliance with other conditions for transactions
covered by these exemptions, such as requirements to make specific
disclosures and representations of fiduciary compliance in written
communications with investors, was postponed until January 1, 2018, by
which time the Department intended to complete the examination and
analysis directed by the Presidential Memorandum.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 82 FR 16902.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Request for Information
On July 6, 2017, the Department published in the Federal Register a
Request for Information (RFI). 82 FR 31278. The purpose of the RFI was
to augment some of the public commentary and input received in response
to the March 2, 2017, request for comments on issues raised in the
Presidential Memorandum. In particular, the RFI sought public input
that could form the basis of new exemptions or changes to the Rule and
PTEs. The RFI also specifically sought input regarding the advisability
of extending the January 1, 2018, applicability date of certain
provisions in the BIC Exemption, the Principal Transactions Exemption,
and PTE 84-24. Comments relating to extension of the January 1, 2018,
applicability date of certain provisions were requested by July 21,
2017. All other comments were requested by August 7, 2017. As of July
21, the Department had received approximately 60,000 comment and
petition letters expressing a wide range of views on whether the
Department should grant an additional delay and what should be the
duration of any such delay. These comments are discussed in Section C,
below, in connection with the proposed amendments.
B. Current Transition Period
BIC Exemption (PTE 2016-01) and Principal Transactions Exemption (PTE
2016-02)
Although the Fiduciary Rule, BIC Exemption, and Principal
Transactions Exemption first became applicable on June 9, 2017,
transition relief is provided throughout the current Transition Period,
which runs from June 9, 2017, through January 1, 2018. ``Financial
Institutions'' and ``Advisers,'' as defined in the exemptions, who wish
to rely on these exemptions for covered transactions during this period
must adhere to the ``Impartial Conduct Standards'' only. In general,
this means that Financial
[[Page 41367]]
Institutions and Advisers must give prudent advice that is in
retirement investors' best interest, charge no more than reasonable
compensation, and avoid misleading statements.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In the Principal Transactions Exemption, the Impartial
Conduct Standards specifically refer to the fiduciary's obligation
to seek to obtain the best execution reasonably available under the
circumstances with respect to the transaction, rather than to
receive no more than ``reasonable compensation.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The remaining conditions of the BIC Exemption would become
applicable on January 1, 2018, absent a further delay of their
applicability. This includes the requirement, for transactions
involving IRA owners, that the Financial Institution enter into an
enforceable written contract with the retirement investor. The contract
would include an enforceable promise to adhere to the Impartial Conduct
Standards, an express acknowledgement of fiduciary status, and a
variety of disclosures related to fees, services, and conflicts of
interest. IRA owners, who do not have statutory enforcement rights
under ERISA, would be able to enforce their contractual rights under
state law. Also, as of January 1, 2018, the exemption requires
Financial Institutions to adopt policies and procedures that meet
specified conflict-mitigation criteria. In particular, the policies and
procedures must be reasonably and prudently designed to ensure that
Advisers adhere to the Impartial Conduct Standards and must provide
that neither the Financial Institution nor (to the best of its
knowledge) its affiliates or related entities will use or rely on
quotas, appraisals, performance or personnel actions, bonuses,
contests, special awards, differential compensation, or other actions
or incentives that are intended or would reasonably be expected to
cause advisers to make recommendations that are not in the best
interest of the retirement investor.\5\ Financial Institutions would
also be required at that time to provide disclosures, both to the
individual retirement investor on a transaction basis, and on a Web
site.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ During the Transition Period, the Department expects
financial institutions to adopt such policies and procedures as they
reasonably conclude are necessary to ensure that advisers comply
with the impartial conduct standards. During that period, however,
the Department does not require firms and advisers to give their
customers a warranty regarding their adoption of specific best
interest policies and procedures, nor does it insist that they
adhere to all of the specific provisions of Section IV of the BIC
Exemption as a condition of compliance. Instead, financial
institutions retain flexibility to choose precisely how to safeguard
compliance with the impartial conduct standards, whether by tamping
down conflicts of interest associated with adviser compensation,
increased monitoring and surveillance of investment recommendations,
or other approaches or combinations of approaches.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Similarly, while the Principal Transactions Exemption is
conditioned solely on adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards
during the current Transition Period, its remaining conditions also
will become applicable on January 1, 2018, absent a further delay of
their applicability. The Principal Transactions Exemption permits
investment advice fiduciaries to sell to or purchase from plans or IRAs
investments in ``principal transactions'' and ``riskless principal
transactions''--transactions involving the sale from or purchase for
the Financial Institution's own inventory. Conditions scheduled to
become applicable on January 1, 2018, include a contract requirement
and a policies and procedures requirement that mirror the requirements
in the BIC Exemption. The Principal Transactions Exemption also
includes some conditions that are different from the BIC Exemption,
including credit and liquidity standards for debt securities sold to
plans and IRAs pursuant to the exemption and additional disclosure
requirements.
PTE 84-24
PTE 84-24, which applies to advisory transactions involving
insurance and annuity contracts and mutual fund shares, was most
recently amended in 2016 in conjunction with the development of the
Fiduciary Rule, BIC Exemption, and Principal Transactions Exemption.\6\
Among other changes, the amendments included new definitional terms,
added the Impartial Conduct Standards as requirements for relief, and
revoked relief for transactions involving fixed indexed annuity
contracts and variable annuity contracts, effectively requiring those
Advisers who receive conflicted compensation for recommending these
products to rely upon the BIC Exemption. However, except for the
Impartial Conduct Standards, which were applicable beginning June 9,
2017, the remaining amendments are not applicable until January 1,
2018. Thus, because the amendment revoking the availability of PTE 84-
24 for fixed indexed annuities is not applicable until January 1, 2018,
affected parties (including insurance intermediaries) may rely on PTE
84-24, subject to the existing conditions of the exemption and the
Impartial Conduct Standards, for recommendations involving all annuity
contracts during the Transition Period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ 81 FR 21147 (April 8, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Comments and Proposed Amendments
Question 1 of the RFI specifically asked whether a delay in the
January 1, 2018, applicability date of the provisions in the BIC
Exemption, Principal Transactions Exemption and amendments to PTE 84-24
would reduce burdens on financial services providers and benefit
retirement investors by allowing for more efficient implementation
responsive to recent market developments. This question also made
inquiry into risks, advantages, and costs and benefits associated with
such a delay.
Many commenters supported delaying the January 1, 2018,
applicability dates of these PTEs. For example, one commenter stated
that there is ``no question that the comprehensive reexamination
directed by the President cannot be completed by January 1, 2018,
especially where the record is replete with evidence that the result of
that review will be required revisions to the Rule and exemptions, all
of which take time.'' \7\ In addition, another commenter stated that it
believes ``a thorough and thoughtful re-assessment of the Fiduciary
Rule, with appropriate coordination with other regulators, will take
months'' and that if the Department does not delay the applicability
date during this review period, ``the industry has no choice but to
continue preparing for the Fiduciary Rule in a form that may never
become effective leading to significant wasted expenses that benefits
no one.'' \8\ Other commenters disagreed, however, asserting that full
application of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs were necessary to protect
retirement investors from conflicts of interests and that the
applicability dates should not have been delayed from April, 2017, and
that the January 1, 2018, date should not be further delayed.\9\ At the
same time, still others stated their view that the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs should be repealed and replaced, either with the original 1975
regulation or with a substantially revised rule.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Comment Letter #109 (Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association).
\8\ Comment Letter #181 (Voya Financial).
\9\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #273 (National Employment Law
Project) (``Because these workers need the protections afforded by
the full set of Conditions as soon as possible, NELP strongly
opposes further delay of the application of any of the Conditions.
NELP also disagrees with the Department's decision to even consider
an additional delay in the applicability date of the Conditions.'').
\10\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #316 (Aeon Wealth Management)
(``The current Fiduciary Rule should not be amended or extended in
any way. IT SHOULD BE COMPLETELY ELIMINATED! It is the first step
towards the government taking control of everyone's personal
retirement assets.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 41368]]
Among the commenters supporting a delay, some suggested a fixed
length of time and others suggested a more open-ended delay. Of those
commenters suggesting a fixed length delay, there was no consensus
among them regarding the appropriate length, but the range generally
was 1 to 2 years from the current applicability date of January 1,
2018.\11\ Those commenters suggesting a more open-ended framework for
measuring the length of the delay generally recommended that the
applicability date be delayed for at least as long as it takes the
Department to finish the reexamination directed by the President. These
commenters suggested that the length of the delay should be measured
from the date the Department, after finishing the reexamination, either
decided that there will be no new amendments or exemptions or the date
the Department publishes a new exemption or major revisions to the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #25 (National Federation of
Independent Business (delay at least until January 1, 2019); Comment
Letter #159 (Davis & Harman) (delay until at least September 1,
2019); Comment Letter #183 (Morgan Stanley) (at least 18 months);
Comment Letter #196 (American Council of Life Insurers) (one year);
Comment Letter #208 (Capital Group) (at least January 1, 2019);
Comment Letter #246 (Ameriprise Financial) (supports a two-year
delay of the January 1, 2018 compliance date of the Rule); Comment
Letter #258 (Wells Fargo) (delay at least 24 months); Comment Letter
#290 (Annexus and other entities/Drinker, Biddle&Reath) (delay at
least until January 1, 2019); Comment Letter #291 (Farmers Financial
Solutions) (delay until April 2019).
\12\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #134 (Insured Retirement
Institute (delay until January 1, 2020, or the date that is 18
months after the Department takes final action on the Fiduciary
Rule); Comment Letter #229 (Investment Company Institute) (one year
after finalization of modified rule); Comment Letter #109
(Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association) (a minimum
of 24 months after completion of the review and publication of final
rules); Comment Letter #266 (Edward D. Jones & Co.) (later of July
1, 2019 or one year after the promulgation of any material
amendments); Comment Letter #251 (Teachers Insurance and Annuity
Association of America) (at least one year after the Department has
promulgated changes to the Rule and PTEs); Comment Letter #196
(Prudential Financial) (at least 12 months with new applicability
dates in conjunction with proposed changes); Comment Letter #212
(American Bankers Association) (at least twelve months after the
effective date of any changes or revisions); Comment Letter #211
(Transamerica) (meaningful period following promulgation of changes
to the Fiduciary Rule); Comment Letter #239 (Great-West Financial)
(provide no less than a 12 month notice of existing/newly proposed
exemptions; and no less than a 12 month notice following any DOL-SEC
standards prior to their effective date); Comment Letter #281 (Bank
of New York Mellon) (delay for a reasonable period that will allow
Department to complete review, finalize changes, and for firms to
implement the processes); Comment Letter #259 (Fidelity Investments)
(delay the requirements for 6 months following notice if there are
no changes to the rule; if there are changes, sufficient additional
time in light of the changes); Comment Letter #248 (Bank of America)
(delay the applicability date until the DOL finalizes its work and
financial firms have a reasonable opportunity to implement its
requirements); Comment Letter #222 (Vanguard) (at least 12 to 18
months from the date that the Department publishes its amended Final
Rule, including exemptions, or confirms that there will be no other
amendments or exemptions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regardless of whether advocating for a fixed or open-ended delay,
many commenters focused on the uncertain fate of the PTEs. A
significant number of industry commenters, for example, stated that
because the Department, as part of its ongoing examination under the
Presidential Memorandum, has indicated that it is actively considering
changes or alternatives to the BIC Exemption, the January 1, 2018,
applicability date should be delayed at least until such changes or
alternatives are finalized, with a reasonable period beyond that date
for compliance. Otherwise, according to these commenters, costly
systems changes to comply with the BIC Exemption by January 1, 2018,
must commence or conclude immediately, and these costs could prove
unnecessary in whole or in part depending on the eventual regulatory
outcome. Industry commenters stated that it is widely expected within
the financial industry that there will be certain change(s) to the Rule
or to the exemption pursuant to the Presidential Memorandum. Industry
commenters also expressed concerns that uncertainty concerning expected
changes is likely to lead to consumer confusion and inefficient
industry development. Several industry commenters indicated their
concern that, without additional delays, compliance efforts may prove
to be a waste of time and money.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See Comment Letter #180 (TD Ameritrade). See also Comment
Letter #212 (American Bankers Association) (``it is difficult for
institutions to determine where to allocate resources for compliance
when the Department itself is in the process of re-examining the
Fiduciary Rule's scope and content.''); Comment Letter #211
(Transamerica) (``[f]ailure to extend the January 1 applicability
date will result in: (a) Companies such as Transamerica continuing
to incur costs and business model changes to prepare for and
implement a regulatory regime that might differ materially from the
regime that results from the Rule in effect today. . ..''); See
Comment Letter #109 (Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association); Comment Letter #293 (the SPARK Institute, Inc.)
(``[u]ntil we know whether the Department intends to make changes to
avoid the Regulation's negative impacts, and what those changes will
be, our implementation efforts will be chasing a moving target. That
approach not only results in significant inefficiencies, it also may
result in potentially duplicative and unnecessary compliance costs
if the Department modifies the Regulation. If the Department is
seriously considering ways to reduce those burdens, it must delay
the January 1, 2018 applicability date. Otherwise, firms will be
forced to continue preparing for a rule that may never go into
effect as currently drafted.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many commenters argued that, in spite of the level of uncertainty
surrounding the ultimate fate of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, the
Department will need to at least partially modify the Fiduciary Rule
and PTEs. These commenters cite the President's Memorandum dated
February 3, 2017, requiring the Department to prepare an updated
analysis of the likely impact of the Fiduciary Rule on access to
retirement information and financial advice, and predict that this
analysis will affirm their view that regulatory changes are necessary
to avoid adverse impacts on advice, access, costs, and litigation.
Many commenters argue that a delay in the January 1, 2018,
applicability date is needed in order for the Department and Secretary
of Labor Acosta to coordinate with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) under the new leadership of Chairman Clayton. These
commenters assert that meaningful coordination simply is not possible
between now and January 1, 2018, on the many important issues affecting
retirement investors raised by the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, including
the potential confusion for investors caused by different rules and
regulations applying to different types of investment accounts. One
commenter suggested that, absent a delay in the January 1, 2018,
applicability date, there will be no genuine opportunity for the
Department to coordinate with the SEC under the new leadership regimes.
The full Fiduciary Rule would become applicable before the SEC had done
its own rulemaking, leaving the SEC no choice except to apply the
standards in the Fiduciary Rule to all of those investments subject to
SEC jurisdiction, write a different rule, which would exacerbate the
current confusion and inconsistencies, or to do nothing, according to
one commenter.\14\ On June 1, 2017, the Chairman of the SEC issued a
statement seeking public comments on the standards of conduct for
investment advisers and broker dealers when they provide investment
advice to retail investors. One commenter asserted that coordination
``suggests that the Department of Labor should await the SEC's receipt
and evaluation of information.'' \15\ At least one commenter
[[Page 41369]]
believes that the outcome of such coordination should be that the SEC
adopts the concept of the Impartial Conduct Standards, as contained in
the PTEs, as a universal standard of care applicable to both brokerage
and advisory relationships.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Comment Letter #159 (Davis & Harman).
\15\ Comment Letter #18 (T. Rowe Price Associates). See also
Comment Letter #72 (National Association of Insurance and Financial
Advisors). ([C]oordination with the SEC, which currently is
undertaking a parallel public comment process, is essential.'')
Other commenters mentioned the need to coordinate with FINRA, state
insurance and other regulators in addition to the SEC. See, e.g.,
Comment Letter #196 (Prudential Financial) (``assess, in conjunction
with the SEC and the appropriate state regulatory bodies that also
have jurisdiction with regard to investment advice retirement
investors, the appropriate alignment of regulatory responsibility
and oversight''); Comment Letter #266 (Edward D. Jones and Co.);
Comment Letter #134 (Insured Retirement Institute). See also Comment
Letter #212 American Bankers Association (mentioning the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve, and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation).
\16\ See Comment Letter #375 (Stifel Financial) (``As the SEC
and DOL consider and coordinate on developing appropriate standards
of conduct for retail retirement and taxable accounts, I propose a
simple solution: the SEC adopt a principles-based standard of care
for Brokerage and Advisory Accounts that incorporates the `Impartial
Conduct Standards'' as set forth in the DOL's Best Interest Contract
Exemption.'' And to achieve consistency between retirement and
taxable accounts, ``[t]he additional provisions of the Best Interest
Contract should be eliminated.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to recent and ongoing market developments, many
commenters stated that a delay would allow for more efficient
implementation responsive to these innovations, thereby reducing
burdens on financial services providers and benefiting retirement
investors. For instance, one industry commenter asserted that a delay
in the applicability date would provide financial institutions with the
necessary time to develop ``clean shares'' programs and minimize
disruption for retirement investors. The commenter stated that
``[w]ithout a delay in the applicability date, a broker-dealer firm
that believes the direction of travel is towards the clean share will
be forced to either eliminate access to commissionable investment
advice or make the fundamental business changes required by the Best
Interest Contract Exemption in order to continue offering traditional
commissionable mutual funds. Both approaches would be incredibly
disruptive for investors who could have little choice but to either
move to a fee-based advisory program in order to maintain access to
advice or enter into a Best Interest Contract only to be transitioned
into a clean shares program shortly thereafter, and would make it less
likely that firms will evolve to clean shares.'' \17\ A different
industry commenter noted that serious consideration is being given to
the use of mutual fund clean share classes in both fee-based and
commissionable account arrangements, but that certain enumerated
obstacles prevent their rapid adoption, stating that ``even absent any
changes to the rule, more time is needed to develop clean shares and
other long-term solutions to mitigate conflicts of interest.'' \18\
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\17\ Comment Letter #208 (Capital Group).
\18\ Comment Letter #229 (Investment Company Institute).
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Consumer commenters expressed a concern with using recent and
ongoing market developments as a basis for a blanket delay. It was
asserted that if the Department decides to move forward with a delay,
it should only allow firms to take advantage of the delay if they
affirmatively show they have already taken concrete steps to harness
recent market developments for their compliance plans. For example, one
commenter contends that if a broker-dealer has decided that it is more
efficient to move straight to clean shares rather than implementing the
rule using T shares, the broker-dealer should, as a condition of delay,
be required to provide evidence to the Department of the steps that it
already has taken to distribute clean shares, including, for example,
providing evidence of efforts to negotiate sellers agreements with
funds that are offering clean shares. This commenter stated that the
Department ``should not provide a blanket delay to all firms, including
those firms that have not taken any meaningful, concrete steps to
harness recent market developments and have no plans to do so. This
narrowly tailored approach has the advantage of benefitting only those
firms and, in turn, their customers that are using the delay
productively rather than providing an undue benefit to firms that are
merely looking for reasons to further stall implementation.'' \19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of America). See
also Comment Letter #235 (Better Markets) (``In short, it would be
arbitrary and capricious for the DOL to deprive millions of American
workers and retirees the full protections and remedies provided by
the Rule and the exemptions simply because the DOL may conclude that
some adjustments to the Rule would be appropriate, or because some
members of industry claim they need additional time to develop new
products to help them more profitably navigate the Rule and the
exemptions.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to risks to retirement investors from a delay, many
industry commenters argue that the risks of a delay are very minimal,
as they have largely been mitigated by the existing regulatory
structure and the applicability of the Impartial Conduct Standards. For
instance, regarding potential additional costs to retirement investors
associated with any further delay, many industry commenters stated that
these concerns have been mitigated, and indeed addressed by the
Department, through the imposition of the Impartial Conduct Standards
beginning on June 9, 2017. Various commenters indicated that Financial
Institutions have, in fact, taken steps to ensure compliance with the
Impartial Conduct Standards. Commenters have also pointed to the SEC
and FINRA regulatory regimes as a means to ensure consumers are
appropriately protected. It is the position of these commenters that
there is little, if any, risk that consumers will be harmed by a delay
of the January 1, 2018 applicability date.\20\
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\20\ See Comment Letter #147 (American Retirement Association);
Comment Letter #222 (Vanguard) (``there is no need to rush to apply
the remaining provisions of the Rule to protect investors because
the Impartial Conduct Standards that are already applicable will
provide sufficient protection for them during the 12-18 month
implementation period we propose.''); Comment Letter #180 (TD
Ameritrade); Comment Letters #111 and #131 (BARR Financial
Services); Comment Letter #134 (Insured Retirement Institute).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By contrast, many commenters representing consumers believe there
is risk to consumers in further delaying these PTEs from becoming fully
applicable on January 1, 2018. One commenter, for example, focused on
the contract provision of the exemption, and expressed concern that
delaying that provision would significantly undermine the protections
and effectiveness of the rule.\21\ Other commenters pointed to the
number of covered transactions happening every day and emphasized the
compounding nature of the harm if the applicability date is further
delayed.\22\ According to these commenters, retirement savings face
undue risk without all of the protections of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs. One commenter asserted that ``absent the contract requirement and
the legal enforcement mechanism that goes with it, firms would no
longer have a powerful incentive to comply with the Impartial Conduct
Standards, implement effective anti-conflict policies and procedures,
or carefully police conflicts of interest. It could be too easy for
firms to claim they are complying with the PTEs, but still pay advisers
in ways that encourage and reward them not to.'' \23\
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\21\ See Comment Letter #284 (Coalition of 20 Signatories,
including AFGE, AFL-CIO, AFSCME, SEIU, NAEFE, Fund Democracy, and
others); see also Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of
America).
\22\ See Comment Letter #213 (AARP). See also Comment Letter
#216 (American Association for Justice) (``As we previously
stressed, the earlier delays have harmed investors, and any further
delay would augment this problem rather than alleviating it.'').
\23\ Comment Letter #238 (Consumer Federation of America).
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Many commenters asserted that a delay would be advantageous both to
retirement investors and firms; and, conversely, that rigid adherence
to the
[[Page 41370]]
January 1, 2018, applicability date would be harmful to both groups.
With respect to firms, it was argued by many that the harm in terms of
capital expenditures and outlays to meet PTE requirements (such as
contract, warranty, policies and procedures, and disclosures) that are
actively under consideration by the Department and that could change
(or even be repealed) should be obvious to the Department.\24\ With
respect to harm to retirement investors from not delaying the
applicability date, on the other hand, one commenter stated that ``the
stampede to fee-based arrangements will leave many small and mid-sized
investors without access to advice . . .'' and that ``retirement
investors are losing access to some retirement products they need to
ensure guaranteed lifetime incomes, including variable annuities, whose
usage has plummeted. These market developments will cause more leakage
and reduce already inadequate retirement resources for millions of
retirement savers.'' \25\ A different commenter stated that ``some
firms announced that retirement investors seeking advice would be
prohibited from commission-based accounts or would be barred from
purchasing certain products, such as mutual funds and ETFs, in
commission-based accounts'' and that ``[u]ntil the industry, with the
assistance of regulators, is able to resolve availability of accounts
and products previously available to retirement investors, and the
mechanisms for payment for advice services, there will be disruption
both to the industry and to retirement plans and investors seeking
advice.''\26\ Another commenter stated that ``it is easy to see how the
average client will be confused by correspondence announcing changes to
their investment products and business relationship (if the Rule
becomes applicable), followed by correspondence announcing additional
changes being made for yet another new regulatory scheme (if the Rule
is rescinded or revised).'' \27\
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\24\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #229 (Investment Company
Institute) (``a delay would result in substantial cost-savings for
financial institutions by allow them to avoid the significant and
burdensome costs of implementation that will likely ultimately prove
unnecessary.''); Comment Letter #251 (Teachers Insurance and Annuity
Association of America) (``we are very concerned that continuing to
make significant staff and financial investments to satisfy the
January 1 applicability date will ultimately prove both a
considerable waste of resources and a source of confusion for
retirement investors.''); Comment Letter #109 (Securities Industry
and Financial Markets Association) (``[d]espite the uncertainties,
our members have spent hundreds of millions of dollars thus far;
causing them to spend still more without certainty of the ultimate
requirements is not responsible.''); See also Comment Letter #196
(Prudential Financial), Comment Letter #169 (Madison Avenue
Securities), Comment Letter #280 (Guardian Life Insurance Company of
America) and Comment Letter #231 (Massachusetts Mutual Life
Insurance Company).
\25\ Comment Letter #256 (Jackson National Life Insurance
Company). See also Comment Letter #211 (Transamerica) (pointing to
reduced annuity sales).
\26\ Comment Letter #18 (T. Rowe Price Associates).
\27\ Comment Letter #90 (True Capital Advisors).
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Many commenters drew attention to pending litigation challenging
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. In this regard, a commenter stated that
``[i]t would be poor process for DOL to allow the remaining
requirements . . . to take effect on January 1, 2018, without providing
detailed and clear guidance on critical open legal issues generated
entirely by the DOL's own regulatory actions. '' \28\ Another commenter
similarly suggested that ``[a]t the very least, an extension is needed
to ensure that the regulation accurately reflects the Department's
position in litigation'' regarding the limitation on arbitration.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Comment Letter #256 (Jackson National Life Insurance
Company).
\29\ Comment Letter #8 (U.S. Chamber of Commerce).
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Regarding the contract and warranty requirements, a significant
number of commenters remain divided on these provisions, with many
expressing concern about potential negative implications for access to
advice and investor costs. Many financial service providers have
expressed particular concern about the potential for class litigation
and firm liability, and that absent a delay of those provisions, there
will be a reduction in advice and services to consumers, particularly
those with small accounts who may be most in need of good investment
advice.\30\ They have suggested that alternative approaches might
promote the Department's interest in compliance with fiduciary
standards, while minimizing the risk that firms restrict access to
valuable advice and products based on liability concerns. These
commenters argue that a delay of the applicability date is needed to
allow the Department an opportunity to review the RFI responses and
develop alternatives to these requirements. For instance, one commenter
stated that ``the Department should further delay the January 1, 2018
applicability date of the contract, disclosure and warranty
requirements of the BICE, Principal Transactions Exemption, and
amendments to PTE 84-24, due to the high level of controversy
surrounding the increased liabilities associated with these
requirements--particularly when their incremental benefits are weighed
against their harm to the retirement savings product marketplace.''
\31\
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\30\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #293 (SPARK Institute, Inc.)
(``[i]n response to the new definition of fiduciary investment
advice that became applicable on June 9, 2017, some retirement
investors have already been cut off from certain retirement
products, offerings, and information. Smaller plans are losing
access to information and guidance from their service providers.
Also, because of increased litigation risk associated with the
[PTEs] provisions set to become applicable on January 1, 2018, this
contraction in retirement services will only become worse if the
Department fails to delay the upcoming applicability date and
materially revise the [Fiduciary Rule and PTEs].''). See also
Comment Letter #289 (Sorrento Pacific Financial) (``We believe an
extension of the Rule's January 1, 2018 applicability date necessary
for the Department to thoroughly examine the Rule for adverse
impacts on Americans' access to retirement investment advice and
assistance, as required by the President's Memorandum. We are deeply
concerned that the Rule will cause significant harm to retirement
investors by restricting their access to retirement investment
advice and services and subjecting firms to meritless litigation due
to overly broad definitions contained in the Rule, and so we
strongly support the Department in considering a further delay of
the Rule and undertaking this examination.'').
\31\ Comment Letter #267 (American Council of Life Insurers).
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Based on its review and evaluation of the public comments, the
Department is proposing to extend the Transition Period in the BIC
Exemption and Principal Transaction Exemption for 18 months until July
1, 2019, and to delay the applicability date of certain amendments to
PTE 84-24 for the same period. The same rules and standards in effect
now would remain in effect throughout the duration of the extended
Transition Period, if adopted. Thus, Financial Institutions and
Advisers would have to give prudent advice that is in retirement
investors' best interest, charge no more than reasonable compensation,
and avoid misleading statements. It is based on the continued adherence
to these fundamental protections that the Department, pursuant to 29
U.S.C. 1108, would consider granting the proposed extension until July
1, 2019.\32\
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\32\ On May 22, 2017, the Department issued a temporary
enforcement policy covering the transition period between June 9,
2017, and January 1, 2018, during which the Department will not
pursue claims against investment advice fiduciaries who are working
diligently and in good faith to comply with their fiduciary duties
and to meet the conditions of the PTEs, or otherwise treat those
investment advice fiduciaries as being in violation of their
fiduciary duties and not compliant with the PTEs. See Field
Assistance Bulletin 2017-02 (May 22, 2017). Comments are solicited
on whether to extend this policy for the same period covered by the
proposed extension of the Transition Period.
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The Department believes a delay may be necessary and appropriate
for multiple reasons. To begin with, the Department has not yet
completed the reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, as directed
by the President on
[[Page 41371]]
February 3, 2017. More time is needed to carefully and thoughtfully
review the substantial commentary received in response to the March 2,
2017, solicitation for comments and to honor the President's directive
to take a hard look at any potential undue burden. Whether, and to what
extent, there will be changes to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs as a
result of this reexamination is unknown until its completion. The
examination will help identify any potential alternative exemptions or
conditions that could reduce costs and increase benefits to all
affected parties, without unduly compromising protections for
retirement investors. The Department anticipates that it will have a
much clearer image of the range of such alternatives once it carefully
reviews the responses to the RFI. The Department also anticipates it
will propose in the near future a new and more streamlined class
exemption built in large part on recent innovations in the financial
services industry. However, neither such a proposal nor any other
changes or modifications to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, if any,
realistically could be implemented by the current January 1, 2018,
applicability date. Nor would that timeframe accommodate the
Department's desire to coordinate with the SEC in the development of
any such proposal or changes. The Chairman of the SEC has recently
published a Request for Information seeking input on the ``standards of
conduct for investment advisers and broker-dealers,'' and has welcomed
the Department's invitation to engage constructively as the Commission
moves forward with its examination of the standards of conduct
applicable to investment advisers and broker-dealers, and related
matters. Absent the proposed delay, however, Financial Institutions and
Advisers would feel compelled to ready themselves for the provisions
that become applicable on January 1, 2018, despite the possibility of
alternatives on the horizon. Accordingly, the proposed delay avoids
obligating financial services providers to incur costs to comply with
conditions, which may be revised, repealed, or replaced, as well as
attendant investor confusion.
Based on the evidence before it at this time while it continues to
conduct this examination, the Department is proposing a time-certain
delay of 18 months. The Department is also interested in an alternative
approach raised by several commenters to the RFI, however--that the
Department institute a delay that would end a specified period after a
certain action on the part of the Department, e.g., a delay lasting
until 12 months after the Department concludes its review as directed
by the Presidential Memorandum. The Department is concerned that this
type of delay would provide insufficient certainty to Financial
Institutions and other market participants who are working to comply
with the full range of conditions under the relevant PTEs. Further, the
Department is concerned that this type of delay would unnecessarily
harm consumers by adding uncertainty and confusion to the market.
Nevertheless, the Department requests comments on whether it could
structure the delay in a way that could be beneficial to retirement
investors and to market participants. If commenters think that such a
structure would be beneficial, the Department requests comments
regarding what event or action on the part of the Department should
begin the period by which the end of the delay is measured (e.g., the
end of the Department's examination pursuant to the Presidential
Memorandum, issuance of a proposed or final new PTEs or a statement
that the Department does not intend any further changes or revisions).
Separately, the Department also requests comments on whether it
would be beneficial to adopt a tiered approach. For example, this could
be a final rule that delayed the Transition Period until the earlier or
the later of (a) a date certain or (b) the end of a period following
the occurrence of a defined event. The Department is particularly
interested in comments as to whether such a tiered approach would
provide sufficient certainty to be beneficial, and how best it could
communicate with stakeholders the determination that one date or the
other would trigger compliance. The Department is interested in
comments that provide insight as to any relative benefits or harms of
these three different delay approaches: (1) A delay set for a time
certain, including the 18-months proposed by this document, (2) a delay
that ends a specified period after the occurrence of a specific event,
and (3) a tiered approach where the delay is set for the earlier of or
the later of (a) a time certain and (b) the end of a specified period
after the occurrence of a specific event.
Finally, several commenters suggested that the Department condition
any delay of the Transition Period on the behavior of the entity
seeking relief under the Transition Period. These commenters suggested
generally that any delay should be conditioned, for example, on a
Financial Institution's showing that it has, or a promise that it will,
take steps to harness recent innovations in investment products and
services, such as ``clean shares.'' Conditions of this type generally
seem more relevant in the context of considering the development of
additional and more streamlined exemption approaches that take into
account recent marketplace innovations and less appropriate and germane
in the context of a decision whether to extend the Transition Period.
Although this proposal, therefore, does not adopt this approach, the
Department solicits comments on this approach, in particular the
benefits and costs of this suggestion, and ways in which the Department
could ensure the workability of such an approach.
D. Regulatory Impact Analysis
The Department expects that this proposed transition period
extension would produce benefits that justify associated costs. The
proposed extension would avert the possibility of a costly and
disorderly transition from the Impartial Conduct Standards to full
compliance with the exemption conditions, and thereby reduce some
compliance costs. As stated above, the Department currently is engaged
in the process of reviewing the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs as directed in
the Presidential Memorandum and reviewing comments received in response
to the RFI. As part of this process, the Department will determine
whether further changes to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs are necessary.
Although many firms have taken steps to ensure that they are meeting
their fiduciary obligations and satisfying the Impartial Conduct
Standards of the PTEs, they are encountering uncertainty regarding the
potential future revision or possible repeal of the Fiduciary Rule and
PTEs. Therefore, as reflected in the comments, many financial firms
have slowed or halted their efforts to prepare for full compliance with
the exemption conditions that currently are scheduled to become
applicable on January 1, 2018, because they are concerned about
committing resources to comply with PTE conditions that ultimately
could be modified or repealed. This proposed applicability date
extension will assure stakeholders that they will not be subject to the
other exemption conditions in the BIC and the Principal Transaction
PTEs until at least July 1, 2019. Of course, the benefits of extending
the transition period generally will be proportionately larger for
those firms that currently have committed fewer resources to comply
with the full exemption conditions. The Department's objective is to
complete its
[[Page 41372]]
review pursuant to the President's Memorandum, analyze comments
received in response to the RFI, and propose and finalize any changes
to the Rule or PTEs sufficiently before July 1, 2019, to provide firms
with sufficient time to design and implement an orderly transition
process.
The Department believes that investor losses from the proposed
transition period extension could be relatively small. Because the
Fiduciary Rule and the Impartial Conduct Standards became applicable on
June 9, 2017, the Department believes that firms already have made
efforts to adhere to the rule and those standards. Thus, the Department
believes that relative to deferring all of the provisions of the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, a substantial portion of the investor gains
predicted in the Department's 2016 regulatory impact analysis of the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs (2016 RIA) would remain intact for the proposed
extended transition period.
1. Executive Order 12866 Statement
This proposal is an economically significant action within the
meaning of section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866, because it would
likely have an effect on the economy of $100 million in at least one
year. Accordingly, the Department has considered the costs and benefits
of the proposal, which has been reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB).
a. Investor Gains
The Department's 2016 RIA estimated a portion of the potential
gains for IRA investors at between $33 billion and $36 billion over the
first 10 years for one segment of the market and category of conflicts
of interest. It predicted, but did not quantify, additional gains for
both IRA and ERISA plan investors.
With respect to this proposal, the Department considered whether
investor losses might result. Beginning on June 9, 2017, Financial
Institutions and Advisers generally are required to (1) make
recommendations that are in their client's best interest (i.e., IRA
recommendations that are prudent and loyal), (2) avoid misleading
statements, and (3) charge no more than reasonable compensation for
their services. If they fully adhere to these requirements, the
Department expects that affected investors will generally receive a
significant portion of the estimated gains. However, because the PTE
conditions are intended to support and provide accountability
mechanisms for such adherence (e.g., conditions requiring advisers to
provide a written acknowledgement of their fiduciary status and
adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards and enter into enforceable
contracts with IRA investors) the Department acknowledges that the
proposed delay of the PTE conditions may result in deferral of some of
the estimated investor gains. One RFI commenter suggested that an
additional one-year extension of the transition period during which the
full PTE conditions would not apply would reduce the incentive for
mutual fund companies to market lower-cost and higher-performing funds,
which will reduce consumer access to such products, resulting in
consumer losses. This commenter argued that in the case of IRA
rollovers, the consumer losses from continued conflicted advice and
reduced access to more consumer-friendly investment products could
compound for decades.
Advisers who presently are ERISA-plan fiduciaries are especially
likely to satisfy fully the PTEs' Impartial Conduct Standards before
July 1, 2019, because they are subject to ERISA standards of prudence
and loyalty and thus would be subject to claims for civil liability
under ERISA if they violate their fiduciary obligations or fail to
satisfy the Impartial Conduct Standards if they use an exemption.
Moreover, fiduciary advisers who do not provide impartial advice as
required by the Rule and PTEs in the IRA market would violate the
prohibited transaction rules of the Code and become subject to the
prohibited transaction excise tax. Even though advisers currently are
not specifically required by the terms of these PTEs to notify
retirement investors of the Impartial Conduct Standards and to
acknowledge their fiduciary status, many investors expect they are
entitled to advice that adheres to a fiduciary standard because of the
publicity the final rule and PTEs have received from the Department and
media, and the Department understands that many advisers notified
consumers voluntarily about the imposition of the standard and their
adherence to that standard as a best practice.
Comments received by the Department indicate that many financial
institutions already have completed or largely completed work to
establish policies and procedures necessary to make many of the
business structure and practice shifts necessary to support compliance
with the Fiduciary Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards (e.g., drafting
and implementing training for staff, drafting client correspondence and
explanations of revised product and service offerings, negotiating
changes to agreements with product manufacturers as part of their
approach to compliance with the PTEs, changing employee and agent
compensation structures, and designing product offerings that mitigate
conflicts of interest). The Department believes that many financial
institutions are using this compliance infrastructure to ensure that
they currently are meeting the requirements of the Fiduciary Rule and
Impartial Conduct Standards, which the Department believes will largely
protect the investor gains estimated in the 2016 RIA.\33\
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\33\ The Department's baseline for this RIA includes all current
rules and regulations governing investment advice including those
that would become applicable on January 1, 2018, absent this
proposed delay. The RIA did not quantify incremental gains by each
particular aspect of the rule and PTEs.
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b. Cost Savings
Based on comments received in response to the RFI that are
discussed in Section C, above, the Department believes firms that are
fiduciaries under the Fiduciary Rule have committed resources to
implementing procedures to support compliance with their fiduciary
obligations. This may include changing their compensation structures
and monitoring the practices and procedures of their advisers to ensure
that conflicts of interest do not cause violations of the Fiduciary
Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards of the PTEs and maintaining
sufficient records to corroborate that they are complying with the
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. These firms have considerable flexibility to
choose precisely how they will achieve compliance with the PTEs during
the proposed extended transition period. The Department does not have
sufficient data to estimate such costs; therefore, they are not
quantified.
Some commenters have asserted that the proposed transition period
extension could result in cost savings for firms compared to the costs
that were estimated in the Department's 2016 RIA to the extent that the
requirements of the Fiduciary Rule and PTE conditions are modified in a
way that would result in less expensive compliance costs. However, the
Department generally believes that start-up costs not yet incurred for
requirements now scheduled to become applicable on January 1, 2018,
should not be included, at this time, as a cost savings associated with
this proposal because the proposal would merely delay the full
implementation of certain conditions in the PTEs until July 1, 2019,
while the Department considers whether to propose changes and
alternatives to the exemptions. The Department would be required to
assume for purposes of this regulatory
[[Page 41373]]
impact analysis that those start-up costs that have not been incurred
generally would be delayed rather than avoided unless or until the
Department acts to modify the compliance obligations of firms and
advisers to make them more efficient. Nonetheless, even based on that
assumption, there may be some cost savings that could be quantified as
arising from the delay being proposed in this document because some
ongoing costs would not be incurred until July 1, 2019. The Department
has taken two approaches to quantifying the savings resulting from the
delay in incurring ongoing costs: (1) Quantifying the costs based on a
shift in the time horizon of the costs (i.e., comparing the present
value of the costs of complying over a ten year period beginning on
January 1, 2018 with the costs of complying, instead, over a ten year
period beginning on July 1, 2019); and (2) quantifying the reduced
costs during the 18 month period of delay from January 1, 2018 to July
1, 2019, during which regulated parties would otherwise have had to
comply with the full conditions of the BIC Exemption and Principal
Transaction Exemption but for the delay.
The first of the two approaches reflects the time value of money
(i.e., the idea that money available at the present time is worth more
than the same amount of money in the future, because that money can
earn interest). The deferral of ongoing costs by 18 months will allow
the regulated community to use money they would have spent on ongoing
compliance costs for other purposes during that time period. The
Department estimates that the ten-year present value of the cost
savings arising from this 18 month deferral of ongoing compliance
costs, and the regulated community's resulting ability to use the money
for other purposes is $551.6 million using a three percent discount
rate \34\ and $1.0 billion using a seven percent discount rate.\35\
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\34\ Annualized to $64.7 million per year.
\35\ Annualized to $143.9 million per year.
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The second of the two approaches simply estimates the expenses
foregone during the period from January 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019 as a
result of the delay. When the Department published the 2016 Final Rule
and accompanying PTEs, it calculated that the total ongoing compliance
costs of the rule and PTEs were $1.5 billion annually. Therefore, the
Department estimates the ten-year present value of the cost savings of
firms not being required to incur ongoing compliance costs during an 18
month delay would be approximately $2.2 billion using a three percent
discount rate \36\ and $2.0 billion using a seven percent discount
rate.37 38
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\36\ Annualized to $252.1 million per year.
\37\ Annualized to $291.1 million per year.
\38\ The Department notes that firms may be incurring some costs
to comply with the impartial conduct standards; however, it has no
data to enable it to estimate these costs. The Department solicits
comments on the costs of complying with the impartial conduct
standards, and how these costs interact with the costs of all other
facets of compliance with the conditions of the PTEs.
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Based on its progress thus far with the review and reexamination
directed by the President, however, the Department believes there may
be evidence of alternatives that reduce costs and increase benefits to
all affected parties, while maintaining protections for retirement
investors. The Department anticipates that it will have a much clearer
image of the range of such alternatives once it completes a careful
review of the data and evidence submitted in response to the RFI.
The Department also cannot determine at this time to what degree
the infrastructure that affected firms have already established to
ensure compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs exemptions would be
sufficient to facilitate compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs
conditions if they are modified in the future.
c. Alternatives Considered
While the Department considered several alternatives that were
informed by public comments, this proposal likely would yield the most
desirable outcome including avoidance of costly market disruptions and
investor losses. In weighing different options, the Department took
numerous factors into account. The Department's objective was to avoid
unnecessary confusion and uncertainty in the investment advice market,
facilitate continued marketplace innovation, and minimize investor
losses.
The Department considered not proposing any extension of the
transition period, which would mean that the remaining conditions in
the PTEs would become applicable on January 1, 2018. The Department is
not pursuing this alternative, however, because it would not provide
sufficient time for the Department to complete its ongoing review of,
or propose and finalize any changes to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.
Moreover, absent the proposed extension of the transition period,
Financial Institutions and Advisers would feel compelled to prepare for
full compliance with PTE conditions that become applicable on January
1, 2018, the applicability date of the additional PTE conditions
despite the possibility that the Department could adopt more efficient
alternatives. This could lead to unnecessary compliance costs and
market disruptions. As compared to a shorter delay with the possibility
of consecutive additional delays, if needed, this proposal would
provide more certainty for affected stakeholders because it sets a firm
date for full compliance, which would allow for proper planning and
reliance. The Department's objective would be to complete its review of
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs pursuant to the President's Memorandum and
the RFI responses sufficiently in advance of July 1, 2019, to provide
firms with enough time to prepare for whatever action is prompted by
the review. As discussed above, the Department believes that investor
losses associated with this proposed extension would be relatively
small. The fact that the Fiduciary Rule and the Impartial Conduct
Standards are now in effect makes it likely that retirement investors
will experience much of the potential gains from a higher conduct
standard and minimizes the potential for an undue reduction in those
gains as compared to the full protections of all the PTE conditions as
discussed in the 2016 Regulatory Impact Analysis.
2. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.)
prohibits federal agencies from conducting or sponsoring a collection
of information from the public without first obtaining approval from
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). See 44 U.S.C. 3507.
Additionally, members of the public are not required to respond to a
collection of information, nor be subject to a penalty for failing to
respond, unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number.
See 44 U.S.C. 3512.
OMB has previously approved information collections contained in
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. The Department now is proposing to extend
the transition period for the full conditions of the PTEs associated
with its Fiduciary Rule until July 1, 2019. The Department is not
proposing to modify the substance of the information collections at
this time; however, the current OMB approval periods of the information
collection requests (ICRs) expire prior to the new proposed
applicability date for the full conditions of the PTEs as they
currently exist. Therefore, many of the information collections will
remain inactive for the remainder of the current ICR approval periods.
The ICRs contained in the exemptions are discussed below.
[[Page 41374]]
PTE 2016-01, the Best Interest Contract Exemption: The information
collections in PTE 2016-01, the BIC Exemption, are approved under OMB
Control Number 1210-0156 through June 30, 2019. The exemption requires
disclosure of material conflicts of interest and basic information
relating to those conflicts and the advisory relationship (Sections II
and III), contract disclosures, contracts and written policies and
procedures (Section II), pre-transaction (or point of sale) disclosures
(Section III(a)), web-based disclosures (Section III(b)), documentation
regarding recommendations restricted to proprietary products or
products that generate third party payments (Section (IV), notice to
the Department of a Financial Institution's intent to rely on the PTE,
and maintenance of records necessary to prove that the conditions of
the PTE have been met (Section V). Although the start-up costs of the
information collections as they are set forth in the current PTE may
not be incurred prior to June 30, 2019 due to uncertainty around the
Department's ongoing consideration of whether to propose changes and
alternatives to the exemptions, they are reflected in the revised
burden estimate summary below. The ongoing costs of the information
collections will remain inactive through the remainder of the current
approval period.
For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81
FR 21002, 21071.
PTE 2016-02, the Prohibited Transaction Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (Principal Transactions Exemption):
The information collections in PTE 2016-02, the Principal Transactions
Exemption, are approved under OMB Control Number 1210-0157 through June
30, 2019. The exemption requires Financial Institutions to provide
contract disclosures and contracts to Retirement Investors (Section
II), adopt written policies and procedures (Section IV), make
disclosures to Retirement Investors and on a publicly available Web
site (Section IV), maintain records necessary to prove they have met
the PTE conditions (Section V). Although the start-up costs of the
information collections as they are set forth in the current PTE may
not be incurred prior to June 30, 2019 due to uncertainty around the
Department's ongoing consideration of whether to propose changes and
alternatives to the exemptions, they are reflected in the revised
burden estimate summary below. The ongoing costs of the information
collections will remain inactive through the remainder of the current
approval period.
For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81
FR 21089, 21129.
Amended PTE 84-24: The information collections in Amended PTE 84-24
are approved under OMB Control Number 1210-0158 through June 30, 2019.
As amended, Section IV(b) of PTE 84-24 requires Financial Institutions
to obtain advance written authorization from an independent plan
fiduciary or IRA holder and furnish the independent fiduciary or IRA
holder with a written disclosure in order to receive commissions in
conjunction with the purchase of insurance and annuity contracts.
Section IV(c) of PTE 84-24 requires investment company Principal
Underwriters to obtain approval from an independent fiduciary and
furnish the independent fiduciary with a written disclosure in order to
receive commissions in conjunction with the purchase by a plan of
securities issued by an investment company Principal Underwriter.
Section V of PTE 84-24, as amended, requires Financial Institutions to
maintain records necessary to demonstrate that the conditions of the
PTE have been met.
The proposal delays the applicability date of amendments to PTE 84-
24 until July 1, 2019, except that the Impartial Conduct Standards
became applicable on June 9, 2017. The Department does not have
sufficient data to estimate that number of respondents that will use
PTE 84-24 with the inclusion of Impartial Conduct Standards but delayed
applicability date of amendments. Therefore, the Department has not
revised its burden estimate.
For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81
FR 21147, 21171.
These paperwork burden estimates, which comprise start-up costs
that will be incurred prior to the July 1, 2019 effective date (and the
June 30, 2019 expiration date of the current approval periods), are
summarized as follows:
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Titles: (1) Best Interest Contract Exemption and (2) Final
Investment Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210-0156.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit
institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 19,890 over the three year period;
annualized to 6,630 per year.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 34,046,054 over the three
year period; annualized to 11,348,685 per year.
Frequency of Response: When engaging in exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 2,125,573 over the three year
period; annualized to 708,524 per year.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $2,468,487,766 during the three
year period; annualized to $822,829,255 per year.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction Exemption for Principal
Transactions in Certain Assets between Investment Advice Fiduciaries
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs and (2) Final Investment Advice
Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210-0157.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit
institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 6,075 over the three year period;
annualized to 2,025 per year.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 2,463,802 over the three year
period; annualized to 821,267 per year.
Frequency of Response: When engaging in exempted transaction;
Annually.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 45,872 over the three year
period; annualized to 15,291 per year.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $1,955,369,661 over the three
year period; annualized to $651,789,887 per year.
Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of
Labor.
Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 84-24 for
Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension
Consultants, Insurance Companies and Investment Company Principal
Underwriters and (2) Final Investment Advice Regulation.
OMB Control Number: 1210-0158.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit
institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 21,940.
Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 3,306,610.
Frequency of Response: Initially, Annually, When engaging in
exempted transaction.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 172,301 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $1,319,353.
[[Page 41375]]
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes
certain requirements with respect to Federal Rules that are subject to
the notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) or any other laws.
Unless the head of an agency certifies that a proposed rule is not
likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities, section 603 of the RFA requires that the agency present
an initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) describing the Rule's
impact on small entities and explaining how the agency made its
decisions with respect to the application of the Rule to small
entities. Small entities include small businesses, organizations and
governmental jurisdictions.
This proposal merely extends the transition period for the PTEs
associated with the Department's 2016 Final Fiduciary Rule.
Accordingly, pursuant to section 605(b) of the RFA, the Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the Employee Benefits Security Administration
hereby certifies that the proposal will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities.
4. Congressional Review Act
This proposal is subject to the Congressional Review Act (CRA)
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and will be transmitted to Congress and the
Comptroller General for review if finalized. The proposal is a ``major
rule'' as that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 804, because it is likely to
result in an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more.
5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-
4) requires each Federal agency to prepare a written statement
assessing the effects of any Federal mandate in a proposed or final
agency rule that may result in an expenditure of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation with the base year 1995) in any one
year by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by
the private sector. For purposes of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act,
as well as Executive Order 12875, this proposal does not include any
federal mandate that we expect would result in such expenditures by
State, local, or tribal governments, or the private sector. The
Department also does not expect that the proposed delay will have any
material economic impacts on State, local or tribal governments, or on
health, safety, or the natural environment.
6. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs
Executive Order 13771, titled Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs, was issued on January 30, 2017. Section 2(a) of
Executive Order 13771 requires an agency, unless prohibited by law, to
identify at least two existing regulations to be repealed when the
agency publicly proposes for notice and comment, or otherwise
promulgates, a new regulation. In furtherance of this requirement,
section 2(c) of Executive Order 13771 requires that the new incremental
costs associated with new regulations shall, to the extent permitted by
law, be offset by the elimination of existing costs associated with at
least two prior regulations.
The impacts of this proposal are categorized consistently with the
analysis of the original Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, and the Department
has also concluded that the impacts identified in the Regulatory Impact
Analysis accompanying the 2016 final rule may still be used as a basis
for estimating the potential impacts of that final rule. It has been
determined that, for purposes of E.O. 13771, the impacts of the
Fiduciary Rule that were identified in the 2016 analysis as costs, and
that are presently categorized as cost savings (or negative costs) in
this proposal, and impacts of the Fiduciary Rule that were identified
in the 2016 analysis as a combination of transfers and positive
benefits are categorized as a combination of (opposite-direction)
transfers and negative benefits in this proposal. Accordingly, OMB has
determined that this proposal, if finalized as proposed, would be an
E.O. 13771 deregulatory action.
E. List of Proposed Amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemptions
The Secretary of Labor has discretionary authority to grant
administrative exemptions under ERISA and the Code on an individual or
class basis, but only if the Secretary first finds that the exemptions
are (1) administratively feasible, (2) in the interests of plans and
their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and (3) protective
of the rights of the participants and beneficiaries of such plans and
IRA owners. 29 U.S.C. 1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2).
Under this authority, and based on the reasons set forth above, the
Department is proposing to amend the: (1) Best Interest Contract
Exemption (PTE 2016-01); (2) Class Exemption for Principal Transactions
in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee
Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); and (3) Prohibited Transaction
Exemption 84-24 (PTE 84-24) for Certain Transactions Involving
Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies,
and Investment Company Principal Underwriters, as set forth below.
These amendments would be effective on the date of publication in the
Federal Register of final amendments or January 1, 2018, whichever is
earlier.
1. The BIC Exemption (PTE 2016-01) would be amended as follows:
A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' would be deleted and ``July 1,
2019'' inserted in its place in the introductory DATES section.
B. Section II(h)(4)--Level Fee Fiduciaries provides streamlined
conditions for ``Level Fee Fiduciaries.'' The date ``January 1, 2018''
would be deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place. Thus, for
Level Fee Fiduciaries that are robo-advice providers, and therefore not
eligible for Section IX (pursuant to Section IX(c)(3)), the Impartial
Conduct Standards in Section II(h)(2) are applicable June 9, 2017, but
the remaining conditions of Section II(h) would be applicable July 1,
2019, rather than January 1, 2018.
C. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the amendment of existing
contracts by negative consent. The date ``January 1, 2018'' would be
deleted where it appears in this section, including in the definition
of ``Existing Contract,'' and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
D. Section IX--Transition Period for Exemption. The date ``January
1, 2018'' would be deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
Thus, the Transition Period identified in Section IX(a) would be
extended from June 9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June 9, 2017,
to January 1, 2018.
2. The Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets
Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and
IRAs (PTE 2016-02), would be amended as follows:
A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' would be deleted and ``July 1,
2019'' inserted in its place in the introductory DATES section.
B. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the amendment of existing
contracts by negative consent. The date ``January 1, 2018'' would be
deleted where it appears in this section, including in the definition
of ``Existing Contract,'' and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
[[Page 41376]]
C. Section VII--Transition Period for Exemption. The date ``January
1, 2018'' would be deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
Thus, the Transition Period identified in Section VII(a) would be
extended from June 9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June 9, 2017,
to January 1, 2018.
3. Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance
Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters, would be
amended as follows:
A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' would be deleted where it appears
in the introductory DATES section and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its
place.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 28th day of August 2017.
Timothy D. Hauser,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Program Operations, Employee Benefits
Security Administration, Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2017-18520 Filed 8-30-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-29-P