U.S. Wealth Managers Grit Teeth and Prepare for Labor Rule

Wealth managers in the United States are cutting fees, relying more on technology to give advice and reducing the minimum amounts clients can hold in their brokerage accounts, all in preparation for a new rule governing how they advise retirement savers.

Some advisers are even job hunting, worried that the rule’s impending introduction could slash their compensation.

The Department of Labor (DOL) is expected to publish the so-called fiduciary standard in the next few weeks. It requires wealth managers to put the interests of retirement savers ahead of their own.

Supporters of the new rule, such as consumer groups and retiree advocates, say it will promote transparency and protect investors from being sold unnecessary financial products that increase commissions for brokers and create conflicts of interest. The wealth management industry has opposed the proposal for years, arguing it will drive up costs, curb commissions and ultimately hurt customers because firms could abandon clients with smaller, less lucrative accounts.

But after five years of fighting, the industry has accepted that the end is in sight.

“We’re working down two paths-advocacy to keep fixing the rule as much as we can and helping members comply,” said Scott Puritz, managing director at Rebalance IRA, a wealth management firm that offers low-cost IRA portfolio management.

“If firms are paying attention, they’ve set up internal DOL task forces that are inventorying clients and preparing for the rule already.”

The Labor Department first proposed a new rule in 2010 but withdrew it in 2011 after wide criticism from industry officials and lawmakers.

A modified version was presented in 2015 with the goal of protecting retirees from buying unnecessary products that line brokers’ pockets with fees and commissions.

“We have been committed to making changes and improvements based on public comment and feedback, but cannot say to what extent the final rule will differ from the proposal,” a Labor Department spokesperson told Reuters.

The agency reviewed comment letters and live testimony from industry officials in support of and against the rule. In January, the revised proposal was sent to the White House’s Office of Management and Budget.

Ahead of the rule’s introduction, some firms are trying to a avoid losing accounts by cutting fees and reducing the minimum balance that clients need to have.

While some opponents have said the rule will force them to abandon clients with small accounts, others are opting to adjust their account offerings and include lower-cost, fee-based accounts.

St. Louis-based firm Edward Jones is piloting low-cost accounts and charging an annual fee for clients with a minimum of $5,000. Normally, customers have to have $50,000 in a fee-based account.

LPL Financial Holdings (LPLA.O) said this week it would allow clients to maintain less money in their brokerage accounts and cut fees in preparation for the rule.

Straw that breaks the camel’s back

Small wealth management firms are expected to take the biggest hit after the rule goes into effect because they have fewer resources to pay for extra paperwork, training and new technology needed to comply.

As firms redirect resources to ensure they are compliant, some advisers worried about lower commissions and compensation have begun to ask recruiters about new opportunities.

“The rule isn’t the sole reason people are ready to move, but in every conversation we have, it is discussed because advisers will be impacted,” said Louis Diamond, vice president of Diamond Consultants, a New Jersey-based recruiting firm.

“For advisers who are already unhappy, the rule could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back.”

While traditional financial advisers have fought the rule, automated or “robo” and other digital advisers have largely spoken in support of it, arguing that digital platforms are more transparent, affordable and lacking in conflicts of interest.

Traditional firms are developing robo advisers and for less well-off clients, robo-advice could be more affordable.

“People will go to robo-advisers when broker-dealers stop taking on smaller accounts,” said Bao Nguyen, director of risk advisory services at the Kaufman Rossin Group, a Miami-based accounting firm.

As proposed last year, the rule gave firms eight months to become compliant, a time frame both supporters and opponents agreed was too short.

“We proposed an 18-month time-frame,” said David Blass, general council for the Investment Company Institute. “That’s the minimum for what it takes to change disclosure process, change compensation practices and train employees.”


Bao Nguyen, CAMS, CFE, CRCP, is a Risk Advisory Services Principal – Investment Leader at Kaufman Rossin, one of the Top 100 CPA and advisory firms in the U.S.