Headquarters of the U.S. Department of Labor in Washington.
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In legal parlance, the final rule expands the scope of when brokers, advisors, and other intermediaries must act as “fiduciaries” and are required to provide client-centered advice. means.
The final rule will go into effect on September 23rd. The rule continues the Obama administration’s previous efforts to curb conflicts of interest in retirement accounts. Experts say the Obama-era “fiduciary” provision was broader than Biden’s, but was struck down by the courts.
Labor Department officials said at a news conference Tuesday that current retirement rules do not provide enough protection for savers.
Advice is often tainted by “significant conflicts of interest” and there is no “obligation” to act in the best interests of departing clients in many situations, says Lisa, assistant secretary for employee benefits.・Mr. Gomez stated.
“That’s not true,” Gomez said.
Retirement and legal experts say the Labor Department is trying to rein in bad actors in two big areas of advice: rollovers from 401(k) plans to individual retirement accounts and the purchase of insurance products such as annuities. .
In some cases, conflicts of interest may cause financial professionals to recommend deals that pay higher fees but are not necessarily in the best interest of the client. Such dynamics can “strip away” Americans’ savings, Gomez said.
Economic Advisory Council Estimate Americans lose up to $5 billion a year due to conflicts of interest in one insurance product: indexed annuities.
“For too many people, retirement plan savings earned through work are their single largest source of savings,” Gomez said. “These important tax-advantaged savings should be protected, and it is the Department of Labor’s job to ensure they are protected.”
Labor officials said the final rule is not significantly different from the Biden administration’s original proposal.
Its elements begin over two phases.
From September 23, the financial industry will have to recognize its fiduciary status and adhere to “fair standards of conduct” when dealing with customers.
These standards mean financial professionals have an obligation to be prudent, loyal and honest when providing personalized investment advice to customers, and to charge a reasonable fee, labor officials said.
The rest of the rules will go into effect a year later, in September 2025, officials said.
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Americans put about $779 billion into IRAs from 401(k)-type plans in 2022, according to data cited by the Council of Economic Advisers. analysis. Retirement rollovers are common, and the amount of annual rollovers is increasing as more baby boomers enter retirement age.
“The amount of money being rolled over is astronomical,” said Andrew Olinger, partner and general counsel at Wagner Law Group.
“The juxtaposition of large amounts of funding and a compensation system that could incentivize rollover requests without necessarily considering the best interests of participants is of concern to the Department of Labor,” Olinger said in a statement. .
Industry groups, on the other hand, argue that the regulation is unnecessary and would harm the very retirement savers the Labor Department is trying to protect.
The American Council of Life Insurers, an industry group, said in a memo issued ahead of the final rule’s publication that the new rules are becoming strikingly similar to the department’s 2016 rules under President Obama. Stated.
Before the rule was overturned, more than 10 million investor accounts with total savings of $900 billion lost access to professional financial guidance, ACLI said.
Additionally, federal and state regulations administered by the Securities and Exchange Commission and the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, respectively, already provide “strong” consumer protections for retirement savers, ACLI said.
However, the Ministry of Labor appears to be concerned that the “scope and content” of these regulatory systems is “inadequate” in relation to retirement benefits, and that the department is trying to “level the playing field.” Olinger said.
Labor officials also said Tuesday that the final fiduciary rules differ significantly from Obama-era regulations.
“We have done our best to write a rule that incorporates the teachings of the Fifth Circuit. [Court of Appeals]lessons learned from [public] Timothy Hauser, assistant secretary for program operations at the Employee Benefits Security Administration, said the company will submit “comments” and draft rules that protect investors without placing an “undue burden” on the financial industry. .
