Conflicted IRA Advice Widespread as Fiduciaries Lack Oversight, Watchdog Finds

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What You Need to Know

Lawmakers asked the Government Accountability Office to assess current issues around conflicts of interest and investment advice.
Conflicts abound among recommedations to retirement investors, the watchdog found.
IRS needs to implement an audit process for IRA fiduciaries so it can more effectively assess excise taxes for prohibited transactions, GAO suggests.

Fiduciary oversight of individual retirement accounts is lacking, and conflicts of interest abound when it comes to advising retirement investors, according to a new report by the Government Accountability Office.

The report, Agencies Can Better Oversee Conflicts of Interest between Fiduciaries and Investors, also found that required disclosures may not fully explain the risks and challenges posed by those conflicts, and that investors fail to review or understand them.

The report was commissioned by members of Congress and released Wednesday by Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., ranking member on the House Education and Workforce Committee. Lawmakers asked GAO to assess where issues around conflicts of interest and investment advice stand today, after the Labor Department’s 2016 fiduciary rule, which was vacated by a Texas court in 2018.

“The interests of financial professionals and firms often conflict with the interests of retirement investors,” the report states. “This could create risks for millions of investors with over $18 trillion dollars in retirement savings in 401(k) plans and IRAs.”

The report covers potential conflicts involving annuities as well as conflicts involving other retirement investment vehicles, because the authors’ definition of “individual retirement account” includes individual retirement annuities.

The report is dated July; however, members of Congress can hold public release of a GAO report for up to 30 days after issuance.

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Excise Taxes

GAO recommended that the IRS develop and implement “a proactive process to identify prohibited transactions between IRA fiduciaries and IRAs, and assess any associated excise tax.”

Only the IRS can enforce excise tax to safeguard retirement savings, the report states. “However, the IRS does not have a process to do so.”

According to IRS, “the excise tax is intended to safeguard income for retired workers by taxing transactions deemed particularly objectionable because of the potential for abuse of fiduciary responsibilities by parties having conflicts of interests,” GAO said.