New DOL Fiduciary Rule Could Rein In Use of Advisor-Like Titles

House to Vote on Bill Killing DOL

What You Need to Know

DOL wants feedback on titles that may convey the offer of individualized recommendations to retirement investors.

The Labor Department is requesting comments on how to potentially regulate advisor-like titles — such as financial consultant, financial planner and wealth manager — under its new fiduciary rule.

The preamble to the proposed rule says the department wants feedback on titles that “may convey the offer of individualized recommendations and are relied upon by the retirement investor,” Duane Thompson, senior policy analyst at Broadridge Fi360 Solutions, said on a recent webcast held by Broadridge.

By requesting such feedback, Labor, according to Thompson, may “add something in the final rule that if you use these advisor-like titles, that may convey to a potential retirement investors that you’re acting in a position of trust and confidence.”

Preamble Language

The preamble to the DOL’s current fiduciary rule proposal states on pages 42 and 43 that Labor “intends to examine the ways investment advice providers market themselves and describe their services.”

For example, the premable continues, “some stakeholders have previously expressed concern that investment advice providers that adopt titles such as financial consultant, financial planner, and wealth manager, are holding themselves out as acting in positions of trust and confidence while simultaneously disclaiming status as an ERISA fiduciary.”

In the Department’s view, “an investment advice provider’s use of such titles routinely involves holding themselves out as making investment recommendations that will be based on the particular needs or individual circumstances of the retirement investor and may be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions that are in the retirement investor’s best interest,” the premable states.

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Labor is also requesting comment on whether “other types of conduct, communication, representation, and terms of engagement of investment advice providers should merit similar treatment.”

The premable to Labor’s Retirement Security Rule also points out that “in addition to lacking rudimentary financial knowledge, many retirement investors do not understand the roles of different players in the investment industry and what those players are obligated to do.”

With this language, Labor’s “concern is that, while different titles may have meaning in the financial services sector, those titles are indistinguishable to main street investors and the investors may believe that they can place trust in the recommendations because of the titles,” ERISA attorney Fred Reish of Faegre Drinker told ThinkAdvisor Monday in an email.