In late 2009 I authored a white paper describing how a large financial services firm could incorporate the fiduciary standard of conduct into its business practices. Two and a half years later, post-Dodd Frank, the principles I expressed therein still provide guidance for the transformation required at Wall Street.
Transformation of a culture begins at the top. It requires careful planning, buy-in by all of senior management, and perseverance. It is not done overnight. However, it must be undertaken with a sense of urgency. While this white paper does not delve into all of the steps necessary, it does set forth various concrete goals for the structure of an organization, in order for it to better adhere to its fiduciary obligations.
Following is the white paper. Enjoy.
How
the Large Modern Financial Services Firm Can Better Compete as
Financial Advisors and Clients
Migrate to a Fiduciary Business Model
by
Ron A. Rhoades, JD, CFP®[1] December 1, 2009
It’s no secret that
the word “fiduciary” has provoked a range of emotions in the financial services
industry, including “fear.” Indeed, a bona fide fiduciary standard poses certain
challenges for product-sales-driven business models, especially in large and
diverse financial services firms. Also, many
smaller firms (the author’s included) have, in recent years, utilized their
fiduciary status as a tremendous marketing advantage[2]
in the competition for clients. In this
outline, I review the major developments of the last several decades affecting
the provision of financial and investment advisory services.[3] I then suggest ways that a forward-thinking,
large financial services firm could embrace a bona fide fiduciary standard of conduct – and use it to their
advantage to more effectively compete against the smaller registered investment
adviser (RIA) firms. Larger firms
possess the opportunity to gain, rather than lose, market share and increased
shareholder value, if effective long-term business strategies are embraced.
A.
THE EVOLUTION OF FINANCIAL & INVESTMENT ADVISORY SERVICES.
Many
major developments have occurred in recent decades which materially affect the
delivery of financial and investment advisory products and services. These developments have spurred on the
application of broad fiduciary duties of due care, loyalty and utmost good
faith upon the providers of investment advisory and financial planning
services.
A.1. Today’s Consumers Face a Far
More Complex Financial World.
The
world is far more complex for individual investors today than it was just a
generation ago. Greater responsibility
exists for the average American to save and invest for his or her future
financial needs, such as retirement, and for the management of any accumulated
retirement nest egg.
In
addition, there exist a broader variety of investment products, including many
types of pooled investment vehicles[4]
and/or hybrid products which employ a diverse range of strategies. This explosion of products has hampered the
ability of individual investors to sort through the many thousands of investment
products to find those very few which best fit within the investor’s
portfolios. Furthermore, as such
investment vehicles have proliferated, individual investors are challenged to
discern an investment product’s true “total fees and costs,”[5]
investment characteristics, tax consequences, and risks.
U.S.
tax laws relating to investment income and returns have also increasingly become
more complex, presenting not only opportunities for the wise through proper
planning, but also a plethora of tax traps for the unwary.
A.2. Academic Research Reveals
Insights into Investment Strategies. Nearly six
decades ago we saw the emergence of Modern Portfolio Theory.[6] Over four decades have passed since the
Efficient Markets Hypothesis was promulgated[7]
and academic studies first indicated that active managers, on average,
underperform their benchmark indices.[8] Only three decades ago, a comprehensive
database of securities values first became available,[9]
leading to a proliferation of academic research into the efficacy of existing
strategies – either over time or through back-testing of the investment
methodology. Nearly two decades ago, prior
academic research was synthesized into the widely utilized Fama-French three-factor
asset pricing model.[10] All of these, as well as many other
developments in modern finance (behavioral finance, interplay of financial
capital and human capital, etc.), have led to the ability to test investment
strategies for robustness and reliability.
This has led to greater understanding of both the need, and the means,
to conduct due diligence on both investment strategies and products. Hundreds of academic white papers now surface
each year examining investment and portfolio management strategies and often
revealing new insights which practitioners can seek to apply.
A.3. The Increased Knowledge Gap
between Financial Advisors and Consumers. As the
sophistication of our capital markets had increased, so has the knowledge gap[11]
between individual consumers and financial advisors. Investment theory continues to evolve, with
new insights gained from academic research each year. In constructing an investment portfolio today,
a financial advisor must take into account not only the individual investor’s
risk tolerance and investment time horizon, but also the investor’s tax
situation (present and future) and risks to which the investor is exposed in
other aspects of his or her life.
A.4. Portfolio Management:
Disintermediation and Re-intermediation. From the
1975 end to fixed commission rates on the major exchanges, to the increased use
of of mutual funds and ETFs, to target date retirement funds, disintermediation
has occurred with respect to several aspects of investment portfolio
management. An ever-growing larger segment of the American public tries to
invest “on their own” – or at least through the use of pooled investment
vehicles which are not sold through the broker-dealer sales channel.
Disintermediation[12]
has been a powerful force in many different industries over the past several
decades. In the securities industry,
perhaps the most dramatic impact of disintermediation has been in the use of
alternative market mechanisms, which have reduced the role of market makers and
driven down the cost of trading (brokerage commissions, bid-ask spreads, etc.).[13]
From
the standpoint of consumers of investment products, as the internet has enabled
the increased availability and exchange of information, calls for better and/or
increased transparency have become more pronounced. Ease of comparison between similar products thereby
results, and fees and costs are more and more heavily scrutinized in the
selection process.
In
turn, differential pricing with respect to the same product becomes
problematic. While justifications exist
for differential pricing from the standpoint of varying distribution costs, transparency
reduces the viability of cross-subsidies between customers who are sold the
same investment products.
Additionally,
increased availability of information leads to new, more direct distribution
channels, in which some intermediaries may be bypassed altogether. Firms which fail to adapt may lose their
best, most profitable, and previously most loyal customers.
The
pace of disintermediation is likely to accelerate in future years as
technological advances (computer-aided personal investment and financial
planning) and increased information availability (internet) and communication
among investors (discussion forums, etc.) occurs. While disintermediation may be slowed by
firms employing product formulation and marketing strategies which tout
“exclusivity” of access to certain products, and/or coupling of limited access
to other service offerings of the firm, such a strategy is likely to result in
an investor backlash given the increased public criticisms of “proprietary
products” and the lack of objectivity which may occur[14]
when such products are recommended.[15]
At
the same time, Re-intermediation has occurred and will continue to occur, as
consumers have begun to migrate from sell-side product providers to buy-side
purchaser’s representatives for advice. Re-intermediation
sometimes occurs when individual investors are “stung” by making the wrong
moves when acting on their own (often the result of incomplete information or
expertise, or due to emotional biases dictating improper investment
decision-making).
Re-intermediation
also occurs when the value proposition of the fiduciary financial planner – a
“purchaser’s representative” – is viewed by the consumer as justifying the
costs of receiving objective financial planning advice. In such instances, if the consumer’s
perception of his or her needs so dictate, the individual investor may seek
financial planning and/or investment advice from lower-fee providers, a task
made easier through greater transparency in fee arrangements.[16]
Part
of the challenge to Re-intermediation in the future will be the continued
perception by many individual investors, often fostered by financial services
firms and their advisors, that “financial planning” is wholly distinct from the
provision of “investment portfolio advice.”
The offering of “financial plans” separate from investment portfolio
management services, at firms both large and small, continues to foster the
expectation of some consumers that individuals can pay a separate fee for a
financial plan, yet then implement the financial plan “on their own” through
direct access to investment product providers.
While some consumers may be capable of the discipline required and
possessing the time necessary to research and monitor investments, much
evidence exists that the lack of ongoing competent professional advice results
in diminished returns for individual investors who choose to “go it alone.”[17] It remains to be seen whether the
acceleration in the move by some investors to self-directed investing, with
financial planning advice provided separately, will be effectively countered by
a more effective embrace by the financial services industry of the need for,
and benefits of, integrated and holistic ongoing financial planning, of which
investment advice is only one part.
A.5. Goals-Based Financial
Planning: Both Needed and Desired by Clients.
Given the complexity of the modern financial world, the fact is that we
should no more expect the vast majority of individual consumers to be able to
successfully navigate today’s complex financial world than we would expect them
to act as their own attorney or physician.
A.5.a.
Financial Literacy Efforts, While Important, Just Don’t Work.
Many academics, as well as consumer advocates and state securities
regulators,[18]
have acknowledged the substantial limitations of financial literacy efforts
given the high degree of complexity of investment products and financial
advice. The extremely low level of
financial literacy among Americans was recently reported on by Professor Lusardi:
Over the past
thirty years, individuals have had to become increasingly responsible for their
own financial security following retirement. The shift from defined benefit
(DB) to defined contribution (DC) plans has meant that workers today have to
decide both how much they need to save for retirement and how to allocate
pension wealth. Furthermore, financial instruments have become increasingly
complex and individuals are presented with new and ever-more sophisticated
financial products. Access to credit is easier than ever before and
opportunities to borrow are plentiful. But are individuals well equipped to
make financial decisions. In other words, do they possess adequate financial
literacy to do so? This paper shows that
most individuals cannot perform simple economic calculations and lack knowledge
of basic financial concepts, such as the working of interest compounding, the
difference between nominal and real values, and the basics of risk diversification.
Knowledge of more complex concepts, such as the difference between bonds and
stocks, the working of mutual funds, and basic asset pricing is even scarcer.
Illiteracy is widespread among the general population ….
Given the
current low levels of financial literacy, employers and the government should devise
and encourage programs that simplify financial decision-making as well as
provide sources of reliable financial advice.[19]
While
financial literacy programs are often touted as the “cure” for enabling consumers
to make better financial decisions, a more reasoned review of the academic
evidence suggests the ineffectiveness of financial literacy education. As stated by Ian Hathaway and Sameer
Khatiwada, writing for the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland:
Conventional
wisdom tells us that a more informed consumer is a better consumer. One could
reasonably argue that when dealing with complex goods and services (such as
those of a financial nature), consumer knowledge is particularly important.
Given the recent public policy debate about whether consumers are being taken
advantage of by various financial services firms, financial education programs
are likely to be one popular remedy. But, one must ask if financial literacy
(i.e., a comprehension of particular financial products) allows those consumers
with more of it to achieve better outcomes than those with less …
Taken together,
the literature does not succeed in establishing the extent of the benefit
provided by financial education programs, nor does it provide conclusive
support that any benefit at all exists.[20]
A.5.b.
Increased Recognition that Product Disclosures are Ineffective.
Despite the 1995 Tully Report’s assertions that consumers should bear
the burden of reading and understanding disclosure documents, and that consumers
should ask questions when they need more information,[21]
much academic research has demonstrated the fallacy of the effectiveness of
disclosures.[22] As stated by Professor Fisch:
The primary
difficulty with disclosure as a regulatory response is that there is limited
evidence that disclosure is effective in overcoming investor biases. … It is
unclear … that intermediaries offer meaningful investor protection. Rather,
there is continued evidence that broker-dealers, mutual fund operators, and the
like are ineffective gatekeepers. Understanding the agency costs and other
issues associated with investing through an intermediary may be more complex
than investing directly in equities … once regulators move beyond disclosure
into substantive efforts to constrain irrational behavior, regulation imposes
substantial costs on the securities markets.”[23]
Only
recently has substantial thought been given to the ability of individual
investors to achieve adequate understanding in order to make informed decisions.
As stated by Professor Schwarcz:
Analysis of the tension between
investor understanding and complexity remains scant. During the debate over the
original enactment of the federal securities laws, Congress did not focus on
the ability of investors to understand disclosure of complex transactions.
Although scholars assumed that ordinary investors would not have that ability,
they anticipated that sophisticated market intermediaries – such as brokers,
bankers, investment advisers, publishers of investment advisory literature, and
even lawyers - would help filter the information down to investors.[24]
A.5.c.
Behavioral Bias Negate the Abilities of “Do-It-Yourself” Investors.
As shown in DALBAR, Inc.’s 2009 “Quantitative Analysis of Investor
Behavior”, most individual investors underperform benchmark indices by a wide
margin, far exceeding the average total fees and costs of pooled investment
vehicles.[25] A growing body of academic research into the
behavioral biases of investors reveals substantial obstacles individual
investors must overcome in order to make informed decisions,[26]
and reveal the inability of individual investors to contract for their own
protections.[27]
A.5.d.
Financial Planning Increasingly Perceived as Essential.
Proper financial planning is essential to encourage both an increase in
household savings and in order to invest those funds more effectively. If people do not make careful, rational
decisions about how to provide for their financial security over the course of
their lifetimes, then the government will have to step in to save people from
the consequences of their poor planning.
As
evidence of the increased perception of the value of financial planning, in
recent years qualified retirement plan sponsors have increasingly pressured investment
solution providers to also provide increased individualized financial advice,
taking into account all of the financial resources and liabilities of plan
participants.[28]
A.6. Increased Disputes over Ownership
of the Client Relationship. There has been a continued assertion by
individual financial advisors, across all business models, that the clients are
“theirs” and not the client of the firm.
Courts have increasingly become hesitant to enforce non-compete agreements. Non-solicitation agreements, while generally
enforced, are seldom valid as to any effort to ban general advertising in order
to secure, by a departed advisor, re-engagement of the client. Rather than view the procurement of a client,
and ownership of the client relationship, as a joint endeavor (with joint
ownership resulting therefrom), financial services firms often cling to the
older business model formulation, as an effort to preserve value. Financial
services firms, whether they are structured as broker-dealers (BDs), registered
investment advisers (RIAs), or insurance companies, are susceptible to
significant risks of market share decline when their advisors depart. Ongoing efforts to recruit advisors by one
firm, from another firm, continue; the protocol established for dealing with
such departures is but a stop-gap measure.
More recently, in the aftermath of shocks to many large financial
services firms, some exceptional producers have fled the larger firms and
joined, or started, their own independent BD and/or RIA firms.
A.7. The Appeal of the RIA
Business Model: It’s Not Just Different Regulatory Oversight.
In a recent survey of registered representatives, 60% of the advisors
surveyed find the idea of joining or starting an RIA appealing, and 49% say
they’d consider it.[29]
As reported recently by Registered Rep
magazine:
[T]he wirehouses are slowly
losing market share, and Cerulli projects their share of retail investor assets
under management to fall to 40.7 percent in 2012 from 47 percent at the end of
2008. Meanwhile, the independent channel, which includes independent
broker-dealers, registered investment advisor firms and dually-registered
advisors, is expected to gain market share. The report predicts independent
firms will nearly match wirehouses’ market share footprint by 2012, with 39.3
percent of retail investor assets under management.[30]
It
is often said that registered representatives give up their Series 7
registrations and join independent RIA firms in order to escape the dictates
resulting from rules-based FINRA oversight.
While there is some truth in the foregoing, it appears that the greater
reason lies in the appeal of “being on the same side of the table” as the
client.[31]
Regardless
of RIA or BD affiliation, goals-based financial planning is an appealing career
choice today. In a recent survey,
financial planners reported deriving their greatest satisfaction from “Helping
clients improve their lives.”[32]
A.8. Demand for Talented
Financial Planners Increases. The employment of personal financial advisors
has been projected by the U.S. Department of Labor to grow by 41% over the
subsequent decade (following a 2006 baseline), much faster than the average for
all other occupations.[33]
Why
this growth? Primarily because there has
been a greater recognition of the need for personal financial planners to deal
with the complexities of managing today’s modern financial life. Yet the question must be posed as to why the
growth in demand is for personal financial planners in particular, rather than in
the services of related specialists (such as attorneys, CPAs, life insurance
agents, etc.). The answer lies in the
fact that the financial planner, consciously or unconsciously, is a generalist,
and offers clients the possibility of economies of scope in the consumption of financial
services and products. Benefits can
result from the coordinative function of advisors, as to identifying planning
needs of the client, prioritizing such needs, and overseeing their fulfillment
in a timely manner. A financial planner
can offer the role of “quarterback” – and can add value by screening out poorly
qualified or unethical specialist advisors, and monitoring the performance of
their services, thereby reducing a client’s search and monitoring transaction
costs.[34]
Despite
growing demand for financial planning services, evidence exists that the supply
of financial planners is not keeping pace:
Cerulli
estimates that there were over 298,000 financial advisers practicing in the
United States at the end of 2007. However, this number has decreased slightly
from the 301,000 practicing advisers reported on the 2004 survey. The industry
has been challenged to hire and train new advisers as consumer expectations
have risen and the sophistication of services that advisers need to provide has
only grown. This has created a number of changes in how the financial advisory
industry must operate. First, the adviser population is rapidly aging, and
there exists a dearth of new talent to replace these advisers. Second, advisers
are in greater need of education and training than ever before to address the
complex financial needs of consumers. Finally, advisers are increasingly
forming team practices to allow them to specialize and provide more
sophisticated services.[35]
With
the average financial advisor being an age 55 white male,[36]
and the demand for financial planning services continuing to grow, greater
demand will likely exist with respect to the very limited pool of experienced
financial advisors – those ages 35-50 in particular. Who will provide these
experienced financial planners? The
large financial services firm of today has become, to a significant degree, as
the training ground for new entrants to the financial services industry. Also, larger
independent RIA firms are increasingly entering the fray for new talent,
recruiting graduates with personal financial planning, finance degrees, and
CFP® certifications. Yet it often takes
years for a new financial planner to become experienced enough to provide
holistic advice and master the intricacies and complexities of integrated
wealth management (as well as gaining the credentials and demonstrated
experience so as to enable the financial planner to attract and retain the
desired type of client).
Recruitment
of “second career” individuals is likely to slow. This is in large part due to the high
educational and experience requirements[37]
necessary to become and compete as a successful Certified Financial Planner™. Even with certification, significant additional
training is often required to enable financial advisors to be able to provide the
comprehensive advice desired by clients, as well as enabling the advisor to secure
and maintain client relationships through both “up” and “down” markets.
Recruitment
of experienced talent from related industries will likely possess mixed results
going forward. Efforts to recruit CPAs
into the financial planning community will likely slow, as many CPAs have
already entered the practice of personal financial planning over the past
decade and the nationwide shortage of experienced CPAs continues to provide
opportunities for advancement in auditing, tax, and other forms of consulting
engagements. Recruitment of estate
planning attorneys may be increasingly possible, but these efforts will likely be
hampered by the decrease in the number of new estate planning attorneys
following estate tax equivalent exemption increases adopted in 2001 legislation. Additionally, the most successful estate
planning attorneys – often those most likely to become top producers as financial
planners – often possess little financial incentive to undertake the
transition.
A.9. The CFP® Certification Becomes
Most Attractive to Potential Clients. From the
standpoint of consumers, the Certified Financial Planner™ certification has
become the most widely recognized[38]
standard for the identification of financial planning expertise. In contrast, the more specialized Chartered
Financial Analyst (CFA) charter, focused largely on a fundamental knowledge of
investment principals, which has been around since 1963 (and which was ranked
by the Economist as the gold standard
among investment analysis designations), has been important to many securities
firms in their recruitment of investment analysts; however, the CFA charter
does not in and of itself attract clients, as most advisers who hold the CFA
charter have confirmed.[39] Other designations, such as Chartered
Financial Consultant (ChFC), Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU), and Personal
Financial Specialist (PFS) have likewise failed to win widespread consumer
acceptance.
A.10. Broader Application of
Fiduciary Standards has Occurred. Fiduciary standards of conduct for those in
advisory relationships based upon trust and confidence have long existed under
the law. The Investment Advisers Act of
1940 simply resulted in the incorporation of existing common law fiduciary
standards of conduct into federal law.[40] As large financial services firms have
migrated to provide more comprehensive and/or ongoing services to individual
clients, their activities have increasingly been held to be subject to a
fiduciary standard of conduct under a “best interests” standard – either
through the application of the Advisers Act or state common law.[41] Moreover, the emergence of ERISA[42]
in 1974 and the application of its “sole interests” standard[43]
have further complicated the legal environment for financial services firms who
seek to avoid any application of the broad fiduciary duties of due care,
loyalty, and utmost good faith.
Currently, many financial advisors (and their firms), regardless of
size, accept fiduciary responsibility for ERISA-covered plans – yet often without
possessing the necessary expertise, resources, and controls over risk arising
from the application of ERISA’s stricter fiduciary standards.[44]
A.11. Increased Regulation of
Financial Planning is Likely to Occur. In recent
years, financial planners have submitted to “voluntary regulation” under the
auspices of several industry organizations, including the CFP Board of
Standards, Inc., the Financial Planning Association, and the National
Association of Personal Financial Advisors, each of which requires adherence to
certain ethical and/or practice standards.
The
SEC has wrestled with the application of the Advisers Act to financial planning
activities, and its various rulings and pronouncements on this issue have been
diverse and often contradictory.
Currently in Congress, there exists strong opposition to application of the
Advisers Act to financial planning activities.
Proposals to permit the proposed new Consumer Financial Planning Agency
to regulate aspects of financial planning have likewise met industry
opposition.
In
the author’s view, such opposition is problematic for financial services
firms. Barring the adoption of express
federal preemption, which is highly unlikely in the current legislative
environment, efforts in Washington to prevent the regulation of financial planning
by either the SEC or the CFPA, it is highly likely that the states will move to
adopt regulation of financial planning activities – regardless of how the
financial planner is otherwise regulated over overseen.
A.12. Smaller Firms Often Lack
Resources Needed to Compete. Smaller financial advisory firms are often
successful due to the sheer personality of their advisors, and their ability to
build relationships based upon trust and confidence. Despite this, small RIA firms, in particular,
have been challenged by ever-increasing compliance burdens, such as the
required annual risk assessment and compliance review. Increased focus by securities regulators at
both the federal and state levels will likely occur on the methods and analysis
utilized to conduct due diligence.
Developments in technology have led to better opportunities to provide
services to clients, yet acquisition of many technologies in a cost-affordable
manner may require certain economies of scale.
As independent investment advisory firms move from small ensembles to
larger firm environments, increased resources are required to address advisor
training, recruitment, and brand identification. Some smaller RIA firms have met these
challenges through informal or formal alliances with other firms, through
outsourcing of certain back office functions, and through building advisory
teams. Yet most registered investment
advisers remain unable to secure, for their clients, the benefits which could
be provided through the resources of a larger financial services firm, as will
be explored in the next section.
B. WHAT
LARGE FINANCIAL SERVICES FIRMS CAN
DO
TO PROSPER: FIDUCIARY TRANSFORMATION.
B.1.
Regardless of Congressional Action, Will
Continue. While many in the broker-dealer lobby view RIA
firm support of fiduciary standards of conduct (generally, and as to their
application to the advisory activities of broker-dealers) as self-serving, in
reality the reverse is true. Efforts by
SIFMA and its member firms to curtail the application of fiduciary standards to
the investment advisory and financial planning activities of broker-dealer
firms may well prove successful in Congress (and subsequently at the SEC). However, if SIFMA is successful, then nearly
every independent registered investment adviser will silently breathe a sigh of
relief. Indeed, it is in the
self-interest of RIA firms that they don’t face robust competition in the
delivery of objective investment and financial planning advice.[45]
Currently broker-dealer firms are not viewed as the primary competition by RIA
firm leadership, and instead are viewed as a tremendous source of potential
clients.
Moreover, and regardless of the
outcome of pending legislation in Congress, it is highly likely that bona fide fiduciary standards of conduct
will be applied to investment advisory and financial planning activities. This may occur through the application of
existing state common law fiduciary standards - unless expressly preempted by
federal legislation, which appears unlikely.
Additionally, efforts which have slowed down the regulation of financial
planning at the federal level will likely lead to increased regulation of
financial planning by the states, over time, especially if Congress and/or the
SEC adopt the view that the Advisors Act does not apply to financial planning
activities.
In essence, disintermediation in
financial services, and Re-intermediation through the increased utilization of
registered investment advisers, may be slowed by future legislative and/or
regulatory action. However, in the end,
the “fiduciary transformation” of the retail securities industry can only be
slowed, not stopped. Over time, and
often spurred on by market declines and/or adverse news affecting broker dealer
firm reputations, registered representatives (especially the more successful
ones) will continue to migrate over to the registered investment adviser
business model (especially so in moving to firms in which conflicts of interest
are substantially removed). The
traditional product-sales-driven business model will continue to lose market
share to the fiduciary advisor business model.
The brokerage model will never
disappear completely, nor should it; if consumers desire to work with a product
salesperson, in an arms-length relationship (which is clearly denoted to not be
an advisory relationship, and no advisory services are rendered), then such
consumers should possess such choice.
But the financial press, as well as consumers themselves, will continue
to refer to, and seek out, objective advice.
B.2.
Realize that Fiduciary Culture Begins at the Top.
The embrace of a bona fide
fiduciary standard of conduct, if it is to be successfully implemented, begins
at the highest echelons of the financial services firm – its CEO, executive
team, and even its Board of Directors.
It must be recognized that a fiduciary culture, once adopted by top
leadership, then must permeate each and every decision affecting the firm – its
organization at every level, its mission statement, each existing and new client
services offering, and indeed each and every operational aspect of the
financial services firm.
B.3.
Achieve a Thorough Understanding of the Fiduciary Principle.
One cannot embrace what one does not understand. Contrary to the assertions by many in the
securities industry – lobbyists and securities law attorneys – fiduciary duties
incorporate the duty of disclosure, but undertaking disclosure is but one
aspect of compliance with the fiduciary standard of conduct. Disclosure must be affirmatively undertaken of
all material facts in a manner which achieves client understanding, and which
leads to the informed consent of the client.
Even then, any proposed transaction must be fair and reasonable to the
client. Moreover, informed consent is
doubtful if the client is being asked to consent to a transaction which would
cause the client harm and provide a pecuniary benefit for the advisor, for it
is the rare client that undertakes a gratuitous transfer to his or her advisory
firm.
A concise statement of the
fiduciary duties of investment advisers, based on observations culled from
reported cases and decisions, was recently published in Advisor Perspectives.[46]
A more detailed outline which
summarizes the fiduciary duties of investment advisers and financial planners can
be found in the author’s outline, Understanding
the Fiduciary Standard of Conduct for Investment Advisers and Financial
Planners: A Summary of Key Principles, included as the Attachment to this
outline.
Acting in a fiduciary capacity
means realizing that certain business practices should be avoided. The greater the conflicts of interest between
the financial services firm and the client, in either quantity or quality or
both, the greater the erosion of trust and confidence between the firm and its
client. At some point, the presence of substantial or numerous conflicts of
interest may well make it impossible to maintain a fiduciary relationship.
Additionally, the presence of substantial conflicts of interest increases the
probability of taking undue advantage of the client by advisors of the firm,
creating increased potential for litigation and risk to the firm’s reputation.
B.4.
Focus on the Client Service Relationship. The embrace
of the fiduciary principle, and its effective implementation and permeation at
every level of an organization, results in a client-centric financial services
firm. The phrase “client-centric” should
not be merely that – a statement of what is desired to occur. Rather, each and every client service
offering must be examined from the point of view of both an unsophisticated
client and that of an educated, thoroughly knowledgeable client. Questions which might be asked of the firms’
service offerings include:
§
Is
each service provided needed and desired by the client, and helpful in securing
a client’s financial future?
§
Are
there financial planning services which are not being provided, but which most
clients would desire as part of the service offering if they knew such services
were possible?
§
Are
there other parts of the client service offering which, although perhaps
desired by the client, fail to result in substantially adding to the value of
the services and advice received by the client?
§
Are
the points of contact planned each year, for each type of client service
offering, sufficient to maintain a relationship of trust and confidence between
the advisor(s) and client?
§
Is
the education of the client sufficient so as to better ensure that the client
“sticks with the plan” through both up and down markets?[47]
§
Is
the client service offering customizable to reflect the varying degrees of
sophistication and client understanding by the client?[48]
B.5.
Increase Due Diligence: Investment
Strategies Should Pass Examination Under Daubert/Frye
Expert Examination Standards. General fiduciary principles impose the
obligation on an investment adviser to exercise due care in the development of
the investment strategy and in the selection of specific investment products
(or managers) for her or his client. In
Exhibit A hereto, the application of the Daubert
and Frye standards (as to the
admissibility of certain expert testimony in federal or state courts) is
discussed as the appropriate standard under which an investment strategy is
tested.
However, fiduciary law does not
prohibit the utilization of novel or untested investment strategies, nor those
based wholly upon qualitative judgment and therefore not susceptible to back-testing
or confirmation by academic research.
However, in such situations, the inherently speculative nature of such
novel or untested investment strategies must be clearly and affirmatively
disclosed to the client, along with any special or unique risks which may be
present, as well as other appropriate disclosures.
Additionally, firms which adopt a
fiduciary culture will not promote investment strategies merely because they
possess “sex appeal” and are likely to lead to a greater number of clients
and/or greater level of managed assets.
Investment strategy review, testing, and selection should be driven by
investment research and compliance dictates, not the marketing arm of a
financial services firm which seeks to act in its clients’ best interests at
all time.
B.6.
Investment Product Due Diligence. There are a large variety of investment
products. Each type of investment
product requires its own due diligence methodology. Investment product due diligence should “lift
the hood” to more closely examine all of the attributes and characteristics of
the investment product, as well as compliance by the investment managers with
their own fiduciary duties and applicable laws and regulation.
Given the expertise required, centralized
due diligence on investment product selection is likely to be a necessity in
each and every financial services firm.
What investment strategies would I
offer, in a financial services firm? I
would begin with four core strategies which might be suitable for the vast
majority of the clients of a fiduciary firm:
1)
Strategic
asset allocation, utilizing mutual funds from Dimensional Funds Advisors.
2)
Tactical
asset allocation, employing exchange-traded funds, and based upon relative
valuations of various asset classes (taking into account, with respect to
international stocks, fluctuations in currency exchange rates). Any tactical asset allocation strategies adopted
should be back-tested, with adequate safeguards against data mining, in order
to confirm a high degree of success for the proposed strategy. Note, however,
that the use of such strategies in taxable accounts would be disfavored, as
they would likely result in realization of capital gains, both short-term and
long-term, over time.
3)
Strategic
asset allocation with ETFs, together with the selective use of options to hedge
against short-term (2 years or less) stock market downturns. This type of strategy has its inherent costs,
and limits to upside potential, but also possesses substantial protection
against major stock market declines.
This strategy might be suitable for a client in the decumulation phase
of their financial lives, where a high degree of volatility poses greater
personal risks.
4)
Separate
account management stressing tax-efficient investing is a valid strategy for
many clients, provided risk reduction is afforded through broad diversification
(as a means of eliminating the statistical disadvantage suffered by many
40-stock portfolios – in terms of the likelihood of underperformance of the
majority of such portfolios as to their longer-term terminal values). Cost efficiencies can be secured for clients
by the large financial services firm through bunching of individual security
trades and strategies designed to minimize trading costs. Stressing low portfolio turnover further
reduces transaction costs, and may well permit greater tax efficiency.
Additional investment strategies
could then be added, based upon proposals received from in-house or outside strategists. Each strategy recommended would be submitted
to the rigors of back-testing (if possible) and due diligence examination to
ascertain any unique risks, hidden costs, etc.
B.7. Adopt Level Compensation
Methodologies.
Contrary
to belief by some, the fiduciary standard of conduct does not compel fee-only
(AUM, flat fee, and/or hourly fee-based) compensation. Commission-based compensation is perfectly
acceptable, and may be more appropriate for certain service offerings (such as
involving the laddering of a municipal bond portfolio). The problem with any method of compensation
is when it may vary based upon the recommendations provided to the client. In such instances, the magnifying glass of
20/20 hindsight is often applied (albeit often incorrectly) by a trier of fact
in a subsequent dispute, and efforts to justify higher fees for one
recommendation, as opposed to another, are extremely vexing.
Hence, efforts should exist to
eliminate situations leading to variable compensation where possible.
All those providing investment
advice possess conflicts of interest resulting from possible variable
compensation. These should be
identified, affirmatively disclosed, and properly managed. For example, the author’s fee-only RIA firm’s
Form ADV, Part II possesses the following disclosures of potential conflicts of
interest which may result in the firm’s level of compensation varying:
Proper
Management of Conflicts of Interest Relating to the Fees We Receive from You. The vast majority of our clients pay Joseph
fees based upon a percentage of the assets we advise upon. This is a very
common form of compensation for registered investment advisory firms and avoids
the multiple inherent conflicts of interest associated with commission-based
compensation (does not accept commission-based compensation of any nature, nor
does Joseph accept 12b-1 fees). Asset-advised-upon percentage method of
compensation can still at times lead to conflicts of interest between our firm
and our client as to the advice we provide. For example, conflicts of interest
may arise relating to the following financial decisions in life: incur or pay
down debt; gift funds to charities or to individuals; purchases of a (larger)
home or cars or other non-investment assets; the purchase of a lifetime
immediate annuity; expenditures of funds for travel or other activities;
investment in private equity investments (private real estate ventures, closely
held businesses, etc.), and the amount of funds to place in non-managed cash
reserve accounts. We have adopted internal policies to properly manage these
and other potential conflicts of interest. Our goal is that our advice to you
remains at all times in your best interests, disregarding any impact of the
decision to be undertaken upon our firm.
Do all investment advisers have a
similar form of disclosure in their Form ADV, Part II? Moreover, to ensure client understanding, do
they discuss the conflict of interest with the client, when it arises in a
specific context? Is that discussion
documented in notes to the file by the advisor?
B.8.
Portfolio and Other Reports: Clients Expect More.
In addition to forthcoming law requiring the tracking of cost basis by
custodians, clients expect more in this age of technology. Forward-thinking financial services firms
will realize that client access to their portfolio information – when desired,
in the format desired, and providing all of the information desired – is
essential. Customization of reporting
capabilities is essential, especially since many clients react favorably to
charts and graphs, while others prefer the detail provided in tabular
formulations of data. Reporting
capabilities might include:
(1)
Online availability at all times, including real-time market valuation.
(2) Performance
reports with up-to-date assessments, provided each day following.
(3) Realized gains
and losses, year-to-date, in taxable accounts.
(4) Unrealized gains
and losses, year-to-date, in all accounts.
(5) Consolidated
reporting, including assets held at other custodians.
(6) Portfolio
rebalancing reports.
(7)
Non-financial asset listings, such as the client’s primary residence, closely
held business interests, etc., and real-time updated listings of liabilities.
(8)
Copies of key documents available in a secure online data vault, including
beneficiary designations on accounts, investment policy statements, historical
reports and/or analysis, tax returns, estate planning documents – with certain
of these documents available to the client’s other professional advisors as
permitted by the client.
The application of technology to
reporting capabilities is essential, as is the focused design of client reports
with the aid of expert form designers and focus groups.
Advisors should be trained in how
to present report options to clients, and in aiding clients to select the
package of reports they desire to receive, in the manner they chose to receive
it, and at the times they desire to receive same (or access same).
B.9. Understand that Financial
Planning and Investments are Inextricably Linked.
People want and need financial
advice. In essence, they desire a
“financial coach,” especially when major financial decisions are present. Such decisions are often about investments,
or may impact the client’s investment policy.
And, increasingly, investment decisions possess ramifications in many
aspects of planning.
For example, take the purchase of
a variable annuity which invests in stock fund subaccounts for a client who is
60 years of age. This decision certainly
affects the client’s other investments, as the stock fund subaccounts may be
taken into account in terms of viewing the client’s entire portfolio. If the variable annuity provides a guarantee
of value upon its annuitization (during the lifetime of the client), this may
reduce the risks of volatility for the client, which in turn may lead to a
change in the client’s asset allocation / investment policy. The deferral of income inside the annuity
provides the benefits inherent with tax-deferred income – avoidance of current
taxation leading to greater funds to invest in succeeding years. The tax-deferred income might be utilized at
a time when the client has major health care expenses (such as those resulting
from the need for custodial care).
However, withdrawals in later years may occur when the client is either
in a lower or a higher marginal income tax bracket, with respect to ordinary
income. Still, marginal tax rates may be
much higher on the accumulated income since long-term capital gain treatment
(and, for 2010, qualified dividend income treatment) are foregone, as are
foreign tax credits if the subaccount invests in foreign stock funds.
While the variable annuity’s
beneficiary designation may result in probate avoidance, non-careful
preparation of the beneficiary designation may result in unintended heirs
receiving funds. In addition, certain
individual heirs and irrevocable trusts named as beneficiary may end up paying
higher combined federal / state / local marginal tax rates than the annuitant /
owner would have paid; rarely is deferral of income taxes into the future, to
pay taxes at a higher tax rate, a good thing.
If the client is charitably inclined, naming a qualified charity as a
beneficiary of the variable annuity may secure greater growth over the long
term, as to end-of-lifetime bequests, while preserving access to the annuity’s
funds in case of a lifetime need.
The presence of the variable
annuity may alter the tax diversification strategy of the overall portfolio as
well, including when withdrawals should be timed from both qualified and
non-qualified accounts so as to minimize the taxation of social security
retirement benefits, avoid paying higher Medicare Part B premiums, or avoid
higher marginal tax rates. In some
states, variable annuities possess protection from claims of general
creditors. These and many other
considerations may come into play in determining whether a variable annuity is
a proper choice for a client, from the standpoint of investor-specific due
diligence, as well as general investment product due diligence.
Clients both want and desire an
advisor who views all of the planning and investment needs holistically. Investment decisions usually interrelate with
financial, tax, estate, and risk management planning for a client. In addition, since any investment decision will
no doubt refer back to, or at least reflect, the financial plan (formal or
informal, comprehensive or modular) of the client, it is extremely difficult to
view financial planning as distinct from investment advice.
B.11.
Lobby for the Redesign of 12b-1 Fees (Or - The Next Scandal?)
.
One of the most contentious
issues facing the SEC currently is that of 12b-1 fees. The SEC has indicated that it will address
12b-1 “reform” in some fashion in the future, but little hint has occurred as
to how this may unfold.
In reality, in many contexts,
12b-1 fees are investment advisory fees “in drag.” They are utilized to compensate registered
representatives and their broker-dealer firms for services of an investment
advisory nature.[49] If 12b-1 fees remain, absent Congressional
legislation in the near term look for a judicial challenge to the use of 12b-1
fees to pay for advisory services. Dual registration (RIA/BD) would solve the
issue of improper use of 12b-1 fees, provided every registered representative
who is compensated by means of 12b-1 fee payments is registered as an
investment adviser representative. Any
conflicts of interest arising from the dual registrant’s receipt of 12b-1 fees
would be solved by crediting any and all 12b-1 fees received against the
advisory fees charged to the client.
If 12b-1 fees were not used to
pay for some aspect of ongoing advice, 12b-1 fees (of the 1% annually variety,
at least) – which often never disappear – would result, in many instances, in unreasonable
compensation to the broker-dealer firm.
In this regard, Class C mutual fund shares may well be the focus of the
next “scandal” – with very similar issues existing as were present in the Class
B mutual fund sales scandal.
Whatever direction Congress, the
SEC, and/or the courts proceed with regard to the complex issues involving the
propriety of 12b-1 fees (only a few of which issues have been touched on
above), this author would hope that should monumental change occur, that more
than adequate time – a few years – is provided to undertake any transition away
from 12b-1 fees, should such become necessary.
Many dedicated registered representatives have staked their livelihoods
on the receipt of 12b-1 fees, believing that such fees more closely aligned
their interests with those of their customers; it would be unfair to see their
quest for fair treatment of their customers lead to a dismantling, overnight,
of their primary source of practice income.
E.12.
The Sale of Proprietary Products: Adopt Practices which Minimize the Conflict
and Meet the Due Diligence Obligation. The sale of
proprietary mutual funds and other proprietary investment products represents
one of the greatest challenges, as to reconciling current business practices
with fiduciary law.
Pooled investment vehicles, such
as mutual funds, provide a means to serve those who do not possess the
resources to engage separate account managers, and it affords the individual
investor the opportunity to secure diversification benefits at lower
costs. The conceptual problem arises in
that the placement of an investor’s cash into a mutual fund is perceived not
just as part and parcel of investment management services provided by the
personal financial advisor himself or herself, but rather results in the
purchase of an investment product. Due
diligence requires a comparative analysis of available investment products.
As a practical matter, conflicts
of interest inevitably occur when recommending proprietary funds. Having clients invest in proprietary funds
brings a number of not-so-incidental benefits to the investment adviser or its
affiliates, including but not limited to securing the critical mass to keep a
fund open and/or attract other investors and resulting higher net worth of the
parent company as more assets under management are secured in the funds
themselves. While often all of the
management fee paid by a fund shareholder to the fund’s investment adviser is
credited back against investment advisory fees (at least in the fiduciary bank
trust department environment), many other forms of compensation may
result. For example, it appears that
many proprietary mutual funds possess higher administrative costs than many of
their peers; administrative fees often result in payments to other affiliates,
and are seldom credited against investment advisory fees paid. Affiliated funds may also pay soft dollar
compensation and other brokerage commissions to affiliate broker-dealers.
In the face of such conflicts of
interest, how can investment advisers properly manage the conflicts? The first way would be to structure the
fund’s operations in such a fashion as to minimize any and all payments to
affiliated service providers and/or affiliated broker-dealers. Additionally,
due diligence must be undertaken by the investment adviser which demonstrates
no harm to the investor is likely to result from the investment in a
proprietary product, as opposed to a similar non-proprietary product. Given the fact that, at least with respect to
active management strategies, it can take several decades to demonstrate the
success of the fund manager is due to skill as opposed to statistical
aberration, this can be a very high hurdle.
Yet the burden of proof of adequate due diligence falls on the
investment adviser when disputes arise over the validity of the advice
provided. It is highly unlikely that a
common practice used by bank trust departments – that of selecting only those
proprietary funds for clients which outperformed over the near term the other
(non-proprietary) funds available – will survive attack by expert
testimony. Much more due diligence is
required other than just looking at historical short-term performance.
E.13. Principal Trades: Set Up a Secure Chinese Wall.
If the large financial services
firm feels compelled to act as a dealer and sell to or purchase from investment
advisory clients, realize the difficulties that result. Every decision the dealer makes to sell out
of its own portfolio is accompanied at the same time by a recommendation of the
same firm to the client to purchase the very same security. Since a fiduciary must undertake disclosure of
all material facts, this includes the reason the firm has chosen to sell, the
profit the firm will have made from the transaction, and the lack of any better
alternative for the client. As to the
latter requirement, given the very large bid-ask spreads typically seen, even
over the course of one business day, in corporate and municipal bonds (even
those which are among the most actively traded), ensuring that the client is
not harmed by the principal transaction becomes problematic.
Moreover, the undertaking of
principal trading creates the risk of rogue decision-makers in the large
financial services firm. Compensation
incentives are based upon trader’s profitability, and a firm’s trader (out of,
or into, its own inventory) may choose not to reveal all material facts to the
firm’s retail advisors (and their clients) – such as when they quickly dump
securities in expectation of adverse news (or worse, following the receipt of
news or conclusion of analyses).
Are the risks to the financial
services firm from principal trading practices worth the profit that results? Are these risks worth the erosion of client
trust which necessarily results from this major conflict of interest?
One solution which could, and
this author would argue should, be adopted is to undertake a Chinese wall in
the financial services firm between the investment adviser client trading desk
and the dealer’s trading desk. The
investment adviser trading desk would be shown what issues were available at
any time, but would not know whether the trade would occur on an agency or principal
basis.
A
better solution
is to utilize the aggregate purchasing power which a large financial services
firm would possess to secure improvement in execution (price improvement) on
behalf of its investment advisory clients.
Aggregating orders into million-dollar bond purchases will substantially
lower the transaction costs, especially in comparison with bond purchases of
less than $100,000 denominations.
Smaller registered investment adviser firms simply cannot compete
against such a service offering, unless they band together with other firms to
establish a joint fixed income trading desk (as some firms have done, but often
at considerable cost to the adviser, and/or incremental cost to the clients
thereby negating much of the purchasing power advantages otherwise secured).
E.14. Provide Ongoing Continuing Education of
Quality and Quantity to Your Financial Planners.
The world changes far too quickly in the world of financial planning,
tax planning, risk management planning, estate planning and investments for
financial planners to not keep pace through continuing education. Even the sales-oriented financial planner
must learn to identify financial planning issues, and be aware of new
opportunities which emerge. Larger
financial services firms can employ their resources, including both access to
technology and access to quality educational content providers, to provide
ongoing education to their financial planners.
One idea is for a large financial
services firm to mandate 60 or more hours of continuing education each year,
for each and every one of its personal financial advisors. Much of this can be accomplished through
1-hour continuing education (CE) conducted, via webinars, nearly each week a
year. Attending the sessions could be
made mandatory, with webinars posted and made available online for a period of
time for “make-up” sessions.
While webinars leverage
technology and enable the cost-efficient delivery of CE, nothing re-energizes
most advisors than providing for their attendance at a seminar. The remaining 12-16 hours of CE could be
provided through a 2-day gathering of the firm’s financial planners, either
nationally or regionally. Emphasis of
such a gathering could focus on client relationship building, marketing, and
client counseling skills. Motivational speakers
could be brought in. Reinvigorate your
sales force, each and every year (if not more often), and ensure that they
understand and remain motivated by the firm’s mission.
The requirement of such education
– twice the hours required each year to maintain the CFP® certification – could
be a real marketing advantage for the firm’s advisors. Each quarter a different focus of the CE
could be undertaken (interspersed with other topics), so as to provide a
Certificate of Completion for the advisor – to add to the advisor’s C.V. and further
aide in credibility enhancement.
E.15. Centralize Financial Planning and Portfolio
Management. Realize that, even with a CFP® credential in
hand, your “Business Developers” (i.e.,
top sales force) are unlikely to possess all the knowledge that their clients
require. In addition, there will be
others hired by the firm who possess relationship management skills, along with
technical expertise, but who are not very good in developing new business.
The solution is not to make
persons into which they are not; this causes undue stress on team members over
time and is likely to lead to substantial attrition. Rather, fit the position to the person’s
capacities and interests. For example,
some experienced financial planners will possess all of the skills required –
technical knowledge and ability, as well as the ability to secure new
clients. Those individuals may operate
with a minimum of support (but, nevertheless, oversight). Even then, persons performing two roles may
be counseled as to which role is likely to be more profitable for them,
personally, over the long term.
More likely, the best “business
developers” will lack the technical expertise, and desire / aptitude, to
prepare financial plans and render financial planning and/or investment advice
with a high degree of skill and knowledge.
Teaming such business developers with a support team can enable all to
blossom, especially if the team is structured so as to enable the business
developer to hand off client relationships over time to other team members
(while retaining rewards from securing such business), in order that the
business developer can go after new clients.
For quality control purposes,
consideration should be given to centralization of financial planning functions
in the firm – or at least centralize the oversight of the “technical” team
members. Business developers, while they
may “lead” a team, will seldom possess the ability to adequately supervise the
technical staff. Adequate compliance
procedures, and routine oversight of the financial advice which is provided,
can better ensure that the quality of the advice lives up to the high standards
which the firm should adopt (and, in so doing, lessen liability risks).
Portfolio management, even in
terms of watching for certain deviations from strategic asset allocation
targets, can be aided through the application of technology. Tax-savvy trading staff should be employed,
and trained, in how to best reduce the long-term tax drag resulting from
trading decisions, client cash requirements, and the deployment of cash
inflows. Model portfolios can be
utilized to provide standardized investment policies to fit a particular
client’s risk attributes. However,
practices to discourage include the employment of model portfolios on a
wholesale basis in a fashion which does not consider the particular ways of
minimizing the tax drag on that particular client’s tax portfolio returns.
In order to secure an adequate
work force as the demand for financial planning services grows, close
affiliation should be established with many of the universities which are now
churning out the next generation of financial planners.
E.16. Don’t Shy Away from Providing Tax Advice to
Individual Investors.
Financial planning and investment
decisions are often driven by tax concerns.
It’s not what your clients make, it’s what they keep that matters.
Given the vast import of taxes in
the net returns of individual investors, arguably it is impossible for a
fiduciary financial advisor to disclaim the provision of tax advice in
connection with the construction and proper management of a taxable client’s
investment portfolio. There are limits
to the extent a fiduciary can circumscribe his or her duties by seeking to define
a more limited “scope of the engagement.”
When new clients come to this
financial planner’s firm from the large financial services firms, virtually
every portfolio seen is not structured tax-efficiently. Usually little or no attention is given to
correct asset placement, the use of tax-efficient investment vehicles (and the
avoidance of tax-inefficient ones), the avoidance of short-term capital gains,
and the harvesting of capital losses.
Unless all financial planners become better at structuring and managing
their clients’ portfolios with a view toward long-term tax minimization, then
both regulators and plaintiff’s attorneys are likely to have a field day.
E.17. Promote Your Firm’s Truly Objective Advice to the Press.
Right now, I – “Small Firm” – have the national press largely in my pocket. While I don’t have the marketing dollars the
“Large Firms” possess to build and maintain a national brand and to secure
ongoing exposure, I don’t need it. Each
and every week articles appear in the press advising “Big Firm’s” brokerage customers
to seek out a truly independent advisor – especially those who possess a level
of competency indicated by attainment of the CFP® certification.
Firms which adopt a true
fiduciary mindset can then advertise the result – adherence to bona fide fiduciary standards of conduct
– as a powerful marketing tool. More
importantly, members of the press, when informed of the path the large
financial services firm has taken – will steer clients to that firm’s door.
E.18. Increased Liability?
As CCO of my firm, the increased potential liability that my firm, and
advisors, possess to our clients as a result of our acceptance of fiduciary
status, is so far down on my list of concerns that it rarely crosses my
mind. The reason is simple – once
conflicts of interest are removed, due diligence is undertaken, and care is taken
in the provision of financial and investment advice (as well as properly
documenting the advice provided), there is very little for clients to complain
about.
E.19.
Change (Partially) Ownership of the Client Relationship.
The forward-thinking financial services firm will realize that both the
firm and its advisors contribute to the acquisition of each client and the
maintenance of that relationship. Hence,
why don’t they share in the “ownership” of the client relationship?
While every firm should continue
to seek non-solicitation agreements, you may agree in advance with each advisor
that should they depart the firm, and should the client follow the advisor, the
advisor will compensate the firm by buying out the firm’s interest in that
client relationship over time. Likewise,
if the advisor departs, the firm will assist in selling the advisor’s client
relationships to another advisor of the firm (to be paid out over time).
Some form of shared ownership of
the client relationship will likely dramatically change your financial
advisor’s perspective of working “for” the large financial services firm, and
will fulfill for them the entrepreneurial desires which many of them possess. Yet, many other changes in the structure of
the firm and how it provides services to clients will also aid in advisor
recruitment and retention efforts:
-
Attract
and retain advisors by providing a platform they feel comfortable working under
– free of the conflicts of interests which cause them distress in dealing with
clients.
-
Retain
advisors through appropriate deferred compensation arrangements, which
encourage long-last relationships between the firm and its clients, and the
firm and its advisors.
-
Attract
and retain advisors by offering comprehensive back-office support – portfolio
monitoring and trading support team, due diligence on investment strategies and
products, compliance, financial plan development and presentment, ongoing
financial and tax advice available to respond to ongoing client needs, ongoing
education of the advisors, rewards for achievements of additional educational
program milestones, etc.
-
Attract
and retain advisors by establishing a firm business model which is sustainable
over the long term; such a business model, designed for affirmative increase in
market share, rather than defensively in an effort to preserve market share, will
create the excitement and atmosphere which attract more advisors, leading to
larger growth of the firm and increased stock values over time.
C. CLOSING THOUGHTS.
Smaller
RIA firms have experienced significant growth in the number of new clients, even
through the recent stock market declines.
From the standpoint of many independent, fee-only RIAs, the larger
broker-dealer firms today are not seen as the competition, but rather as
fertile ground for “easy picking.”[50]
Recent months have seen, in large
part due to the unhinging of the glue of many deferred compensation arrangements
tied to the value of stock in the financial services firms, an exodus of
registered representatives from broker-dealer firms. However, other reasons exist for the flight
of top sales and relationship manager talent.
Many financial advisors flee to the independent BD and/or RIA model
because they would prefer to work in an environment which possesses reduced
conflicts of interest.
Legislation emerging from
Congress, and rule-making efforts at the SEC, may fail to embrace a bona fide fiduciary standard of conduct
for all those who provide investment advice and may even lower the existing
fiduciary standard applicable to RIAs.
It is likely that Congress will also fail to subject financial planning
to regulation at the national level.
Challenges will remain for large financial
services firms. This results from the
application of broad fiduciary duties under state common law (which are
unlikely to be preempted by this Congress).
Additionally, the past decade has seen the re-emergence of the states as
a bastion of investor protection. Lack
of federal regulation of financial planning will likely spur the states to fill
the void through state-specific regulatory schemes over the provision of
financial advice. While legislative and
regulatory efforts may slow down disintermediation, it won’t stop the
fundamental underlying forces which effect change – the demands of both clients
and advisors that a fiduciary business model be adopted.
Paradigm shifts are often difficult to accept. The large financial services firm of today
should possess a long-term strategic plan to adapt. Forward thinking leadership
will embrace the bona fide fiduciary
standard of conduct, which will in turn necessitate a re-design of the firm’s
operational structures and client service offerings. With their significant resources and through efficiencies
of scale, those larger financial services firms which react most quickly, and which
execute well, in such an endeavor, will prosper. Moreover, this “fiduciary transformation”
results in a “win-win-win” scenario:
·
A
huge “win” for the firm’s clients, as they receive better investment and
financial planning advice and are far more likely to follow a long-term plan to
accomplish their lifetime financial goals;
·
A
significant “win” for the firm’s advisors, who thrive professionally, receive
high levels of satisfaction from their relationships with clients built upon
trust and confidence, and who are vastly appreciative of the expert support
they receive as they build and preserve “their” practices; and
·
An
enormous “win” for the firm itself, as it grows market share through a more
attractive offering to prospective clients, retains clients over the very long
term through trusted relationships, and retains advisors by providing an
environment for them to both prosper and enjoy their professional lives.
ATTACHMENT:
UNDERSTANDING THE FIDUCIARY STANDARD OF CONDUCT FOR
INVESTMENT ADVISERS
AND FINANCIAL PLANNERS: A SUMMARY OF KEY PRINCIPLES
by Ron A. Rhoades, JD, CFP®[51]
October 18, 2009, as revised
Dec. 1, 2009
In the investment
adviser and financial planning communities, there has long existed confusion
over what the “fiduciary standard” requires.
This confusion has been exacerbated by often-inconsistent rule-making
and/or no-action letters by the SEC.
Additionally, advocacy efforts from a few organizations have long sought
to minimize the fiduciary standard of conduct – either as to its application, the
specific requirements resulting from its application, or both. This memorandum explores the “fiduciary
standard of conduct” applicable to investment advisers and, by extension, also
to financial planners. The purpose of
this memorandum is to provide a greater understanding of the fiduciary standard
of conduct, as an aide to those involved in policy-making efforts at the
federal and/or state levels, by providing a summary
explanation of the fiduciary standard of conduct as it currently exists under
the Advisers Act and state common law.
In addition, I provide a copy of a letter signed by seven university
professors, expressing concerns regarding language in proposed legislation
which could be construed as resulting in a non-fiduciary standard of conduct
for investment advisers.
Table of
Contents
A.
Sources of Confusion as to Fiduciary Duties Abound.
B.
The Fiduciary Standard of Conduct, Generally.
C.
The Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty, Generally.
D.
Observing the Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty when a
Conflict of Interest is Present.
E.
The Fiduciary Duty of Due Care.
F.
The Fiduciary Duty of Utmost Good Faith.
EX: OCT. 16, 2009 LETTER TO CONGRESS,
FROM UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS
INTRODUCTION.
Reasons for the Application of Fiduciary Standards. Why
are fiduciary standards of conduct imposed?
Why are arms-length relationships not embraced, and why does the law
restrain conduct by fiduciaries (and their ability to contract around broad fiduciary
duties)? Understanding the rationale for imposition of the
fiduciary standard of conduct is essential to understanding the fiduciary
standard itself. This rationale is
summarized in the end notes to the Letter to Congress (found in Exhibit A to this
memorandum).
Application of these Concepts to Financial Planners. Since the
Advisers Act is based upon state common law, and since either the Advisers Act (depending
upon its construction by regulators), state statutes, and/or state common law
(or all three) applies the fiduciary standard found in the Advisers Act to
personal financial planning activities, this material may be of interest to
those interested in the standards to financial planners.
Impact of Organizational Ethics Codes, Etc. Organizational
ethics codes and/or codes of conduct may either adopt higher or lower
standards. This does not generally
modify the requirements imposed by law.
Although organizational standards do not create a separate cause of
action under fiduciary law, these standards may be utilized, in some instances,
as evidence of the proper standard of care in a breach of fiduciary duty
action. However, the existence of lower
organizational standards are likely to have far less impact upon an investment
adviser’s or financial planner’s fiduciary duties of loyalty and utmost good
faith; courts would unlikely accept a lower standard of conduct simply because
an association’s standards of conduct do not rise to the level required by
applicable law.
The Greater Risks Posed To Investment Advisers and
Personal Financial Advisors in Today’s Regulatory Environment. The past year has seen a substantial erosion of trust
in our financial institutions.
High-profile Ponzi schemes involving financial services intermediaries
both large and small have called into question the capability of the existing
regulatory regime for the retail securities industry. Near-term impacts include:
·
Embarrassing
scandals have led to the typical reaction by regulators - examiners of
securities firms have stated that they are more likely to refer violations of
an investment adviser’s fiduciary duties for enforcement proceedings;
·
Disgruntled
clients of financial advisors and their attorneys are increasingly successful
during arbitration hearings with broker-dealer firms in obtaining the
application of fiduciary duties, as they seek to recover losses from
often-inappropriate or conflicted investment recommendations; and
·
Congress is likely
to address, through new legislation, both the control of financial system systemic
risks, as well as the diverse, piecemeal regulatory scheme which governs the
furnishing of investment products and services to individual Americans.
All of these developments pose regulatory and
reputational risks for investment advisers and personal financial advisors as
they seek to understand and comply with their fiduciary duties.
A.
CONFUSION OVER THE FIDUCIARY STANDARD OF CONDUCT
EXISTS. There appears to exist a fundamental lack of
agreement over just what the fiduciary standard of conduct actually requires
under the Advisers Act. A related issue
is what the phrase “best interests” means.
The fact that there exists confusion over these points, some seven
decades after the enactment of the Advisers Act, is not unexpected, given recent
developments.
Over the past two decades, the SEC has,
in its rule-making efforts, generally de-emphasized (but not overturned,
formally)[52]
its prior rulings and various court decisions which applied the Advisers Act
and its fiduciary standard of conduct.
The SEC, no doubt under pressure (and many would assert, “regulatory
capture” by the broker-dealer, investment banking, and investment company
communities), has begun to view the Advisers Act as imposing a “disclosure”
requirement, with consent of the client being all that is necessary.
In addition, the standards of conduct
provided by various investment adviser / financial planner trade associations
may or may not reflect bona fide
fiduciary standards of conduct, and may not incorporate all of the requirements
imposed by fiduciary law.
What matters to the individual
investment adviser and financial planner is what
the law requires, and what actions can be undertaken to ensure compliance
with the fiduciary standards of conduct imposed by law.
The SEC’s views (even if unclear) as to
the nature of fiduciary standard of conduct may be authoritative as to the
application of the (federal) Advisers Act, but even these views are capable of
being overturned by the courts. And,
since the state common law of fraud is not expressly preempted by the Advisers
Act (although “implied preemption” may exist in certain compelling
circumstances), the state common law application of fiduciary duties to the
activities of investment advisers and financial planners must also be
considered.
This memorandum seeks to summarize the
fiduciary standard of conduct for investment advisers and financial planners,
by reference to decisions arising under the Advisers Act, as well as references
to some state common law decisions.
B.
UNDERSTANDING THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS’ ACT FIDUCIARY
STANDARD OF CONDUCT, GENERALLY. The fiduciary standard of conduct is a tough
standard that should not be diminished merely to accommodate someone’s
business model.
- A “Best Interests” Standard, Generally. The
Advisers’ Act fiduciary standard of conduct is generally described as a
“best interests” fiduciary standard of conduct. The Advisers Act has
always adopted the “best interests” standard[53] found in the Investment Advisers Act of
1940, which is a codification of state common law.
- Not a “Sole Interests” Standard. The
Advisers Act does NOT impose a “sole interests” standard. Under a “sole interests” standard, any
form of self-dealing is essentially prohibited.[54]
- The Tri-parte Fiduciary Standard. We
can derive from the case law and reported administrative decisions
applicable to investment advisers and financial planners, as well as
general principles of fiduciary law, a listing of some of the specific
principles or duties arising from the fiduciary standard of conduct. In this regard, in the United States we
frequently refer to a triad of broad fiduciary duties – due care, loyalty,
and utmost good faith. While useful
as a clear and succinct statement of the law, these tri-parte general
duties or principles still often fail to provide adequate guidance to
advisors and those who regulate them.
In an attempt to fill this void, following is the author’s further
elicitation of the fiduciary duties of advisors, presented in summary
fashion, which this author has derived from various reported decisions and
rulings:
- Status as a Fiduciary. An
advisor is a fiduciary (and a trusted source of objective professional
advice) with respect to the client, and shall at all times during the
course of the relationship[55]
(during which any advice is provided by the adviser to the client), owe
to such client broad fiduciary duties of due care, loyalty, and utmost
good faith.
- Duty of Due Care. An
advisor shall act with due care.
In connection therewith (and not by way of limitation):
i.
An advisor possesses
a fiduciary duty to the client to exercise with good judgment, knowledge, and
due diligence[56]
as to the investment strategies, the investment products,[57] and the
matching of those strategies to meet the needs and objectives of the client,[58] and
with that degree of care ordinarily possessed and exercised in similar
situations by a competent professional properly practicing in his or her field.
ii.
An advisor shall
maintain the confidentiality of client information in accordance with
applicable law and the agreement with the client.
- Duty of Loyalty. An
advisor shall abide by his, her or its fiduciary duty of loyalty to the
client at all times during the course of the relationship with the
client. In connection therewith
(and not by way of limitation):
i.
The
advisor shall at all times place and maintain his or her or its client's best
interests[59]
first and paramount to those of the advisor; [60]
ii.
The advisor shall
not, through either false statement nor through omission,[61] mislead
his or her or its clients;
iii.
The advisor shall
affirmatively provide full and fair disclosure of all material facts[62] to his
or her or its client prior to a client’s decision[63] on a
recommended course of action,[64]
including but not limited to: (1) all fees and costs[65]
associated with any investment, securities and insurance products recommended
to a client, expressed with specificity for the particular transaction
contemplated; and (2) all of the material benefits, fees and any other material
compensation paid to the advisor (and additionally those benefits, fees and
other material compensation paid to the advisor representative) or to any firm
or person with whom he or she or it may be affiliated, expressed with
specificity for the particular transaction which is contemplated.
iv.
The advisor is
under an affirmative obligation to reasonably avoid conflicts of interest[66] which
would impair the independent and objective advice rendered to the client. As to any remaining conflicts of interest
which are not reasonably avoided, the advisor shall undertake full and affirmative
disclosure of such conflict of interest[67] and
shall ensure the intelligent, independent and informed consent[68] of his
or her or its client is obtained with regard thereto. In any event, the proposed arrangement
remains should be prudently managed in order that the client’s best interests
are preserved[69]
and that the proposed arrangement is substantively fair to the client.
- Utmost Good Faith. An
advisor shall act with utmost good faith[70]
toward his, her or its client. Not
by way of limitation thereof, an advisor shall not act recklessly nor
with conscious disregard of the client’s interests.
- The “One” Fiduciary Standard under the Common
Law. Under state common law, there exists
only one fiduciary standard of conduct governing the activities of
investment advisers and financial planners.
- Some Statutes Modify the Common Law Fiduciary
Standard. This common law fiduciary standard may
be modified by statute, such as the Advisers Act or ERISA (or, within the
limits of agency authority and discretion, through administrative
regulations applying statutes).
- Fiduciary Standards of Conduct Constantly
Evolve. Additionally, the “one fiduciary
standard” is not static – it evolves as the business practices of
financial planners and investment advisers evolve to fit the nature of
the relationship between the parties.[71]
- The Fiduciary Standard Should NOT Be Legislative
Defined. This author concurs with the position
by learned commentators that “the overarching fiduciary standard”[72]
should not be “defined” further by legislation setting forth specific
fiduciary duties. This is because
fiduciary duties must evolve over time to meet the ever-changing business
practices of advisors and fraudulent conduct successfully circumscribed.[73] Any attempt to “define” the fiduciary
standard of conduct would effectively negate the ability of courts of
equity to react to the ever-changing field of investment and financial
planning advice.[74]
C.
THE FIDUCIARY DUTY OF LOYALTY.
- The Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty, Generally. It is the
principle of the fiduciary duty of loyalty which makes fiduciary duties so
demanding upon the fiduciary.
Although expressed as an obligation or duty of loyalty, the
fiduciary duty of loyalty essentially imposes an inhibition or disability
upon the fiduciary. It requires
the fiduciary to refrain from certain acts, in exclusion of the interests
of the fiduciary himself. Under
English law, from which American law is derived, the broad fiduciary duty
of loyalty includes these three separate rules:
a.
The “No Conflict” Rule: A fiduciary
must not place itself in a position where its own interests conflict with those
of its client.
b. The “No
Profit” Rule: A fiduciary must not profit from its position
at the expense of the client. This
aspect of the fiduciary duty of loyalty is often considered a prohibition
against self-dealing. Under the heading,
“Duty of Loyalty,” the Second Restatement of Trusts states that the fiduciary
“is under a duty not to profit at the expense of the beneficiary and not to
enter into competition with him without his consent, unless authorized to
do. Similarly, the Second Restatement
of Agency provides that the duty of loyalty entails a duty not to make a profit
on transactions conducted for the principal or deal with the principal as an
adverse party.
c.
The “Undivided Loyalty” Rule: A fiduciary
owes undivided loyalty to its client and therefore must not place itself in a
position where his or her duty toward one client conflicts with a duty that it
owes to another client.
- The Duty of Loyalty: The General Requirement of
Disclosure of All Material Facts. A salient feature of
fiduciary law is that the fiduciary is under a legal obligation of
enhanced disclosure to the client (or beneficiary, or representative
thereof). Generally, “fiduciary law
protects the [client] by obligating the fiduciary to disclose all material
facts, requiring an intelligent, independent consent from the [client], a
substantively fair arrangement, or both.”
a.
The Advisers Act Requirement to Disclose Material
Facts and to Avoid Misleading Clients. Investment advisers are
fiduciaries and possess an affirmative duty to “provide full and fair
disclosure of all material facts” as well as an affirmative obligation to
“employ reasonable care to avoid misleading” clients. Engaging in transactions with clients without
making required disclosures of material facts is a violation of Section 206 of
the Advisers Act.
b. What is a
Material Fact? Generally, a material fact is “anything which
might affect the (client’s) decision whether or how to act.”
c.
Disclosures Must Be Timely Given. “[D]isclosure,
if it is to be meaningful and effective, must be timely. It must be provided
before the completion of the transaction so that the client will know all the
facts at the time that he is asked to give his consent.”
3.
The Fiduciary’s Duty to Disclose Conflicts of
Interest.
a.
What is a Conflict of Interest? A “conflict of
interest” generally refers to any activity or relationship in which an
investment adviser’s interests compete with the interests of its clients. More broadly, “a conflict of interest arises
in any situation in which an interest interferes, or has the potential to
interfere, with a person, organization or institution’s ability to act in accordance
with the interest of another party, assuming that the person, organization or
institution has a (legal, conventional or fiduciary) obligation to do so.”
b. A Conflict
of Interest is Always a Material Fact. Due to the risks posed by a
conflict of interest, the presence of a
(material) conflict of interest is always a material fact which must be
disclosed in fiduciary relationships by
the fiduciary.
c.
Unavoidable Conflicts of Interest are Still Conflicts. Unavoidable
and systematic conflicts of interest are still conflicts of interest and must
be treated as such. The fact that the financial advisor or investment adviser
is not to blame for finding herself in a conflict of interest situation, or
that the conflict of interest is incapable of being avoided, does not mean that
the conflict of interest is not a material fact requiring, at the minimum,
disclosure.
d. The
Compensation of the Financial Planner is Always a Source of Conflicts, and Must
be Fully Disclosed. “Compensation is inherent in any commercial
transaction; it is simultaneously a source of conflicts of interests and a
possible means of reducing these conflicts by creating the proper
incentives.” At the inception of the
fiduciary relationship, the financial advisor and client bargain as to the type
and amount of compensation the client is to pay for the fiduciary’s
services. Even in this process, full
disclosure of the compensation methodology and amounts (or at least good faith
estimates of same) is required.
e. “Casual
Disclosure” vs. “Full Disclosure” and Obtaining Informed Consent.
(1) The Scope
of the Fiduciary Obligation of Disclosure. The fiduciary
duty of disclosure extends not just to the existence of a conflict, nor when a
profit may be made by the fiduciary on a proposed transaction, but also
mandates disclosure of “all other facts which he should realize have or are
likely to have a bearing upon the desirability of the transaction from the
viewpoint of the principal. This
includes, in the case of sales to him by the principal, not only the price
which can be obtained but also all facts affecting the desirability of sale …
and all other matters which a disinterested and skillful agent advising the
principal would think reasonably relevant.”
Stated differently, “’any omission to state a material fact necessary in
order to make the statements made, in the light of the circumstances under
which they were made, not misleading,’ is expressly made unlawful. These quoted
words as they appear in the statute can only mean that Congress forbid not only
the telling of purposeful falsity but also the telling of half-truths and the
failure to tell the ‘whole truth.’ These statutory words were obviously
designed to protect the investing public as a whole whether the individual
investors be suspicious or unsuspecting.”
(2) “Casual
Disclosure” is Insufficient. The duty of disclosure is not satisfied
merely by “casual disclosure,” such as “there may be facts which may be of
interest to you” or “I may possess a conflict of interest.” As stated by Justice Cardoza: “If dual
interests are to be served, the disclosure to be effective must lay bare the
truth, without ambiguity of reservation, in all its stark significance ….”
(3) Disclosure
Must Be Affirmatively Made. Additionally, the duty to disclose is an
affirmative one, and the failure to disclose by an investment adviser is a
violation of the Advisers Act. The fiduciary is required to ensure that the
disclosure is received by the client; the “access equals delivery” approach
adopted by the SEC in connection with the delivery of a full prospectus to a
consumer would not likely qualify as an appropriate disclosure by a fiduciary
financial advisor to her or his client.
As stated in an early case applying the Advisers Act: “It is not enough that one who acts as an
admitted fiduciary proclaim that he or she stands ever ready to divulge
material facts to the ones whose interests she is being paid to protect. Some
knowledge is prerequisite to intelligent questioning. This is particularly true
in the securities field. Readiness and willingness to disclose are not
equivalent to disclosure. The statutes and rules discussed above make it
unlawful to omit to state material facts irrespective of alleged (or proven)
willingness or readiness to supply that which has been omitted.”
D.
UNDERSTANDING THE FIDUCIARY DUTY OF LOYALTY WHEN A
CONFLICT OF INTEREST IS PRESENT.
- “Disclosure” and ”Consent” Alone are
Insufficient. Advocates of the “new federal fiduciary
standard” have implied that “disclosure” of a conflict of interest,
followed by the “consent” of the client to proceed with the transaction,
is all that is required of the fiduciary.
This view takes into account only the disclosure-based regime of
either the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934[75]
- which contemplate an arms-length relationship[76]
between the issuer or broker and customer.
In contrast, the Advisors Act requires much more of those in fiduciary
relationships with their clients. In the
presence of a conflict of interest, fiduciary law protects the client by
obligating the fiduciary to: (1) affirmatively
disclose all material facts to the client; (2) ensure client understanding of the transaction, the conflict of interest
which exists, and their ramifications; (3) obtain an intelligent, independent and informed consent from the client; and
(4) ensure that the proposed transaction, even with client consent, remains a substantively fair arrangement for the
client. The remainder of this memorandum
provides authority for each of the foregoing requirements of the “best
interests” standard.
5. Full Disclosure of All Material Facts
Required. “Courts have imposed
on a fiduciary an affirmative duty of `utmost good faith and full and fair
disclosure of all material facts,’ as well as an affirmative obligation `to
employ reasonable care to avoid misleading' his customers.” SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 194,
84 S.Ct. 275, 11 L.Ed.2d 237 (1963).
6. A “Material Fact” is Anything Which May
Affect Client’s Decision. “When
a stock broker or financial advisor is providing financial or investment
advice, he or she … is required to disclose facts that are material to the
client's decision-making.” Johnson v. John Hancock Funds, No.
M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App. 6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006). A material fact is “anything which might
affect the (client’s) decision whether or how to act.” Allen
Realty Corp. v. Holbert, 318 S.E.2d 592, 227 Va. 441 (Va., 1984). An example of the type of disclosure, when a
conflict of interest is present, is revealed in a recent decision arising under
the Advisers Act: “[W]hen a firm has a fiduciary relationship with a customer,
it may not execute principal trades with that customer absent full disclosure
of its principal capacity, as well as all other information that
bears on the desirability of the transaction from the customer's perspective.’…
Other authorities are in agreement. For example, the general rule is that an
agent charged by his principal with buying or selling an asset may not effect
the transaction on his own account without full disclosure which ‘must include
not only the fact that the agent is acting on his own account, but also all
other facts which he should realize have or are likely to have a bearing upon
the desirability of the transaction, from the viewpoint of the principal.’” Geman v. S.E.C., 334 F.3d 1183, 1189
(10th Cir., 2003), quoting Arst v.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., 86 F.3d 973, 979 (10th Cir.1996) (applying
Kansas law) (quoting Restatement (Second)
of Agency § 390 cmt. a (1958)).
7. Disclosure Must “Bare the Truth … in All
Its Stark Significance”; Disclosure that “A Conflict Exists” is Insufficient. As stated by Justice Cardoza: “If dual
interests are to be served, the disclosure to be effective must lay bare the
truth, without ambiguity of reservation, in all its stark significance ….” Wendt
v. Fischer, 243 N.Y. 439, 154 N.E. 303 (1926).
See
also In re Src Holding Corp., 364
B.R. 1 (D. Minn., 2007): “The fact that the client knows of a conflict is not
enough to satisfy the attorney's duty of full disclosure. Florida Ins. Guar. Ass'n Inc. v. Carey Canada, Inc., 749 F.Supp.
255, 259 (S.D.Fla.1990) ("Consent can only come after consultation — which
the rule contemplates as full disclosure.... [I]t is not sufficient that both
parties be informed of the fact that the lawyer is undertaking to represent
both of them, but he must explain to them the nature of the conflict of
interest in such detail so that they can understand the reasons why it may be
desirable for each to [withhold consent].") (quoting Unified Sewerage Agency, Etc. v. Jeko, Inc., 646 F.2d 1339,
1345-46 (9th Cir.1981)); see also British
Airways, PLC v. Port Authority of N.Y. and N.J., 862 F.Supp. 889, 900
(E.D.N.Y.1994) (stating that the burden is on the client's attorney to fully
inform and obtain consent from the client); Kabi
Pharmacia AB v. Alcon Surgical, Inc., 803 F.Supp. 957, 963 (D.Del.1992)
(stating that evidence of the client's constructive knowledge of a conflict
would not be sufficient to satisfy the attorney's consultation duty); Manoir-Electroalloys Corp. v. Amalloy Corp.,
711 F.Supp. 188, 195 (D.N.J.1989) ("Constructive notice of the pertinent
facts is not sufficient."). A client is not responsible for recognizing
the conflict and stating its lack of consent in order to avoid waiver. Manoir-Electroalloys, 711 F.Supp. at
195. The lawyer bears the duty to recognize the legal significance of his or
her actions in entering a conflicted situation and fully share that legal
significance with clients.”
8. Disclosure Must be Timely. Disclosure must be timely provided. “[D]isclosure, if it is to be meaningful and
effective, must be timely. It must be provided before the completion of the
transaction so that the client will know all the facts at the time that he is
asked to give his consent.” In the Matter of Arleeen W. Hughes, SEC
Release No. 4048 (February 17, 1948), affirmed
174 F.2d 969 (D.C. Cir. 1949).
9. Disclosure Must be Affirmatively Made. The duty to disclose is an affirmative one,
and the failure to disclose by an investment adviser is a violation of the Advisers
Act. The fiduciary is required to ensure
that the disclosure is received by the client; the “access equals delivery”
approach undertaken with regard to disclosures required by the SEC under the
’33 and ’34 Acts would not qualify as an appropriate disclosure by a fiduciary
financial advisor to her or his client.
As stated in an early case applying the Advisers Act:
It is not enough that one who acts
as an admitted fiduciary proclaim that he or she stands ever ready to divulge
material facts to the ones whose interests she is being paid to protect. Some
knowledge is prerequisite to intelligent questioning. This is particularly true
in the securities field. Readiness and willingness to disclose are not
equivalent to disclosure. The statutes
and rules discussed above make it unlawful to omit to state material facts
irrespective of alleged (or proven) willingness or readiness to supply that
which has been omitted.
Hughes
v. SEC, 174 F.2d 969 (D.C. Cir., 1949). [Emphasis added.]
10. The Extent of Disclosure Necessarily
Varies with the Sophistication of the Client; Burden is on Adviser to Ensure
“Client Understanding” of the Disclosure. The fiduciary duty to avoid conflicts of
interest, and the necessity to obtain the informed consent of the client as to
conflicts of interest not avoided, were well known in the early history of the
Advisers Act. In an address entitled
“The SEC and the Broker-Dealer” by Louis Loss, Chief Counsel, Trading and
Exchange Division, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on March 16, 1948,
before the Stock Brokers’ Associates of Chicago, the fiduciary duties arising
under the Advisers Act, as applied in the Arleen
Hughes release, were elaborated upon:
The doctrine of that case, in a
nutshell, is that a firm which is acting as agent or fiduciary for a customer,
rather than as a principal in an ordinary dealer transaction, is under a much
stricter obligation than merely to refrain from taking excessive mark-ups over
the current market. Its duty as an agent or fiduciary selling its own property
to its principal is to make a
scrupulously full disclosure of every element of its adverse interest in the
transaction.
In other words, when one is engaged
as agent to act on behalf of another, the law requires him to do just that. He must not bring his own interests into
conflict with his client's. If he does,
he must explain in detail what his own self-interest in the transaction is in
order to give his client an opportunity to make up his own mind whether to
employ an agent who is riding two horses. This requirement has nothing to
do with good or bad motive. In this kind of situation the law does not require
proof of actual abuse. The law guards against the potentiality of abuse which
is inherent in a situation presenting conflicts between self-interest and
loyalty to principal or client. As the Supreme Court said a hundred years ago,
the law ‘acts not on the possibility, that, in some cases the sense of duty may
prevail over the motive of self-interest, but it provides against the
probability in many cases, and the danger in all cases, that the dictates of
self-interest will exercise a predominant influence, and supersede that of
duty.’ Or, as an eloquent Tennessee
jurist put it before the Civil War, the doctrine ‘has its foundation, not so
much in the commission of actual fraud, but in that profound knowledge of the
human heart which dictated that hallowed petition, 'Lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil,’ and that caused the announcement of the
infallible truth, that 'a man cannot serve two masters.’
This
time-honored dogma applies equally to any person who is in a fiduciary relation
toward another, whether he be a trustee, an executor or administrator of an
estate, a lawyer acting on behalf of a client, an employee acting on behalf of
an employer, an officer or director acting on behalf of a corporation, an investment adviser or any sort of
business adviser for that matter, or a broker. The law has always looked with
such suspicion upon a fiduciary's dealing for his own account with his client
or beneficiary that it permits the client or beneficiary at any time to set
aside the transaction without proving any actual abuse or damage. What the
recent Hughes case does is to say that such conduct, in addition ‘to laying the
basis for a private lawsuit, amounts to a violation of the fraud provisions
under the securities laws: This proposition, as a matter of fact, is found in a
number of earlier Commission opinions. The
significance of the recent Hughes opinion in this respect is that it elaborates
the doctrine and spells, out in detail exactly what disclosure is required when
a dealer who has put himself in a fiduciary position chooses to sell his own
securities to a client or buys the client's securities in his own name …
The
nature and extent of disclosure with respect to capacity will vary with the
particular client involved. In some cases use of the term ‘principal’ itself
may suffice. In others, a more detailed explanation will be required. In all
cases, however, the burden is on the firm which acts as fiduciary to make
certain that the client understands that the firm is selling its own
securities …
Id.
[Emphasis added.]
11.
The
Consent must be “Intelligent, Independent and Informed.” Generally, “fiduciary law protects the
[client] by obligating the fiduciary to disclose all material facts, requiring
an intelligent, independent consent
from the [client], a substantively fair arrangement, or both.”[77] [Emphasis
added.]
In a recent white paper, Professor
Frankel reminded us that “blanket” waivers of fiduciary duties are seldom
appropriate: “[F]iduciary rules cannot
be avoided if the entrustors are incapable of
independent and informed consent. The entrustors’ consent is subject to a
number of conditions. The fiduciaries must disclose the details of the proposed
transactions to the clients-entrustors. The information should enable the
entrustors to protect themselves in the bargain and deal with their
fiduciaries. Therefore, consent to future unspecified transactions is
uninformed and should not be binding. Nor are the clients -- entrustors’
consents to highly unfavorable conflict of interest transactions always
binding. The terms of the transactions may indicate possible fraud or
misleading disclosure. Clients’ consents may be more doubtful and would require
more evidence of entrustors’ independence
when the fiduciaries are experts, and the non-expert entrustors are unlikely to
form informed and rational decisions.”
[Empahsis added.][78]
12. Informed Consent must not be Induced;
Even with Informed Consent the Transaction Must Remain “in All Respects Fair
and Reasonable.” The purpose of
the fiduciary duty of disclosure is arming the client with sufficient
information to undertake an informed decision, when the client is called upon
to do so. In the context of conflicts
of interest which may exist between the fiduciary and the client, the purpose
of full and affirmative disclosure of material facts by a fiduciary financial
planner is also to obtain the client’s informed consent to proceeding with a
recommendation or transaction. Indeed,
under traditional notions of fiduciary law, conflicts of interest must be
avoided absent the informed consent of the client. However, “informed consent” does not exist
if full disclosure of all facts is not undertaken, if the consent is induced,
or if the transaction does not remain fair and reasonable to the client. As one court stated:
One
of the most stringent precepts in the law is that a fiduciary shall not engage
in self-dealing and when he is so charged, his actions will be scrutinized most
carefully. When a fiduciary engages in self-dealing, there is inevitably a
conflict of interest: as fiduciary he is bound to secure the greatest advantage
for the beneficiaries; yet to do so might work to his personal disadvantage.
Because of the conflict inherent in such transaction, it is voidable by the
beneficiaries unless they have consented. Even then, it is voidable if the
fiduciary fails to disclose material facts which he knew or should have known,
if he used the influence of his position to induce the consent or if
the transaction was not in all respects fair and reasonable.
Birnbaum v. Birnbaum,
117 A.D.2d 409, 503 N.Y.S.2d 451 (N.Y.A.D. 4 Dept., 1986).
The informed consent of the client
to proceed with a transaction recommended by a fiduciary advisor in the
presence of a conflict of interest would rarely be given by an informed client
if the conflict of interest were not managed to keep the best interests of the
client paramount at all times; clients rarely undertake gratuitous transfers to
their financial advisors. Hence, courts
appear to often find that there was not full disclosure, or that it was not
affirmatively undertaken, or that the terms of the transaction were not fair,
where the voluntary nature of the consent, or the understanding by the client
of the material facts, is suspect. Such
cases often arise in the context of the attorney-client relationship. See,
e.g. Schenk v. Hill, Lent &
Troescher, 530 N.Y.S.2d 486, 487 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1988) (a lawyer hired to
sue another lawyer for malpractice was
himself a potential defendant in the same action, and obtained client consent
to waive the conflict of interest. In disqualifying the lawyer, the court said:
“[T]he consent obtained in this case does not reflect a full understanding of
the legal rights being waived … [T]he unsophisticated client, relying upon the
confidential relationship with his lawyer, may not be regarded as able to
understand the ramifications of the conflict, however much explained to him.”);
Wade v. Clemmons, 377 N.Y.S.2d 415,
419 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1975) (striking down contingent fee because client would
have refused to agree to settlement offer yielding fee if properly advised).
E.
EXPLORING THE FIDUCIARY DUTY OF DUE CARE. “Because
fiduciaries have far greater expertise than the entrustors, fiduciaries must
use their skills in performing their services well and attentively.”[79] “Fiduciaries may not purport to give advice
without sufficient knowledge.”[80] While the “duty of care” is generally considered
to be the “lesser” fiduciary duty (in contrast to the fiduciary duty of
loyalty), recent developments have triggered a more careful examination of the
fiduciary duty of due care, and in particular the due diligence required of an
adviser.
1. The Fiduciary
Duty of Due Care is Relational. The fiduciary duty of due care is not unlike
the duty of care seen in general tort law (such as that seen in the law of
negligence), in that it sets forth a standard of conduct of a “reasonable
person.” Yet, just as the duty of care
owed by a professional for negligence is higher than that of an ordinary
person, the investment adviser’s duty of care is relational. The care exercised by an investment adviser
is measured objectively against the activities a prudent investment adviser
would have exercised in the same circumstances.
2. So What
Is The Standard of Care for an Advisor? In Erlich v. First National Bank of Princeton,[81] a 1984
decision applying New Jersey law, the court went to great lengths in describing
the duties of the bank which had provided a nondiscretionary “custodian
management account” for a customer, in which the account manager gave advice
“to the customer on purchases and sales and the customer makes the final
decisions.” The court held the bank and
its employees to be fiduciaries on the basis that they “held themselves out to
be professional investment advisers, stating in the Bank's brochures that ‘we
bring considerable experience to bear and the specialized knowledge we have
gained in ... the management of money.... We are highly trained in the
techniques of investment.’” In denying
to enforce an exculpatory clause in the agreement with the customer which would
have relieved the bank of all liability for “recommendations made in good faith
nor for failure to make recommendations”, the court addressed the duties of the
bank (which it held acted as an investment adviser and was therefore acting in
a professional capacity) in detail and explored the bank’s duty of due care:
It is clear that the term 'professional services' is no longer limited
to the traditional professions such as law and medicine." [Citation
omitted.] … The essence of a professional service is that it involves
'specialized knowledge, labor or skill and the labor or skill is predominantly
mental or intellectual, rather than physical or manual.' [Citation
omitted.] Unlike doctors and lawyers,
who are self-regulated, investment advisers who hold themselves out to the
public as having special knowledge and skill are not self-regulated. This
distinction does not justify a holding that they may contractually exculpate
themselves from negligent advice. To allow investment advisers to exculpate
themselves from the mischief caused by their breach of duty would violate the
public policy of this State … professional must exercise that degree of care,
knowledge and skill ordinarily possessed and exercised in similar situations by
the average member of the profession practicing in his field [citations
omitted] … Industry custom and practice are commonly looked to for illumination
of the appropriate standard of care in a negligence case. Fantini v. Alexander, 172 N.J.Super. 105, 108, 410 A.2d 1190
(App.Div.1980); Restatement, Torts
2d, § 299A at 73 (1965). The Bank offered plaintiff professional investment
advisory services. This was not merely a brokerage account. It is therefore the
degree of care, knowledge and skill expected of professional investment
advisers to which we must look for the standard of care.
There is a dearth of case law on this issue, but I find that the obligation of the investment manager to
give prudent advice is the standard of care to be applied in this
case. This is a higher standard of care than that found in the "Know
Your Customer" and "Suitability" rules. Prudent advice includes:
(1) knowing the customer, his assets, and objectives; (2) diversifying
investments; (3) engaging in objective analysis as the basis for purchase and
sale recommendations and (4) making the account productive. See Bines, THE LAW
OF INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT (1979), Ch. 6 passim. The investment manager is not a guarantor; he
has no crystal ball with which to predict with perfect certainty the behavior
of a particular stock in the market. When judging the actions of the manager
with the benefit of hindsight, incorrect advice is easy to detect. We hasten to
point out, however, that incorrect advice is not necessarily negligent advice …
The duty to give prudent advice obligates
the investment manager to carefully assess the customer's circumstances, both at
the outset and during the term of the account. The customer's age, health,
family obligations, assets and income stream (both current and prospective)
should be evaluated to determine his ability to absorb losses in the event an
investment is unsuccessful … The
obligation to give prudent investment advice imports the duty to make such
recommendations as a prudent investor would act on ‘for his own account, having
in view both safety and income, in the light of the principal's means and
purposes.’ Restatement, Agency
2d, § 425(b) (1958). The prudence of the
investment advice must be judged by objective standards. A manager's personal
beliefs are largely irrelevant when measuring his conduct against the conduct
of a prudent, objective adviser …The accepted standard of professional
performance is that which has ‘substantial support as proper practice by the
profession.’ Alternate courses of conduct engaged in by the few do not
establish the standard. Schueler v.
Strelinger, 43 N.J. 330, 346, 204 A.2d 577 (1964) … The Bank … owed plaintiff the duty to act with skill and care in
accordance with industry practice, and to advise an investment strategy that,
under the circumstances, was prudent.
[Emphasis added.]
3. The
Standard of Care is Always Evolving. Advisors are therefore expected to adhere to
an “expert” standard of care, but even this test applied is not static. The knowledge and expertise required of an
advisor, and the process undertaken and judgment required, evolves over
time. As investment advisers’ knowledge
regarding investment management and its delivery improves, and better
techniques and practices become widely accepted, investment advisers must
continually adapt their practices to meet the “prudent expert” test applied to
investment advisers. Moreover, as new
risks to investors become known, measures to guard against those risks must be
addressed appropriately by the investment adviser.
4. Procedural
Due Diligence, Generally. The main evaluation of an investment
adviser’s adherence to the duty of due care is undertaken by examining the
process the fiduciary undertakes in performing her or his functions and not the
outcome achieved. Indeed, the very word “care” connotes a process. One
associates caring with a condition, state of mind, manner of mental attention,
a feeling, regard, or liking for something.
How else may one determine whether an investment adviser who regularly
achieves below average returns, or an attorney who loses most cases, has
performed her or his duty of care? It is only through evaluating the steps the
fiduciary took while doing her or his job, and not whether they resulted in
success, that one may judge whether the fiduciary has breached her or his duty.
5. Substantive
Due Diligence, Generally. While many commentators focus on the
“process” underlying decisions involving an investment adviser’s duty of due
care, adherence to the duty of care involves both process and substance. That is, in reviewing the conduct of an
investment adviser in adherence to the adviser’s fiduciary duty of due care, a
court or arbitrator or examiner would likely review the method by which the
decision was made by the investment adviser (procedural due care) as well as
the substance of the transaction or advice given (substantive due care). Substantive due care pertains to the standard
of care and the standard of culpability for the imposition of liability for a
breach of the duty of care. In plain
English, the question must be asked: “Was good judgment undertaken by the
investment adviser at each step of the process undertaken?” (This assumes that the process undertaken met
the fiduciary duty of due care.)
However, courts and securities examiners recognize that it is simply
not possible for a investment adviser to be aware of every piece of relevant
information before making a decision on behalf of the client, nor can a
fiduciary guarantee that the best (with 20/20 hindsight) judgment will be made
in all cases. Due to the difficulty of
evaluating the behavior of fiduciaries, most often the reviewer of the conduct
of a fiduciary turn to an analysis not of the advice that was given but rather
to the process by which the advice was derived.
Nevertheless, while adherence to a proper process is also necessary, at
each step along the process the investment adviser is required to act prudently
with the care of the prudent investment adviser. In other words, the investment adviser must
at all times exercise good judgment, applying his or her education, skills, and
expertise to the financial planning or investment issue before the investment
adviser. Simply following a prudent
process is not enough if prudent good judgment, and the investment adviser’s
requisite knowledge, expertise and experience, is not applied as well.
6. Effect of
Association Codes / Standards as Evidence of the Standard of Care. Generally, it
is clear that an association’s “Code of Ethics” or its “Rules of Professional
Conduct” do not establish an independent cause of action. Additionally, ethics rules, even when
mandatory on professionals pursuant to law, do not establish standards of care
unless such as intended “by language that is clear, unambiguous, and
peremptory.” [82] However, ethics codes can be utilized as
evidence of the standard of care. While
ethics codes do not define standards for civil liability, the standards stated
in a code of ethics or rules of professional conduct are not irrelevant in
determining the standard of care in certain actions for malpractice. The code
of ethics may provide guidance in ascertaining the professional’s obligations
to their clients under various circumstances, and conduct which violates the
code of ethics may also constitute a breach of the standard of care due a
client. Hence, in a civil action
charging malpractice or negligence, the standard of care is the particular duty
owed the client under the circumstances of the representation, which may or may
not be the standard contemplated by the applicable ethics rules. In an
examination by securities regulators, the use of association codes and standards
of conduct are also relevant in assessing compliance by the investment adviser
with her or his fiduciary standard of due care.
7. Due
Diligence: The Fiduciary’s Selection and Monitoring of Investment Strategies
and Products, Generally. General fiduciary principles impose the
obligation on an investment adviser to exercise due care in the development of
their investment strategy, and in the selection of specific investment products
(or managers) for her or his client. Moreover,
should the investment adviser possess the obligation to the client to monitor
the investment strategy or product, the adviser should undertake periodic
and/or alert-based monitoring mechanisms and possess and execute a strategy for
periodic due diligence of the strategy or product.
a. The Need
to Test Any Investment Strategy. It is not enough to adhere to an investment
strategy which has not been tested and/or scrutinized by the investment
adviser. Instead, securities examiners
should expect that the investment adviser’s Investment Committee records will
reflect a scientific analysis of the investment strategy recommended by the
adviser to his or her clients, or reliance upon a scientific analysis
undertaken by others with respect to the overall strategy or particular aspects
of it. But how is an investment strategy
to be “tested”? And what standards for
such testing should securities examiners require of investment advisers? This section explores the standards for
evaluation of expert testimony, and how those standards can be applied in
testing (by an examiner) of the investment adviser’s own due diligence efforts.
b. Daubert
Supplies a Standard for Expert Testimony. The admission of expert
testimony is governed by Fed. R. Evid. 702, which states:
If scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge will assist the
trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue, a
witness qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
education, may testify thereto in the form of an opinion or otherwise, if (1)
the testimony is based upon sufficient facts or data, (2) the testimony is the
product of reliable principles and methods, and (3) the witness has applied the
principles and methods reliably to the facts of the case.
In addition, expert testimony must be both relevant
and reliable to be admitted. Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharms., Inc.,
509 U.S. 579, 589, 113 S. Ct. 2786 (1993).
It may be based upon the personal knowledge or experience of the expert.
See Kumho Tire Co. v. Carmichael, 526
U.S. 137, 150, 119 S. Ct. 1167 (1999). The key to evaluating expert testimony
that is based on the expert's personal experience is determining whether the
expert employs "the same level of intellectual rigor that characterizes
the practice of an expert in the relevant field." Kumho, 526 U.S. at 152, 119 S. Ct. 1167.
The U.S. Supreme Court in the Daubert decision adopted the proposition that scientific
methodology should be “based on generating hypotheses and testing them to see
if they can be falsified…” The Court
stated that the “generated” hypotheses should be supported by an articulation
of credible principles. There must be more than the mere standing of the
proponent backing up the expert testimony.
The Daubert
case involved the determination of the standard for admitting expert testimony
in federal courts. The standard that the Court articulated is now referred to
as the Daubert standard. Under the Daubert
standard, a judge in federal court now makes a threshold determination
regarding whether certain scientific knowledge would indeed assist the trier of
fact (the jury, or in a jury’s absence, the judge). “This entails a preliminary
assessment of whether the reasoning or methodology underlying the testimony is
scientifically valid and of whether that reasoning or methodology properly can
be applied to the facts in issue.” This preliminary assessment can turn on
whether something has been tested, whether an idea has been subjected to
scientific peer review or published in scientific journals, the rate of error
involved in the technique, and even general acceptance, among other things. It
focuses on methodology and principles, not the ultimate conclusions generated.
The Daubert decision
was heralded by many observers as one of the most important Supreme Court
decisions of the last century imparting crucial legal reforms to reduce the
volume of what has disparagingly been labeled “junk science” in the court
room. While its application to expert
testimony in federal courts is undisputed, some state courts continue to choose
to apply the Frye standard,[83] which
holds that expert opinion based on a scientific technique is admissible only if
the technique is generally accepted as reliable in the relevant scientific
community. According to one state court,
Frye’s general acceptance standard
“is more likely to yield uniform, objective, and predictable results among the
courts, than is the application of the Daubert
standard, which calls for a balancing of several factors,” including hypothesis
testing, error rate, peer review and general acceptance. Grady v. Frito-Lay, Inc., 2003 Pa. LEXIS 2590 (December 31,
2003). Some state courts also apply a
hybrid standard.[84] In terms of practical application, while the
focus of the inquiry has changed from Frye
to Daubert, the result rarely does.
Accordingly, the Daubert standard is
occasionally referred to as "Frye in drag."
c. Investment
Adviser Examinations: The Relevance of the Daubert, Frye, or Hybrid Expert
Testimony Admission Standards to the Standards Applicable to an Investment
Adviser’s Due Diligence. In the
context of securities administrator examinations of investment advisers,
examiners seek to ascertain if an investment adviser is fulfilling his or her
fiduciary duties to his or her clients.
Securities examiners should therefore require the investment adviser to
describe how he or she meets the fiduciary duty of due care, with regard to due
diligence in the selection of investment strategy, the recommendation of
specific investments, and ensuring that the investments fit the client’s
particular situation and needs.
d. Investment
Advisers Must Provide Justification for Their Decisions. The implicit
duty for every fiduciary is to insure that the process utilized by him or her
will clear the same threshold analysis a court would employ in evaluating
whether expert testimony on the same point would be permitted.
e. Due
Diligence in Manager Selection. Should the investment adviser choose outside
investment managers (including investment advisers to mutual funds) to manage
all or a discrete part of a client’s portfolio, the investment adviser must use
his or her own expertise (or retain third-party experts for this purpose) to
ensure that the investment manager can reasonably be expected to provide
high-quality investment management services.
To the extent that the scope of the investment adviser’s engagement
extends to monitoring investment products previously selected, such monitoring
should occur on a reasonable basis and actions should be taken to replace
investment managers which do not meet the quality standards.
f. Delegation
of Due Diligence is Permitted. Fiduciaries
without expertise in the development and evaluation of investment strategies,
and/or the selection of investment managers and investment products, should be
encouraged to seek expert help.
g. Investment
Manager or Product Selection: Duty to Consider Fees and Expenses. Investment
advisers possess the obligation to determine that the fees and expenses of the
investment products selected are reasonable under the circumstances.
h. Disclosure
of Fees and Costs to the Client is Also Required. In addition,
investment advisers possess, as part of their duty of loyalty when undertaking
a recommendation of an investment product to a client, to disclose all material
facts regarding the investment product to the client. Without this information, the client cannot
undertake an informed decision. Should
the investment adviser be acting in a purely discretionary capacity, the
investment adviser must possess this information before undertaking the
purchase of the investment product, and should ensure that the material
information about the investment product is subsequently provided to the client
within a reasonable time thereafter.
i. “Total
Fees and Costs” Should be Discerned. All fees and costs, both direct and indirect,
should be discerned (or at least estimated) and disclosed. Many advisors are unaware of the many
“hidden” fees and costs of pooled investment vehicles.[85] Not only should advisers attempt to discern
these fees and costs, as part of their due diligence process, but they should
seek to disclose them in a timely manner to their clients.
j. Does the
Advisor Possess the Duty of Due Care to Undertake Tax Planning in Connection
with the Delivery of Investment Advice to the Individual Client? It can be
argued that, given the material impact of taxes on the investment returns of a
client, an advisor must consider the application of strategies designed to
minimize the long-term tax impact upon the client.
Tax planning may relate to the investment products
chosen for taxable accounts, the use of non-qualified tax-deferred investment
vehicles (or their non-use, as they often are tax-inefficient in the long
term), the financial advice to contribute to certain types of retirement plan
accounts, Roth IRA contributions and conversions, and decumulation planning
(involving such factors as marginal tax rates of the client both now and in the
future, effect on taxation of social security benefits, effect on Medicare
premiums, etc.)
Will an investment adviser always possess the duty to
an individual investor to seek lower-tax-drag alternatives when investing in
taxable accounts? Probably not, for
there may be some investors who, due to their specific circumstances (large
amount of capital loss carryforwards, and/or low marginal income tax brackets)
for whom certain taxable distributions from an investment portfolio would not
materially impact the individual investor’s long-term returns.
Attempts to limit the scope of the engagement, so as
to preclude consideration of tax consequences by the fiduciary advisor, are
likely to be ineffective. (See
discussion in subsequent section of this memorandum, as to waivers of fiduciary
duties and scope of engagement issues).
This is because, in order to disclaim any responsibility to consider
taxes as part of investment portfolio design and management, a complete
explanation of the limits imposed must be undertaken by the client, together
with an explanation of the ramifications of non-consideration of taxes. This must be affirmatively made. It is likely that only with informed consent
of the client can the duty to consider taxes be negated, and individual clients
who are truly “informed” would rarely provide such informed consent.
These, and other issues in fiduciary law as applied to
investment advisers and financial planning, deserve greater exploration through
additional legal research and analysis, and also through efforts of
professionals to provide “best practices” to members of their profession.
F.
EXPLORING THE FIDUCIARY DUTY OF UTMOST GOOD FAITH. Perhaps the
least understood of the tri-parte fiduciary duties is the duty of “utmost good
faith.” In part, this is because some
courts view this duty as part of the other two fiduciary duties of due care and
loyalty, while others view it as a stand-alone duty. In part, this is because the fiduciary duty
of utmost good faith is seen as a “gap-filler” – and utilized by courts as a
means of achieving equity in circumstances where the other two fiduciary duties
don’t appear to fit the particular circumstances of the case.
1. Generally,
the Good Faith Obligation Applies to All Contracts. The duty of
“good faith” existing between parties to a contract is nothing new.[86] Duties of “good faith” are implied in every
contract and enable courts to “fill in gaps” by providing “the term most
suitable to the agreement in question.”[87] The contractual obligation of good faith
constitutes a “gap filler” term in a contract, in the sense that the doctrine
is utilized by courts to resolve specific issues relating to contractual
disputes, where the contract between the parties is silent on whether the
conduct of a party complained of is prohibited.[88] In resolving contractual disputes, judges
must ascertain what the parties would have intended, had they contracted as to
the specific matter in dispute. Such
“gap-filling” occurs in the context of commercial contracts only when the
parties “have failed to express [the good faith obligations] because they are
too obvious to need expression.”[89]
2. Fiduciary
Relationships: “Utmost” Good Faith, Generally. Yet in the
context of the fiduciary relationship, the duty of good faith is perceived to
be so strong it is referred to as “utmost good faith” and a separate duty by
some courts from the duties of due care and loyalty.[90] Utmost good faith has been defined as the
“most abundant good faith; absolute and perfect candor or openness and honesty;
the absence of any concealment or deception, however slight. A phrase used to express the perfect good
faith, concealing nothing, with which a contract must be made ….”[91]
3. Good
Faith Requires “Honesty.” The fiduciary’s duty of utmost good faith
requires both subjective and objective honesty. As to the fiduciary’s
subjective honesty, the fiduciary must sincerely believe that his conduct is in
the best interests his or her client, that any statements or representations
made as a fiduciary to the client are truthful, and that the fiduciary’s
conduct is within the realm of decent behavior.
Beyond the personal belief of the fiduciary in the rightness of his or
her actions, the fiduciary’s adherence to his or her good faith obligation is
not judged solely by reference to the fiduciary’s belief that his or her
actions were compliant or non-compliant with the duty of good faith. Instead, the fiduciary’s compliance with his
or her duty of good faith are judged objectively – by the views of others
(judges, juries, or arbitrators) – with a view as to whether the fiduciary
should have made inquiry to discern certain facts[92] and
whether a fiduciary’s actions would have been compliant when judged by
disinterested observers.[93]
4. Utmost
Good Faith as a “Gap-Filler.” The fiduciary duty of good faith is also a
“gap-filler.” In the context of the
directors of a corporation and the duty of good faith owed by such directors,
Professor Lowenstein observed:
The notion of a ‘subjective intent’ or a ‘conscious disregard’ forces
one to examine the director’s motivation, in contrast to the fiduciary duty of
care, which looks to process undertaken by directors to inform themselves, or
the fiduciary duty of loyalty, which looks to the relationship of the director
to the transaction under scrutiny. These
demarcations are not, however, bright and independent of one another. While the duties of due care and loyalty
encompass many affirmative obligations as well as prohibited conduct, the
traditional duties of care and loyalty do not cover all types of improper
conduct by a fiduciary. Into this gap
steps the duty of good faith, offering to the courts another means of finding a
breach of the broad fiduciary duties possessed by financial planners and other
fiduciaries.[94]
The fact that a breach of the duty of
good faith can support an independent action, not dependent upon any breach of
the other fiduciary duties of due care and loyalty, is well known in fiduciary
law (but not always accepted in every fiduciary law context[95]). For example, a financial planner may act
recklessly, supplying advice to a client which is cavalierly given and not
based upon adequate knowledge or analysis.
Suppose that (and fortunately for the sake of the financial planner, the
advice results in a favorable outcome for the client). Since there is no harm which has been done,
nor any personal profit derived by the fiduciary, an action for the breach of
the duty of due care or the duty of loyalty is unlikely to afford any
remedy. Yet, courts may well find the
fiduciary financial planner’s conduct a breach of the duty of good faith, as a
“reckless and indifferent” act with respect to the client.[96]
EXHIBIT:
OCTOBER 16, 2009 LETTER TO CONGRESS, FROM UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS ET. AL.
October 16, 2009
Honorable
Christopher Dodd Honorable
Barney Frank
Chairman Chairman
Honorable
Richard Shelby Honorable
Spencer Baucus
Ranking Member Ranking Member
Senate
Committee on Banking House
Financial Services Committee
Washington, DC 20510 Washington,
DC 20515
Re: Section 103 of the Discussion Draft, Investor Protection Act of 2009
Dear Chairman Dodd, Ranking Member
Shelby, Chairman Frank and Ranking Member Bachus:
We write in our capacities as members of
the academic, legal, compliance, and registered investment adviser communities,
to express our strong support for preserving the current fiduciary standard of
conduct found in the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. We express our deep concern over proposals
advanced by some participants in the securities industry which would create a
far lower standard for firms and individuals who provide investment advice.
In order to correct misunderstandings as
the nature and effect of various proposals, and to facilitate a greater
understanding of the fiduciary standard of conduct, we offer the following
observations:
1. The Proposed Legislation Would Result in a Lowering of
Standards of Conduct Upon Those Who Provide Investment Advice. The highest
standard under the law[i] – the
fiduciary standard of conduct – currently applies under the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940[ii] and the
common law[iii] of the
various states to those who provide investment and financial advice. The proposed legislation[iv] would
result in a lower standard of conduct for investment advisers, and hence less
protection for all Americans who desire and who receive financial and
investment advice, by adopting an arms-length standard of conduct for
investment advisers in place of the fiduciary standard of conduct, as explained
herein.
2. “Personalized Investment Advice” Includes Advice
Provided to “Non-Retail” Clients. The Advisers Act is applied to all advisers’
clients, whether “retail”[v] or otherwise.
The argument that that only “personalized investment advice” to “individual
investors” was intended to be covered by the Advisers Act is mistaken. The term “personalized” used in connection
with the phrase “investment advice” refers not to the nature of the client, but
rather to the activities of the investment adviser.[vi] There
exists no justification for narrowing the scope of the Advisers Act by
excluding non-retail clients, such as endowment funds, government entities,
pension funds, trustees, and many others, from the protections afforded by the
fiduciary standard of conduct.
3. There Exists Only One Fiduciary Standard of Conduct
for Investment Advisers; It is Uniformly Applied. When the
fiduciary standard of conduct is applied to financial advisors and investment
advisers, whether such standard is
imposed by the Advisers Act or state common law, it has been applied uniformly by the courts to financial
advisors and investment advisers. There
are not “51 different standards,” as has been suggested by some
advocates of a “new federal fiduciary standard” (which is not a fiduciary
standard at all). Only one fiduciary standard of conduct
exists under the law for investment advisers and financial advisors; [vii] there
is no need to modify this one standard. Even if such uniform standards did not
already exist, legislation which instead applies the currently existing one
fiduciary standard of conduct to all providers of financial and investment
advice would cure the very complaints of those who mistakenly give the
impression that “51 different standards” exist. Furthermore, this uniform
standard has been established and refined in years of interpretation by the
courts and the regulators. A new
“unified standard” will erase the rich history of the current law.
4. The Fiduciary Standard of Conduct Must Remain Flexible
to Address Fraud. It has long been acknowledged under the law
that fiduciary duties must adapt in order that fraudulent conduct, which is
always changing, be successfully prohibited and published.[viii] Any
attempt to further “define” the fiduciary standard of conduct through
legislation could effectively negate the ability of courts of equity to react
to the ever-changing field of investment and financial planning advice and to
new schemes cooked up by fraudsters.[ix]
5. The “New Federal Fiduciary Standard” as Proposed is Not A Fiduciary Standard of Conduct; How
Fiduciaries Deal with Conflicts of Interest. Advocates of a “new federal
fiduciary standard” have implied that “disclosure” of a conflict of interest,
followed by the “consent” of the client to proceed with the transaction, is all
that is required of the fiduciary. This
view takes into account only the disclosure-based regime of either the
Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 which contemplate
an arms-length relationship[x] between
the issuer or broker and customer. In
contrast, the Advisors Act requires much more of those in fiduciary
relationships with their clients. In the
presence of a conflict of interest, fiduciary law protects the client by
obligating the fiduciary to: (1) affirmatively
disclose all material facts to the client; (2) ensure client understanding of the transaction, the conflict of interest
which exists, and their ramifications; (3) obtain an intelligent, independent and informed consent from the client; and
(4) ensure that the proposed transaction, even with client consent, remains a substantively fair arrangement for the
client.[xi]
6. Consumer Choice Remains; Investors Will Retain Access
to a Broad Array of Products. The issue of “consumer choice” is a red
herring.[xii] The same investment product choices will
remain for Americans. The issues are the
standard of conduct for those who offer investment and financial advice, and
the representations and inferences[xiii] made
by providers with regard to their duties toward the client. The fiduciary standard of conduct possesses
real teeth, as it imposes affirmative obligations of loyalty, utmost good faith
and due care on the advisor, which duties continue throughout the life of the
relationship. It is not, and should not
become, a check-the-box standard that only periodically applies, as individual
investors rarely possess the knowledge necessary to negotiate for the standard
of conduct which the advisor should provide.[xiv]
7. Commission-Based Compensation Is Not Prohibited Under
the Advisers Act; Third-Party Compensation Arrangements Create Difficulties,
But These Should Be Resolved Through Best Practices, Not Legislation.
Commission-based compensation is not specifically prohibited under the
current Advisers Act; there is no need to specify in legislation that
commission-based compensation is permitted, and inclusion of such a paragraph
could inadvertently be construed as permitted self-dealing, a lowering of the
fiduciary standard. Commission-based
compensation leads to conflicts of interest which must be affirmatively
disclosed and properly managed, as discussed above. The even more difficult
problem a fiduciary faces is when
variable compensation is present. In
this regard, the securities industry could adopt the approach of
agreed-to-in-advance level compensation
as a “best practice.” Those who seek to
provide investment advice should adapt to the higher standard of conduct
imposed upon investment and financial advisors; the law should not be revised
to accommodate the sales practices of Wall Street’s broker-dealer firms
operating under the guise of unbiased advice.[xv]
8. The Bona Fide
Fiduciary Standard of Conduct is Essential for Americans, and America Itself. Strong practical
and public policy reasons exist for the imposition of the true fiduciary
standard of conduct upon investment advisers and financial advisors.[xvi] The increased complexities of today’s modern
capital markets and the difficult decisions today’s Americans face in preparing
for their own financial futures provide an even greater rationale for the
fiduciary standard of conduct established in the Advisers Act.[xvii]
9. The Proposed Legislation Which Would Lower Standards of Conduct for
Investment Advisers and Financial Advisors, Following a Global Economic Crisis
Caused In Large Part by Broker-Dealer Firms, Would Undermine the Investors’
Trust in Our Capital Markets. Restoring individual investor’s trust in our
capital markets system is essential. It
would be ironic indeed if the economic crisis is used by lobbyists, who
represent the very same firms whose risk-taking led in substantial part to the
current recession. It would be tragic if they succeed in convincing Congress to
lower the standards of conduct for providers of investment advice to our fellow
Americans, instead of tightening the standards.
10. If a New Standard of Conduct is to be Adopted, Don’t
Call it a “Fiduciary Standard.” Fiduciary standards are applicable to many
who are in positions of trust and confidence.
The lowering of a “fiduciary standard” as to one fiduciary actor could
result in a slippery slope, in which the fiduciary standards of conducts are
subsequently lowered for attorneys, trustees, ERISA plan sponsors and advisors,
and many other forms of fiduciaries.
Congress should not proceed down this path of enacting “particular
exceptions” which would “denigrate” the one fiduciary standard of conduct.[xviii]
11. Harmonization” Should Not Lower Standards of Conduct. It has been
recognized that brokers have recently changed their business practices to act
and look more like advisers, and to refer to themselves using terminology which
denotes an advisor-client fiduciary relationship based upon trust and
confidence. In contrast, the business
practices of investment advisers have not generally changed in the nearly seven
decades since the Advisers Act of 1940 was adopted. The proposed
“harmonization” seeks to make investment advisers look more like brokers,[xix] and
transforms the current fiduciary relationship between investment advisers and
their clients into a contractual arms-length relationship. This proposed
standard matches the far lower past suitability standard, but is advanced under
the guise of a new “federal fiduciary standard.” This attempt at “harmonization”
has no foundation in investor protection.[xx]
Conclusion. As Congress
works to restore the vitality of the U.S. economy, renew investor confidence,
and address failures of and weaknesses in, the current regulatory framework,
the undersigned express our strong support of the proposal in the Obama
Administration’s white paper on financial regulatory reform to require that
“broker-dealers who provide investment advice about securities to investors
have the same fiduciary obligations as registered investment advisers.”
Federal investor protection laws since
1933 have been largely developed by Congress to strengthen, supplement and
enhance co-existing state laws for the protection of investors and not to deny
investors the common law protections they already possess. The Investor Protection Act of 2009, as
proposed in the “Discussion Draft” dated Oct. 1, 2009, would – to the extent it
would take away the common law protections applicable to fiduciaries – place
investors in a lower caste or subclass; such investors would be denied the
protections afforded by common law to all other beneficiaries of fiduciary
duties. If this should become Congressional policy, it would contradict and
undermine the Congressional policy which led to federal securities regulation in
the first place.
We urge Congress to revise the draft of
the Investor Protection Act of 2009 to: (1) unambiguously provide for the
fiduciary standard of conduct, as developed over centuries of common law and
applied with remarkable consistency by civil, probate and other courts across
this great nation to those brokers who choose to offer investment advice,
whether to individuals or entities; and (2) ensure that the fiduciary duty
which already exists under the Advisers Act is not undermined or weakened in
any way. Such an approach will enhance
investor protection, reduce investor confusion, and promote regulatory fairness
and efficiency by establishing the same fiduciary duty for all investment
professionals who provide investment and financial advice.
Our fellow Americans deserve no less.
Sincerely,
Academic Community Signatories:
Steven G. Blum, Department of Legal
Studies and Business Ethics, Wharton School of Business, University of
Pennsylvania
Harold Evensky, Adjunct
Professor,
Texas Tech University
Jill E. Fisch,
Perry Golkin Professor of
Law,
University of Pennsylvania Law School
Tamar Frankel, Professor of Law,
Boston University, Michaels Faculty Research Scholar
Professor A. William
Gustafson, Ph.D.,
Center for Financial
Responsibility,
Division of Personal
Financial Planning,
Texas Tech University School of Law
Irene E. Leech,
Associate Professor of Consumer Affairs; Virginia Tech University; and
President, Virginia Citizens Consumer
Council
Professor Manning Warren
Harter Chair of Corporate
Law
Brandeis School of Law
University of Louisville
Legal Counsel, Compliance Officers,
and Others:
Gary N. Bowyer, CFP, Chief Compliance
Officer, Bowyer, Weydert Wealth Planning Partners, Inc., Park Ridge, IL
Brian R.
Carlton, CFP®, Chief Compliance Officer,
Huff, Stuart & Carlton, Forest, VA
John T. Carr,
Managing Partner,
Carr Butterfield, LLC, Lake Oswego, OR
Jennifer Cray, CFP®, Partner and Chief
Compliance Officer, Investor’s Capital Management, LLC, Menlo Park, CA
Bedda D’Angelo, President, Fiduciary
Solutions, Durham, NC
Blaine P. Dunn,
CFP®, President,
Dunn Financial Advisors, LLC,
Winchester, VA
Velda A. Eugenias, CFP®, CEO and Chief
Compliance Officer, Eugenias Advisory Group, LLC, Gadsden, Alabama
Thomas Grzymala, CFP®, AIFA®, Keswick,
VA
Michael G. Hollars, Ph.D., CFP®,
President and Chief Compliance Officer, Client First Finance LLC
William H. Lambe, Jr., Esq., Durham,
NC
Kathleen M.
McBride
Editor in Chief
Wealth Manager
Founding Member
Committee for the Fiduciary Standard
David
Morganstern, CFP®, AIF®,
CMC Advisers, LLC, Portland, OR
Keith Newcomb
AIF®
Chief Manager,
Chief Compliance Officer,
Full Life Financial LLC
Ron Pearson, CFP®, AEP
Beach Financial
Advisory Service
Virginia Beach, VA
Daniel Poole, Bay Village, Ohio
Paul E.
Puckett, Jr., Principal of a
State-Registered Investment Adviser
Thomas S. Rogers, CFP®, Portland
Financial Planning Group, LLC, 477 Congress Street, Ste 814, Portland, ME
Knut Rostad, AIF®, Compliance Officer,
Rembert Pendleton Jackson, Falls Church, VA
Janice J. Sackley, Fiduciary ForesightSM,
Fiduciary Risk Management and Compliance Consultants
Steven M. Sherman, Esq., Sherman
Business Law Offices, San Francisco, CA
Bill Singer, Esq., publisher of
RRBDLaw.com and BrokeAndBroker.com
Eric J. Sobocinski, Esq., Pittsboro,
NC
Todd E. Schwartz, Schwartz Law Group
LLC
Donald B.
Trone, President,
Foundation for Fiduciary Studies
Denise Wilcox, CFP®, AIF®, Financial
Solutions, Henderson, NV
Exhibit A in the Letter to Congress:
The
Distinction: Arms-Length (Broker) vs. Fiduciary (Adviser) Relationships
ARMS-LENGTH
SALES RELATIONSHIPS FIDUCIARY ADVISORY RELATIONSHIPS
[1] This article is
written in Ron’s personal capacity and does not represent the views of any
organization in which he is a member. Ron
A. Rhoades serves as Program Chair of the Financial Planning Program at Alfred
State College. He is also Chair-Elect of
the National Assocation of Personal Financial Advisors (www.NAPFA.org), the nation’s premier
organization for fee-only, fiduciary financial advisors. To contact the author, please e-mail RhoadeRA@AlfredState.edu.
[2] If SIFMA is
successful in its efforts to “harmonize” BD and RIA regulation under a
“universal standard” (a.k.a. “new federal fiduciary standard”) – which this
author believes is anything but a true fiduciary standard – the existing
business model of large financial services firms will continue for a time. However, large financial services firms will
inevitably continue to lose market share.
Independent RIA firms, such as the author’s own, may have to rephrase
their message a bit, such as by encouraging clients to ask more precise
questions when evaluating potential financial advisors. However, the core message of the independent
RIA firm – objective advice, free of many of the conflicts of interest present
in many large financial services firms, remains quite strong. In fact, if SIFMA “wins” the battles in
Congress, and thereafter at the SEC, this author’s RIA firm possesses a more
prosperous long-term future. This is
because, in essence, the independent RIA firm will not face any increase in
true competition.
[3] While many
commentators cite past and potential future changes in the regulation of
financial services as a driver of change, this author believes that the drivers
of change are driven primarily by the evolution of consumer needs preferences
as well as advisor desires as to choice of
business model. These preferences
result, in turn, from more fundamental changes, including the shifting from
defined benefit to defined contribution retirement plans, the increasing number
and complexity of investment strategies and products, and the greater
recognition of the impact of fees, costs and taxes upon returns secured by
individual investors. As discussed herein,
the application of broad fiduciary standards of due care, loyalty, and utmost
good faith upon financial advisors is but part of a larger trend to apply
fiduciary standards in a more complex financial world in which specialists
provide expert services which public policy promotes.
[4] At the end of
2008, U.S.-registered investment companies as a whole were the largest group of
investors in U.S. companies, holding 27 percent of their outstanding
stock. In addition, U.S. registered
investment companies held 33% of U.S. municipal debt securities and 44% of U.S.
commercial paper. Investment Company
Institute, 2009 Investment Company Fact Book, p.11. U.S.-registered mutual funds, closed-end
funds, exchange-traded funds and unit investment trusts totaled 16,262 at end
of 2008. Id. at p.15.
[5] Pooled
investment vehicles often possess substantial “hidden” fees and costs which are
not included in the fund’s annual expense ratio and of which most individual
investors are unaware. For a review of
the literature on this issue and for a methodology for estimating these fees
and costs, see Ron A. Rhoades,
Estimating the Total Fees and Costs of Stock Mutual Funds and ETFs (April
2009), a white paper available at www.JosephCapital.com, under
“Resources.”
[6] In 1952,
Professor Harry Markowitz, who won the Nobel Prize in Economics (1990),
theorized that diversification reduces risk, and that assets should be
evaluated and selected for inclusion not solely on the basis of their individual
characteristics but rather by their effect on the investor’s portfolio. It was demonstrated that an optimal portfolio could be constructed to
maximize return for a given standard deviation.
[7] In 1966
Professor Eugene Fama, Sr. of the University of Chicago Graduate School of
Business, utilizing extensive research on stock price patterns, developed the
Efficient Markets Hypothesis (EMH), which generally asserts that prices reflect
values and information accurately and quickly, and therefore it is difficult if
not impossible to capture returns in excess of market returns without taking
greater than market levels of risk.
Various forms of the EMH exist today, and substantial confusion exists
as to distinctions between collective investor rationality versus the efficacy
of the EMH. Nevertheless, the EMH
proponents possess substantial academic research backing either the semi-strong
or weak forms of the EMH.
[8] The first
studies of mutual funds (Jensen, 1965) and of institutional plans (A.G. Becker
Corp., 1968) indicated active managers underperform indexes. A more recent study concludes: “For
1984-2006, when the CRSP database is relatively free of biases, mutual fund
investors in aggregate get net returns that underperform CAPM, three-factor,
and four-factor benchmarks by about the costs in expense ratios. Thus, if there
are fund managers with enough skill to produce benchmark adjusted expected
returns that cover costs, their tracks are hidden in the aggregate results by
the performance of managers with insufficient skill.” Fama, Eugene F. and French, Kenneth R., Luck
Versus Skill in the Cross Section of Mutual Fund Returns (November 2009). Tuck
School of Business Working Paper No. 2009-56 ; Chicago Booth School of Business
Research Paper. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1356021.
[9] Center for
Research in Securities Prices databases, maintained by the Univ. of Chicago
Booth School of Business, which have over the years been expanded in terms of their
number and historical coverage, and which have been subject to periodic
revisions in efforts to enhance the reliability of the data and to remove
survivorship bias.
[10] Fama, E.F. &
K.R. French, The Cross-section of Expected Stock Returns, 47 Journal of Finance 427-486 (1982).
[11] The “knowledge
gap” between financial advisors and individual investors has long been
recognized. For example, the 1995 Tully
Report noted: “As a general rule, RRs and their clients are separated by a wide
gap of knowledge--knowledge of the technical and financial management aspects
of investing. The pace of product
innovation in the securities industry has only widened this gap. It is a rare client who truly understands the
risks and market behaviors of his or her investments, and the language of
prospectuses intended to communicate those understandings is impenetrable to
many. This knowledge gap represents a potential source of client abuse, since
uninformed investors have no basis for evaluating the merits of the advice they
are given.” Report of the Committee on
Compensation Practices (April 10, 1995) (a.k.a., Tully Report, after its
Chairman, Daniel P. Tully, Chairman and CEO, Merrill Lynch), available at http://www.sec.gov/news/studies/bkrcomp.txt. The suggested Tully Report reforms to
overcome this financial gap included increased disclosures greater acceptance
of responsibility by individual investors.
[12] For an early
work exploring disintermediation in the financial services industry, see Freedman, Stephen R., Regulating the
Modern Financial Firm: Implications of Disintermediation and Conglomeration
(September 2000). St. Gallen Economics Working Paper 2000-21, observing: “Conglomeration
across lines of business has been quite common under the European universal
banking system, and will certainly take off in the US following the repeal of
the Glass-Steagall Act in 1999 … Investor protection … should increasingly be
addressed through the regulation of business conduct ….” Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=253928.
[13] For an early
analysis of this impact, see Weber,
Bruce W., Trade Execution Costs and the Disintermediation of Trading in a
Competing Dealer Market (July 1994). Information Systems Working Papers Series,
available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1284851. A summary of more recent techniques utilized
in disintermediation in trade execution can be found in Ron A. Rhoades, Estimating
the Total Fees and Costs of Stock Mutual Funds and ETFs (April 2009), a white
paper available at www.JosephCapital.com, under
“Resources.”
[14] Lack of
objectivity is not confined to recommendations of proprietary over
non-proprietary products. Many forms of
compensation practices relating to mutual fund sales impair the delivery of
objective advice and are likely to be attacked by competitors who do not
receive material compensation from investment companies. Such practices include
recommendations of proprietary funds over non-proprietary funds, preferred
partner funds over non-preferred partner funds, funds which engage in revenue
sharing over funds which do not, Class B shares over Class A shares, Class C
shares over Class A shares, and funds that provide soft dollar compensation
over funds which do not. While sales
contests involving the awards of prizes (cash and non-cash compensation) and
other differential compensation arrangements have been either banned or
discouraged by regulators, other variable compensation practices remain,
including but not limited to revenue sharing arrangements. See
Serafeim, George, Directed Brokerage no More: The Effects of New Regulation in
the Mutual Fund Industry (July 10, 2008) (“[E]vidence also indicates that
brokers have begun compensating for lost revenues from directed brokerage
commissions by implementing revenue sharing agreements. Although affected funds
have lower inflows after the regulation, suggesting that brokers’ bias is
partly eliminated, revenue sharing agreements appear to be the new means of
increasing fund inflows.”). Available at
SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1157917.
[15] Independent
RIAs, sometimes aided by their custodians, often tout the objectivity of their
advice and the fact that they eschew proprietary product sales. For example, the 2005 Charles Schwab
Institutional marketing brochure provided to their RIAs for marketing,
“Investing in More Objective Advice: A Guide to Working With an Independent
Registered Investment Advisor,” suggests investors who already work with a
broker ask themselves this question: “Do I sometimes feel that my broker’s
recommendations for products, including ones from their own company, are not
always in my best interest or may be motivated by commissions?”
[16] Through the Investment
Adviser Registration Depository (IARD) system, several states already mandate
the public-accessible filings of Form ADV, Part II narrative disclosure. Part II includes information about the
service offerings and fees of registered investment advisers, as well as the
increased savvy of consumers in obtaining internet-based data, will likely continue
to accelerate fee competition among investment advisory firms. SEC-registered advisers may, but are not
required to, file Part II with the IARD.
[17] DALBAR, Inc., Quantitative Analysis of
Investor Behavior, March 2009 Advisor’s Edition, observing: “Throughout the
15-year history of QAIB, which encompassed periods of unprecedented market
upswings as well as last year’s drop, the ‘average investor’ has continuously
achieved 20-year results that have lagged the oft-quoted return statistics
would lead investors to believe are achievable.
Why? There is one simple reason:
When the going gets tough, investors panic … Market declines caused panic, and
panic led to bad decisions. And bad
decisions combined with declining markets resulted in exacerbated losses.” I do not suggest that all financial planners
also avoid the behavioral biases (loss aversion, narrow framing, herding, etc.)
which so often doom individual investors; indeed, the failure of many
[18] As stated in the
consumer-oriented brochure, “Cutting Through the Confusion”: “While some people
are comfortable handling their own investments, many are not. They find the
idea of creating a plan for allocating their assets bewildering, choosing a
mutual fund intimidating, and designing an investment portfolio to be one more
thing for which they have neither the time nor the expertise. This is nothing
to be embarrassed about. Investing can be confusing.” “Cutting Through The Confusion,” a brochure
published by the “Coalition on Investor Education,” which consists of the
Consumer Federation of America, the North American Securities Administrators
Association, the Investment Adviser Association, the Financial Planning
Association, and the CFA Institute.
[19] Lusardi,
Annamaria, Financial Literacy: An Essential Tool for Informed Consumer Choice?
(July 2008). Paolo Baffi Centre Research Paper No. 2009-35. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1336389.
[20] Hathaway, Ian
and Khatiwada, Sameer, Do Financial Education Programs Work? (April 1, 2008).
FRB of Cleveland Working Paper No. 08-03. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1118485.
In another white
paper critical of prior research into the effectiveness of financial literacy,
Professor Willis wrote: “[Financial literacy education (FLE)] is widely
believed to turn consumers into responsible and empowered market players,
motivated and competent to handle their own credit, insurance, savings and
investment matters by confidently navigating the marketplace. In this
financially literate world, other forms of legal regulation of financial
products are unnecessary and even counterproductive. This vision depends on the
belief that FLE can not only improve financial behavior, but that it can do so
to the degree necessary for consumers to protect and even increase their
welfare in the modern financial marketplace … The demands of contemporary
personal financial management are prodigious and varied … What degree of
effectiveness should appropriately be claimed for the current model of
financial literacy education? As yet, none ….” Willis, Lauren E., Evidence and
Ideology in Assessing the Effectiveness of Financial Literacy Education. U of
Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 08-08; Loyola-LA Legal Studies
Paper No. 2008-6; Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1098270.
[21] Tully Report, supra n.11, stating in pertinent part:
“Brokerage firms are not – and cannot be – teaching institutions for investors,
but practices that narrow the knowledge gap between investors and RRs can only
be viewed positively. Only one
"best practice" was found in this area:
MAKE SPECIAL EFFORTS TO INFORM INVESTORS
OF THEIR RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES. All brokerage firms distribute such
materials to their clients, as required by law. Typically, however, these are
done in print so small that only the most diligent would wade through them. One
firm interviewed provides each new account holder with a clear and thorough
document explaining risk, return, and the role of the registered
representative. The document provides a summary of services provided by the
firm, trade and settlement arrangements, and procedures for resolving
complaints. Further, the document spells out the client's responsibilities with
respect to communicating objectives, and so forth. Other firms spell out
alternative compensation arrangements which are fee-based rather than
transaction-driven …
Investors have an
important role to play in the alignment of interests described above. Intense competition has created a buyers'
market for brokerage services, giving investors of the 1990s the power to
demand AND RECEIVE high levels of professionalism and quality service.
Using their
ability to direct business to organizations that serve them well, and to
withhold it from those who serve them poorly, today's investors have more
potential power over the behavior of brokers than any regulator or consumer
watchdog. Investors' insistence on professionalism and quality service is the
ultimate safeguard of their own best interests and, indirectly, the ultimate
enforcer of high standards within the brokerage industry …
[Clients] must
assume decision-making responsibility for their accounts. It is their
responsibility to evaluate the advice of their brokers and to determine which
actions will be taken. In many cases this means that clients must educate
themselves in the basics of financial markets, the nature of risk, and other
aspects of investing. Good decisions cannot be made in ignorance….” Tully Report, pp.15-18.
[22] For a general
discussion of the ineffectiveness of disclosures in the context of waiving
broad fiduciary duties of due care, loyalty, and good faith, see Rhoades, Managing Conflicts of
Interest: The Limits of Disclosure and Informed Consent (2008), stating: “To
accept the premise [advanced in the Tully Report] that investors are
responsible for their own actions, it is necessary to conclude that investors
are not only armed with adequate disclosure, but also that they possess an
ability to understand the disclosures which have been provided to them.
Assuming, for the moment, that the disclosure is adequate (in writing, in
‘plain English’ to the extent possible, specific as to the material facts to be
disclosed, and communicated to the investor in advance of any decision by the
investor), the sole question then becomes the adequacy of understanding of the
disclosures which have been made.”
Available at http://www.fiduciarynow.com/ManagingConflictsofInterest.pdf.
[23] Jill E. Fisch,
“Regulatory Responses To Investor Irrationality: The Case Of The Research
Analyst,” 10 Lewis & Clark L. Rev. 57, 74-83 (2006).
[24] Steven L.
Schwarcz, Rethinking The Disclosure Paradigm In A World Of Complexity,
Univ.Ill.L.R. Vol. 2004, p.1, 7 (2004), citing
“Disclosure To Investors: A Reappraisal Of Federal Administrative Policies
Under The ‘33 and ‘34 Acts (The Wheat Report),“ 52 (1969); accord William O. Douglas, “Protecting the Investor,” 23 YALE REV.
521, 524 (1934).
[25] Supra n. 17.
[26] As stated by
Professor Ripken: “[E]ven if we could
purge disclosure documents of legaleze and make them easier to read, we are
still faced with the problem of cognitive and behavioral biases and constraints
that prevent the accurate processing of information and risk. As discussed
previously, information overload, excessive confidence in one’s own judgment,
overoptimism, and confirmation biases can undermine the effectiveness of
disclosure in communicating relevant information to investors. Disclosure may
not protect investors if these cognitive biases inhibit them from rationally
incorporating the disclosed information into their investment decisions. No matter how much we do to make disclosure more
meaningful and accessible to investors, it will still be difficult for people
to overcome their bounded rationality. The disclosure of more information alone
cannot cure investors of the psychological constraints that may lead them to
ignore or misuse the information. If investors are overloaded, more information
may simply make matters worse by causing investors to be distracted and miss
the most important aspects of the disclosure … The bottom line is that there is
‘doubt that disclosure is the optimal regulatory strategy if most investors
suffer from cognitive biases’ … While disclosure has its place in a
well-functioning securities market, the direct, substantive regulation of
conduct may be a more effective method of deterring fraudulent and unethical
practices.” Ripken, Susanna Kim, The
Dangers and Drawbacks of the Disclosure Antidote: Toward a More Substantive
Approach to Securities Regulation. Baylor Law Review, Vol. 58, No. 1, 2006;
Chapman University Law Research Paper No. 2007-08. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=936528.
[27] See Robert Prentice, Whither Securities
Regulation Some Behavioral Observations Regarding Proposals for its Future, 51
Duke Law J. 1397 (March 2002). Professor
Prentices summarizes: “Respected commentators have floated several proposals
for startling reforms of America’s seventy-year-old securities regulation
scheme. Many involve substantial deregulation with a view toward allowing
issuers and investors to contract privately for desired levels of disclosure
and fraud protection. The behavioral literature explored in this Article
cautions that in a deregulated securities world it is exceedingly optimistic to
expect issuers voluntarily to disclose optimal levels of information,
securities intermediaries such as stock exchanges and stockbrokers to
appropriately consider the interests of investors, or investors to be able to
bargain efficiently for fraud protection.”
Available at http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?51+Duke+L.+J.+1397.
[28] See Kevin P. Condon, Ph.D., CFP®, The
financial case for integrating directed advice programs into consumer-directed
health plans, BenefitNews.com (July 1, 2006), stating: “As a group, 401(k) plan
sponsors have realized, rather belatedly, that education initiatives, online
financial calculators and automated advice engines are, by themselves
insufficient to help many participants make sound 401(k)-related decisions. Far
greater attention is now being paid to direct financial advice alternatives.” New software programs, focusing on gap-based
retirement planning, which enable inputs of not only qualified retirement plan
investment assets but also other investments, home equity, and liabilities,
will likely fulfill some of the demand for financial planning in the workplace,
but their efficacy has yet to be studied comprehensively. A recent survey found that employers are beginning
to offer access to telephone consultation services and personal meetings with a
financial planning professional; in these cases, the employer often bears the
full cost of formal retirement planning programs. Patricia A. Krajnak, CEBS, Sharon A. Burns,
Ph.D., and Sally M. Natchek, CEBS, Retirement education in the workplace, Financial
Services Review 17 (2008) 131–141,
[29] Schwab
Institutional survey, released Nov. 29, 2009, of 200 registered representatives
respondents, who averaged 10 years of investment advisory experience and had an
average of $84m in AUM. The survey also
noted that less than half of the registered representatives (46%) believed
their employer’s brand helped them acquire or retain clients, and that 80%
believed that if they left their current employer, their clients would follow
them.
[30] Halah Touryalai,
Survey Says: Wall Street Advisors Going…Wait For It…Independent! Registered Rep
magazine (Sept. 11, 2009), citing Cerulli
report entitled “Advisor Migration: The Changing Landscape of Retail
Distribution.”
[31] Anecdotal
evidence supports this conclusion, from discussions this author has had with
numerous advisors who have migrated to the independent RIA business model. As related to Schwab Institutional by John
Burns: ““The RIA model was the only option that let me serve my clients' best
interests.” Indeed, this author began his own independent RIA firm only after
surveying eight different business models and determining that the independent
RIA firm model was likely to be the best, from the standpoint of providing a
broader array of service and product offerings.
[32] College for
Financial Planning, 2009 Survey of Trends in the Financial Planning Industry. Available
at http://www.cffpinfo.com/pdfs/2009SOT.pdf
[33] DOL Bureau of
Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook, 2008-09 Edition, further
noting that: “Growing numbers of advisors will be needed to assist the millions
of workers expected to retire in the next 10 years. As more members of the
large baby boom generation reach their peak years of retirement savings,
personal investments are expected to increase and more people will seek the
help of experts. Many companies also have replaced traditional pension plans
with retirement savings programs, so more individuals are managing their own
retirements than in the past, creating jobs for advisors. In addition, people
are living longer and must plan to finance longer retirements.”
[34] See Kenneth Black, Jr., Contrad S.
Ciccotello, and Harold D. Skipper, Jr., Issues in Comprehensive Personal
Financial Planning, 11 Financial Services Review 1 (2002), available at http://www2.stetson.edu/fsr/abstracts/vol_11_num1_p1.pdf
[35] College for
Financial Planning, 2009 Survey of Trends in the Financial Planning Industry,
noting also that: “Advisers are increasingly moving to independent channels.
Over half of respondents to the 2009 survey work in an independent advisory
channel (independent broker/dealer, dual registration, independent RIA). There
is a clear secular trend toward adviser independence, but there will always
remain a place for the employee adviser operating in more structured
distribution channels.” Available at http://www.cffpinfo.com/pdfs/2009SOT.pdf.
[36] Comments of
Deanna Katz, Chairman, Evensky & Katz; Associate Professor, Texas Tech
University, at the Tiburon Advisors CEO Summit XVII, November 27, 2009.
[37] A bachelor's
degree (or higher), or its equivalent, in any discipline, from an accredited
college or university is required to attain CFP® certification. In addition, applicants must pass the CFP®
Certification Examination, a 10-hour exam testing their ability to apply
financial planning knowledge to client situations. Also, at least three years of qualifying
full-time work experience are required for Certified Financial Planner™
certification. A background check is also
required, and applicants must agree to abide by CFP Board's Code of Ethics and
Professional Responsibility and Financial Planning Practice Standards.
[38] See Ibanez v. Fl Dep't of Business &
Professional Regulation, 512 U.S. 136, 114 S.Ct. 2084, 129 L.Ed.2d 118 (1994),
in which the U.S. Supreme Court stated: “‘Certified
Financial Planner’ and ‘CFP’ are well-established, protected federal trademarks
that have been described as ‘the most recognized designation[s] in the planning
field ….” The U.S. Supreme Court cited Financial
Planners: Report of Staff of United States Securities and Exchange Commission
to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce's Subcommittee on
Telecommunications and Finance 53 (1988), reprinted in Financial Planners and
Investment Advisors, Hearing before the Subcommittee on Consumer Affairs of the
Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, 100th Cong., 2d Sess.,
78 (1988).
As stated
on Wikipedia.org: “One of the oldest, best-known financial planning
certification trademarks is the CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER certification,
which has gained global recognition because of its active standard setting
activities and worldwide presence. CFP certification was first introduced in
the United States in the early 1970s to meet the need of the consumers. CFP
Board, based in Washington, D.C. owns the CFP marks within the United States.
The CFP marks are owned outside of the United States by Financial Planning
Standards Board ….”
As
stated by the CFP Board of Standards itself: “Why has the CERTIFIED FINANCIAL
PLANNER™ certification become so sought after by consumers and the financial
planners who serve them? The answer is simple. The public is looking for a
planner who has demonstrated a commitment to competency, and financial professionals
want an established certification that sets them apart in a globally expanding
financial planning profession. CFP Board research shows consumers increasingly
rely on credentials when selecting a financial adviser.”
[39] Cynthia
Harrington, Icing the Cake, Bloomberg Wealth Manager.
[40] As stated by the
U.S. Supreme Court: “Congress codified the common law ‘remedially’ as the
courts had adapted it to the prevention of fraudulent securities transactions
by fiduciaries … Congress intended the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 to be
construed like other securities legislation ‘enacted for the purpose of
avoiding frauds,’ not technically and restrictively, but flexibly to effectuate
its remedial purposes.” SEC vs. Capital Gains Research Bureau,
375 U.S. 180 (1963).
The
Congress has continuously incorporated the common law of fiduciary duty into
numerous federal statutes by simply using the words “fiduciary duty”- see, e.g., §36(b), Investment Company
Act, and ERISA. The Supreme Court has
repeatedly held that “where Congress uses terms that have settled meaning under
common law ... Congress means to incorporate the established meanings of these
terms.” NLRB v. Amax Coal Co., 53
U.S. 322, 101 S.Ct. 2789, 69 L.Ed.2d 672 (U.S.1981) (adopting Meinhard's fiduciary standard).
The
existence of a “federal fiduciary standard” under the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 does not mean that deference is not provided to the scope of fiduciary
duties as they exist under state common law. See U.S. v. Brennan, 938 F.Supp. 1111 (E.D.N.Y., 1996) (“Other
spheres in which the existence and scope of a fiduciary duty are matters of
federal concern are ERISA and § 523(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy code. The analysis
under each of these statutes continues to be informed by state and common law. See, e.g., Varity v. Howe, 516 U.S. 489,
116 S.Ct. 1065, 1070, 134 L.Ed.2d 130 (1996); F.D.I.C. v. Wright, 87 B.R. 1011 (D.S.D. 1988) (bankruptcy).”) Id. at 1119.
[41] Under state
common law, fiduciary status arises from those relationships which, on their
particular facts, are appropriately categorized as fiduciary in nature. A variety of circumstances may indicate that
a fiduciary relationship exists, as opposed to an arms-length relationship.
Such circumstances, or indicia or evidential factors, include influence,
placement of trust, vulnerability or dependency, substantial disparity in
knowledge, the ability to exert influence, and placement of confidence. Another factor may lie in the ability of the
fiduciary, by virtue of his or her position or authority, to derive profits at
the expense of his or her client.
The
development of the branch of fiduciary relationships arising out of
relationships based on trust and confidence accelerated during the 20th
Century and continues today, in response to the increased complexity of our
modern world. Increased amounts of
specialization are required in modern society, and this in turn leads to
greater reliance on others in order to obtain greater affluence. As stated by Professor Frankel, “Courts,
legislatures, and administrative agencies increasingly draw on fiduciary law to
answer problems caused by these social changes.” Tamar Frankel, Fiduciary Law, 71 Calif. L. Rev. 795, 796 (1983).
Many
state courts, applying state common law to relationships based upon trust and
confidence, have held that the relationship is or may constitute a fiduciary
relationship between the financial advisor and/or investment adviser and the
client. Western Reserve Life Assurance Company of Ohio vs. Graben, No.
2-05-328-CV (Tex. App. 6/28/2007) (Tex. App., 2007) ("Obviously, when a
person such as Hutton is acting as a financial advisor, that role extends well
beyond a simple arms’-length business transaction. An unsophisticated investor
is necessarily entrusting his funds to one who is representing that he will
place the funds in a suitable investment and manage the funds appropriately for
the benefit of his investor/entrustor. The relationship goes well beyond a
traditional arms’-length business transaction that provides ‘mutual benefit’
for both parties."). See also U.S. v. Williams, 441 F.3d 716,
724 (9th Cir. 2006); Sergeants Benevolent
Assn. Annuity Fund v. Renck, 4430 (NY 6/2/2005) (NY, 2005); Hatleberg v. Norwest Bank Wisconsin,
2005 WI 109, 700 N.W.2d 15 (WI, 2005); Fraternity
Fund v. Beacon Hill Asset, 376 F.Supp.2d 385, 414 (S.D.N.Y., 2005) (the
customer “relied upon superior knowledge. Asset Alliance allegedly was
plaintiff's investment advisor and committed to ‘monitor the status and
performance of [Beacon Hill and Bristol] at least once a month and [to]
promptly inform Sanpaolo if, for any reason, it believes that [Beacon Hill or
Bristol] should be de-selected.’ These
allegations are sufficient to plead a fiduciary relationship.”); Mathias v. Rosser, 2002 OH 2531 (OHCA,
2002) (“[T]he evidence established that Rosser was a licensed stockbroker and
held himself out as a financial advisor, and that plaintiff was an
unsophisticated investor who sought investment advice from Rosser precisely
because of his alleged expertise as a broker and investment advisor. Further,
Rosser testified that plaintiff had relied upon his experience, knowledge, and
expertise in seeking his advice. Therefore, we conclude that plaintiff
presented sufficient evidence to establish that she and Rosser were in a
fiduciary relationship.”); Cunningham vs.
PLI Life Insurance Company, 42 F.Supp.2d 872 (1990); MidAmerica Federal Savings
and Loan Ass’n v. Shearson / American Express Inc., 886 F.2d 1249 (10th
Cir. 1989) (The court found a fiduciary relationship under Oklahoma law between
a broker and his client in circumstances where the broker held himself out as
having superior knowledge and expertise and the client reasonably placed his
confidence in the broker.); Koehler v.
Pulvers, 614 F. Supp. 829 (USDC, Cal, 1985).
It
should be noted that neither federal nor state securities laws generally
preempt common law claims based upon breach of fiduciary duty (except under
special circumstances, such as ERISA accounts and under SLUSA). This is because the securities statutes were
modeled after the common law actions of fraud and deceit. See Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder, 425 U.S. 185, 193-215, 96
S.Ct. 1375, 1381-1391, 47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976) (review of legislative history); see also Securities Regulation, 69
Am.Jur.2d Sec. 1 et seq.
It
should be noted that all agents, including brokers and investment advisers,
are, by definition, fiduciaries under common law. However, the scope of those fiduciary duties
(care, loyalty, good faith and disclosure) dependent on the powers and
responsibilities assumed. For example, a
broker-dealer firm accepts responsibility as an “agent” of the customer for the
proper execution of the brokerage transaction. In connection with the scope of
that agency, the broker-dealer and its RRs owe “limited fiduciary duties” or
“quasi-fiduciary duties” to the customer.
[42] Employee
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) (Pub.L. 93-406, 88 Stat. 829,
enacted September 2, 1974).
[43] ERISA imposes a
duty to prudently manage the retirement fund’s assets for the sole and
exclusive interest of the participants and beneficiaries, as set forth in
Section 404(a) of ERISA, 29 U.S.C. §1104(a).
ERISA’s stricter application of the fiduciary standard was summarized by
Professor Laby: “ERISA contains many nonnegotiable provisions, which
demonstrate the mandatory nature of that particular legislative scheme. ERISA’s
exclusive benefit rule provides that an ERISA fiduciary shall discharge his
duties ‘solely in the interest’ of plan participants and for the ‘exclusive purpose’
of providing them with benefits. Another provision clarifies that plan assets
‘shall never inure’ to the employer. ERISA departs from the common law of
trusts by voiding any provision purporting to ‘relieve a fiduciary from
responsibility or liability.’” Laby,
Arthur B., The Fiduciary Obligation as the Adoption of Ends. Buffalo Law
Review, Vol. 56, No. 1, 2008. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1124722. The effect of the Pension Protection Act of
2006’s amendments to ERISA, as it pertains to the provision of investment
advice, remain the subject of Department of Labor rulemaking (see http://www.dol.gov/federalregister/HtmlDisplay.aspx?DocId=23318&AgencyId=8&DocumentType=2, withdrawing Jan. 21, 2009 “Final Rule”
designed to implement an exemption to ERISA’s prohibited transaction
rules). According to the EBSA, the
agency received a number of comments that raised concerns about the potential
for investment adviser self-dealing as a result of these provisions. EBSA noted comments which claimed that the
rule does not contain strong enough safeguards to protect the interests of plan
participants and beneficiaries from potential conflicts of interest. The EBSA
concluded that given these and other legal and policy concerns raised, the
Department is justified in withdrawing its final rule, and intends to propose
new regulations on the statutory prohibited transaction exemption under ERISA
shortly. ERISA’s fiduciary standards are
also likely to see further modification by Act of Congress; currently under
consideration by the House Ways and Means Committee is The 401(k) Fair
Disclosure and Pension Security Act of 2009 (H.R. 2989), which combines
provisions of two other bills that were approved by the House Education and
Labor’s Subcommittee on Health, Employment, Pensions and Labor on June 17,
2009: the 401(k) Fair Disclosure for Retirement Security Act (H.R. 1984)
sponsored by Rep. George Miller (D-CA), and the Conflicted Advice Prohibition
Act (H.R. 1988) sponsored by Rep. Robert Andrews (D-NJ).
[44] Center for Due
Diligence, Evaluating ERISA Plan Advisors, Part 1 (Nov. 10, 2009), stating
that: “ERISA fiduciary standards, the highest standards known to law, are
already higher than all existing and proposed standards applicable to the BD
community” and also noting that: “As the retirement plans component of their
business grows, advisors are forced to evaluate the structure of their
practice. They must also determine the type of entity that allows them to
provide competitive services that are in the best interest of their clients.
This step requires advisors to evaluate the pros and cons of Broker/Dealer association,
establishing their own Registered Investment Advisor (RIA) or joining an
independent firm.” http://thecfdd.com/files/insights/EvaluatingERISAPlanAdv.pdf.
[45] One might call into
question the lobbying efforts of the IAA, CFP Board, FPA, and NAPFA, among
others, to preserve the existing fiduciary standard of conduct found in the
Advisers Act and apply this standard to the activities of broker-dealer firms,
when their members might be adversely affected through renewed
competition. Many members of these
organizations are somewhat altruistic, in that they view the provision of
investment and financial planning advice under a bona fide fiduciary standard
of conduct as good for both Americans and the economic future of America
itself. Yet other members recognize that
should financial planning rise to the level of a true profession, under the
guise of a professional regulatory organization (such as that seen for
attorneys), the fiduciary standard of conduct will be preserved and peer review
made possible to better enforce fiduciary standards. Additionally, once financial planning is
always provided under a non-waivable bona fide fiduciary standard of conduct,
with objective and competent financial advice being its hallmarks, consumer
demand for financial planning services will continue to rise. Professions are self-regulated by the
professionals themselves and not subject to oversight by commercial interests
(which are often not aligned fully with the necessity of appropriate fiduciary
standards, and hence would seek to weaken them). Professional regulation has, historically,
led to preservation and enhancement of standards of conduct over time, as
professionals recognize that high standards increase demand for professional
services and raise the status of the profession, generally.
[46] Ron A. Rhoades,
JD, CFP®, I Am A Fiduciary Advisor, Advisor Perspectives, November 3, 2009,
available at http://www.advisorperspectives.com/newsletters09/pdfs/I_am_a_Fiduciary_Financial_Advisor.pdf.
[47] There are many
elements of a fiduciary financial planner’s value proposition. However, if a client departs from the
financial services firm during a down market, and flees the stock market, this
will largely negate the value added through risk reduction strategies,
tax-efficient portfolio management, cost-efficiencies achieved through
investment product due diligence, application of academic research to
investment strategy design, orienting investment and financial decisions toward
the focused identification and achievement of a client’s lifetime financial
goals, etc. During the late 2008 through
early 2009 stock market decline, the author’s firm lost very few clients (far
less than 5% of total clients and/or total AUM), but each loss of a client –
especially since those clients often fled the equity markets – was viewed as a
personal failure to properly educate instill within those client the discipline
required for long-term investment success.
[48] It is common for financial
planners / investment advisers to spend less time with clients who demand
less. Often this is counter-productive,
and can result in increased risk to the financial services firm. Applying the fiduciary duty of disclosure of
material facts, coupled with the need to ensure client understanding, it is
imperative that greater time be spent in educating the less sophisticated
client as to the investment strategies utilized and various aspects of their
implementation. The natural tendency of
individual financial advisors to spend less time with clients who demand less
explanation must be effectively countered through firm service standards,
required documentation of client communications, and compliance oversight.
[49] The anti-fraud provision of the Advisers Act,
15 U.S.C. § 80b–6, Prohibited transactions by investment advisers, which forms
the basis on which fiduciary duties have been applied to investment advisers,
states: “It shall be unlawful for any investment adviser by use of the mails or
any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce, directly or indirectly— ….”
(Emphasis added.) Broker-dealers who receive “special
compensation” - generally, anything
other than a commission at the time of a product sale or upon the deposit of
funds into the product, appear to fall outside of the broker-dealer exclusion
from the Advisers Act. See Philadelphia Suburban Water Co. v.
Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 2002 PA 3603 (PACW, 2002)
(“’Indirectly’ signifies the doing by an obscure circuitous method something
which is prohibited from being done directly, and includes all methods of doing
the things prohibited except the direct one. Farmers' State Bank v. Mincher (Tex. Civ. App.) 267 S.W. 996. State v. Pielsticker, 225 N.W. 51, 52
(Neb. 1929). In Amicable Life Insurance
Co. v. O'Reilly, 97 S.W. 2d 246, 249 (Tex. Civ. App. 1936), the Texas
Supreme Court noted that ‘indirectly’ cannot be treated as surplusage; this
word must be given its meaning in the adjudicated case.”)
[50] At Joseph
Capital Management, LLC, our “competition” consists of: (1) bank trust
departments, which tout their fiduciary business model (even though they often
fail to execute it well); (2) Vanguard; and (3) other independent RIA
firms. We lose very few potential
clients to larger BD firms, and we possess a higher closing ratio for
prospective clients to our firm when they are presently served by larger BD
firms.
[51] The author submits this memorandum personally and not on behalf of
any organization or firm to which the author may belong or be associated with. Ron may be reached by e-mail at rrhoades@josephcapital.com, or by phone at (352) 746-4460.
[52] For example, the SEC’s promulgation of the “Temporary
Rule” in 2007 with regard to expanded relief from principal trading made no
specific mention, in the rule itself or the associated release, of the
multitude of very specific requirements imposed on investment advisers when
engaged in principal transactions with their clients. An elaboration of these requirements can be
found in several decisions, including Arleen
Hughes (1949), Geman (2003).
The SEC’s proposed “Two Hats” rule (Sept. 2007), based
upon strained interpretation of the phrase “solely incidental” in reference to
the investment advisory activities of broker-dealers and the application of the
broker-dealer exclusion from the Advisors Act’s requirements, flies in the face
of substantial legal precedent that fiduciary status is applied to the adviser
in all aspects of its relationship with the client, not just to specific
accounts under a “check-the-box” approach.
Many dually registered firms appear to be following this Proposed Rule
in their existing business practices – which the author suggests is undertaken
at their own peril, given the likelihood that the Proposed Rule, if adopted by
the SEC, would be judicially challenged, and given the application of state common
law to investment adviser activities.
Moreover, SEC application of the anti-fraud rules
(i.e., fiduciary duties) to financial planning activities has been remarkably
inconsistent over the years. At first,
the SEC held the view that marketing investment advisory services or financial
planning services as a means to effect the sale of securities may well violate
the anti-fraud provisions of Section 206 of the Advisers Act. See Elmer D. Robinson, SEC No-Action
Letter (Jan. 6, 1986); Nathan & Lewis,
SEC No-Action Letter (Apr. 4, 1988). [However, a broker-dealer that employs
terms such as "financial planner" merely as a device to induce the
sale of securities might violate the antifraud provisions of the Securities Act
of 1933 and the Exchange Act. Cf. In re Haight
& Co., Inc., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 9082 (Feb. 19, 1971)
(Broker-dealer defrauded its customers in the offer and sale of securities by
holding itself out as a financial planner that would give comprehensive and
expert planning advice and choose the best investments for its clients from all
available securities, when in fact it was not an expert in planning and made
its decisions based on the receipt of commissions and upon its inventory of
securities.)]”
However, as noted in FN 153 of the 2005 IA Release
(Merrill Lynch Rule), the SEC stated: “Our staff has previously expressed the
view that advice provided in connection with financial planning is not solely
incidental to brokerage. See, e.g.,
Townsend and Associates, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Sept. 21, 1994)
(advice is not incidental that is provided “as part of an overall financial
plan that addresses the financial situation of a customer and formulates a
financial plan.”). See also Investment
Management & Research, Inc., SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Jan. 27,
1977). It is also consistent with views expressed in two of the leading
treatises on investment advisers. See Thomas P. Lemke & Gerald T. Lins,
REGULATION OF INVESTMENT ADVISERS §1:20 (2004); INVESTMENT ADVISER REGULATION,
supra note 150 at §2:5:1. It may, however, be inconsistent with statements made
in a few of our staff’s other letters. See, e.g., Nathan & Lewis Securities, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Mar. 3,
1988) (“Nathan & Lewis No-Action Letter”); Elmer D. Robinson, SEC Staff No-Action Letter (Dec. 6, 1985).”
[53] As to the “best interests” standard being present
under the Advisers Act, see S.E.C. v.
Moran, 922 F.Supp. 867, 895-6 (S.D.N.Y., 1996) (“the SEC alleges that by
allocating Liberty stock to his personal and family accounts and requiring his
clients to pay a higher price for the stock the next day, Moran Sr. and Moran
Asset placed their own interests ahead of their clients thereby violating the
fiduciary duty owed to those clients … Section 206 of the Advisers Act establishes
a statutory fiduciary duty for investment advisers to act for the benefit of
their clients, requiring advisers to exercise the utmost good faith in dealing
with clients, to disclose all material facts, and to employ reasonable care to
avoid misleading clients. Transamerica
Mortgage Advisors, Inc. v. Lewis, 444 U.S. 11, 17, 100 S.Ct. 242, 246, 62
L.Ed.2d 146 (1979); Burks v. Lasker,
441 U.S. 471, 482 n. 10, 99 S.Ct. 1831, 1839 n. 10, 60 L.Ed.2d 404 (1979); Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green, 430
U.S. 462, 472 n. 11, 97 S.Ct. 1292, 1300 n. 11, 51 L.Ed.2d 480 (1977); SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc.,
375 U.S. 180, 191-92, 84 S.Ct. 275, 282-83, 11 L.Ed.2d 237 (1963) … [T]he court
interprets Section 206 to establish a fiduciary duty which in addition to
applying to misrepresentations and omission, also requires the investment
advisor to act in the best interests of its clients. See e.g., SEC v. Capital Gains Bureau, 375 U.S. at 195, 84 S.Ct. at
284-85 (‘Congress intended the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 to be construed
like other securities legislation ‘enacted for the purpose of avoiding frauds,’
not technically and restrictively, but flexibly to effectuate its remedial
purposes.’) ….”
[54] A more elaborate explanation of the difference between
the “sole interests” standard and “best interests” standard can be found in
Professor John Langbein’s article: “The sole interest rule prohibits the
trustee from “plac[ing] himself in a position where his personal interest . . .
conflicts or possibly may conflict with” the interests of the beneficiary. The
rule applies not only to cases in which a trustee misappropriates trust
property, but also to cases in which no such thing has happened—that is, to
cases in which the trust “incurred no loss” or in which “actual benefit accrued
to the trust” from a transaction with a conflicted trustee. The conclusive
presumption of invalidity under the sole interest rule has acquired a
distinctive name: the “no further inquiry” rule. What that label emphasizes, as
the official comment to the Uniform Trust Code of 2000 explains, is that
“transactions involving trust property entered into by a trustee for the
trustee’s own personal account [are] voidable without further proof.” Courts
invalidate a conflicted transaction without regard to its merits—“not because
there is fraud, but because there may be fraud.” “[E]quity deems it better to .
. . strike down all disloyal acts, rather than to attempt to separate the
harmless and the harmful by permitting the trustee to justify his representation
of two interests … I compare the trust law duty of loyalty with the law of
corporations, which originally shared the trust law sole interest rule but
abandoned it in favor of a regime that undertakes to regulate rather than
prohibit conflicts … I recommend (in Section II.C) reformulating the trust law
duty of loyalty in light of these developments. I would generalize the
principle now embodied in the exclusions and exceptions, which is that the
trustee must act in the beneficiary’s best interest, but not necessarily in the
beneficiary’s sole interest. Overlaps of interest that are consistent with the
best interest of the beneficiary should be allowed. What is needed to cure the
overbreadth of the sole interest rule is actually quite a modest fix: reducing
from conclusive to rebuttable the force of the presumption of invalidity that
now attaches to a conflicted transaction.” Langbein, John H., Questioning the
Trust Law Duty of Loyalty: Sole Interest or Best Interest?. Yale Law Journal,
Vol. 114, p. 929 (2005), available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=696801
[55] Generally, “[t]he duties of a broker in a fiduciary
status are not at an end when a transaction is completed; they include a
continuing duty to keep abreast of financial information that may affect the
customer's portfolio and to act on the basis of that information.” Paine, Webber, Jackson & Curtis, Inc. v.
Adams, 718 P.2d 508, 515-6 (Colo., 1986).
[56] “The broker or advisor implicitly represents to the
client that he or she has an adequate basis for the opinions or advice being
provided.” Johnson v. John Hancock Funds,
No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App. 6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006), citing Hanly v. S.E.C., 415 F.2d 589,
596-97 (2d Cir. 1969); Univ. Hill Found.
v. Goldman, 422 F. Supp. 879, 893 (S.D.N.Y. 1976).
[57] While the duty of due diligence is a high one, it is
not without boundaries. For example,
“ERISA imposes the highest standard of conduct known to law on fiduciaries of
employee pension plans. Reich v. Valley
National Bank of Arizona, 837 F.Supp. 1259, 1273 (S.D.N.Y.1993), quoting Donovan v. Bierwirth, 680 F.2d
263 (2nd Cir.1982); Kuper v. Iovenko, 66 F.3d 1447, 1453 (6th Cir.1988). However, this is not equivalent to a standard
of absolute liability, as ERISA fiduciaries are only required to exercise
prudence, not prescience or omniscience. Frahm
v. Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States, 137 F.3d 955, 960
(7th Cir.1998); DeBruyne v. Equitable
Life Assurance Society of the United States, 920 F.2d 457, 465 (7th
Cir.1990).” Keach v. U.S. Trust Co. N.A., 313 F.Supp.2d 818, 863 (C.D. Ill.,
2004).
Another case “addressed, in the context of determining
liability under federal securities laws, whether an investment advisor has a duty
to investigate the accuracy of statements made in an offering memorandum not
prepared by itself and which its client relies upon in making an investment.
The court declined to impose such a duty "when there is nothing that is
obviously suspicious about those statements.”
Fraternity Fund v. Beacon Hill
Asset, 376 F.Supp.2d 385, 413 (S.D.N.Y., 2005), citing Gabriel Capital, L.P. v. Natwest Finance, Incorporated, 137
F.Supp.2d 251, 262 (S.D.N.Y.2000).
("An investment advisor is retained to suggest appropriate
investments for its clients, but is not required to assume the role of
accountant or private investigator and conduct a thorough investigation of the
accuracy of the facts contained in the documents that it analyzes for the
purpose of recommending an investment.”).
Id. at 263. Of course, if a representation is made that
the accuracy of documents will be verified, then such a duty of due diligence,
voluntarily assumed by the investment adviser, will likely exist. See
Fraternity Fund at p.415 (“Here, however,
Asset Alliance allegedly represented to Sanpaolo that it ‘ensure[d] that the
portfolios’ marks are consistent with market values.’ By making this
representation, Asset Alliance took on a duty to review and check Beacon Hill's
prices.”).
[58] “[T]he broker handling a discretionary account becomes
the fiduciary of his customer in a broad sense. Such a broker, while not
needing prior authorization for each transaction, must … manage the account in
a manner directly comporting with the needs and objectives of the customer as
stated in the authorization papers or as apparent from the customer's
investment and trading history.” Leib v. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith, 461 F.Supp. 951,3 (E.D. Mich., 1978).
[59] In contrast to the “best interests” standard traditionally
imposed upon investment advisers and financial planners under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 and state common law, ERISA (at least prior to amendments
made by the Pension Protection Act of 2006) imposed a “sole interests”
standard. See Keach v. U.S. Trust Co.
N.A., 313 F.Supp.2d 818 (C.D. Ill., 2004) (“Under the section 404(a) duty
of loyalty, ERISA fiduciaries must act ‘solely in the interest of plan
participants and beneficiaries’ … for the ‘exclusive purpose’ of providing
benefits to them.”). Id. at 863.
[60] “An essential feature and consequence of a fiduciary
relationship is that the fiduciary becomes bound to act in the interests of her
beneficiary and not of herself.” In re Prudential Ins. Co. of America Sales
Prac., 975 F.Supp. 584, 616 (D.N.J., 1996).
[61] “[We] think the better reading of section 206 is that
it prohibits failures to disclose material information, not just affirmative
frauds. This reading is consistent with the fiduciary status of investment
advisers in relation to their clients ... and it is also more likely to fulfill
Congress's general policy of promoting ‘full disclosure’ in the securities
industry.” S.E.C. v. Washington Inv. Network, 475 F.3d 392 (D.C. Cir., 2007), citing SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau,
Inc., 375 U.S. 180 at 191-2, and at 186, 84 S.Ct. 275, 11 L.Ed.2d 237
(1963).
[62] “Courts have imposed on a fiduciary an affirmative
duty of `utmost good faith and full and fair disclosure of all material facts,'
as well as an affirmative obligation `to employ reasonable care to avoid
misleading' his customers.” SEC v.
Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 194, 84 S.Ct. 275, 11
L.Ed.2d 237 (1963).
[63] “When a stock broker or financial advisor is providing
financial or investment advice, he or she … is required to disclose facts that
are material to the client's decision-making.”
Johnson v. John Hancock Funds,
No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App. 6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006).
[64] As the Commission said here, ‘when a firm has a
fiduciary relationship with a customer, it may not execute principal trades
with that customer absent full disclosure of its principal capacity, as well as
all other information that bears on the desirability of the transaction from
the customer's perspective.’… Other authorities are in agreement. For example,
the general rule is that an agent charged by his principal with buying or
selling an asset may not effect the transaction on his own account without full
disclosure which ‘must include not only the fact that the agent is acting on
his own account, but also all other facts which he should realize have or are
likely to have a bearing upon the desirability of the transaction, from the
viewpoint of the principal.’” Geman v.
S.E.C., 334 F.3d 1183, 1189 (10th Cir., 2003), quoting Arst v. Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., 86 F.3d 973, 979 (10th
Cir.1996) (applying Kansas law) (quoting Restatement
(Second) of Agency § 390 cmt. a (1958)).
[65] Disclosure of just the “disclosed fees” and costs of a
pooled investment vehicle is inadequate, in the view of this author, given the
substantial impact of transaction costs and opportunity costs within many
mutual funds and other pooled investment vehicles, and the non-inclusion of
these costs in a fund’s stated “annual expense ratio.” See
Ron A. Rhoades, JD, CFP®, Estimating the Total Costs of Stock Mutual Funds
(April 22, 2009), available at http://www.josephcapital.com/Resources.html. “[W]e decline
to find that providing a client with a prospectus is a complete defense, as a
matter of law, to state claims that the stock broker or investment advisor
misrepresented facts or failed to disclose facts material to his or her
client's investment decisions.” Johnson
v. John Hancock Funds, No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App. 6/30/2006)
(Tenn. App., 2006).
[66] “[T]he Committee Reports indicate a desire to ...
eliminate conflicts of interest between the investment adviser and the clients
as safeguards both to 'unsophisticated investors' and to 'bona fide investment
counsel.' The [IAA] thus reflects a ... congressional intent to eliminate, or
at least to expose, all conflicts of interest which might incline an investment
adviser — consciously or unconsciously — to render advice which was not
disinterested.” SEC v. Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 191-2
(1963). “The IAA arose from a consensus
between industry and the SEC that ‘investment advisers could not 'completely
perform their basic function — furnishing to clients on a personal basis competent,
unbiased, and continuous advice regarding the sound management of their
investments — unless all conflicts of interest between the investment counsel
and the client were removed.'” Financial
Planning Association v. Securities and
Exchange Commission, No. 04-1242 (D.C. Cir. 3/30/2007) (D.C. Cir., 2007) citing SEC vs. Capital Gains at 187.
[67] “The overall statutory scheme of the IAA addresses the
problems identified to Congress in two principal ways: First, by establishing a
federal fiduciary standard to govern the conduct of investment advisers,
broadly defined, see Transamerica
Mortgage Advisors v. Lewis, 444 U.S. 11, 17 (1979), and second, by
requiring full disclosure of all conflicts of interest.” Financial
Planning Association v. Securities and Exchange Commission, No. 04-1242 at
p.17 (D.C. Cir. 3/30/2007) (D.C. Cir., 2007).
The existence of “federal fiduciary standard” under the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 does not mean that deference is not provided to the scope
of fiduciary duties as they exist under state common law. See U.S. v. Brennan, 938
F.Supp. 1111 (E.D.N.Y., 1996) (“Other spheres in which the existence and scope
of a fiduciary duty are matters of federal concern are ERISA and § 523(a)(4) of
the Bankruptcy code. The analysis under each of these statutes continues to be
informed by state and common law. See,
e.g., Varity v. Howe, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 116 S.Ct. 1065, 1070, 134 L.Ed.2d
130 (1996); F.D.I.C. v. Wright, 87
B.R. 1011 (D.S.D. 1988) (bankruptcy).”) Id.
at 1119.
[68] The fiduciary duty to avoid conflicts of interest, and
the necessity to obtain the informed consent of the client as to conflicts of
interest not avoided, were well known in the early history of the Advisers
Act. In an address entitled “The SEC and
the Broker-Dealer” by Louis Loss, Chief Counsel, Trading and Exchange Division,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on March 16, 1948, before the Stock
Brokers’ Associates of Chicago, the fiduciary duties arising under the Advisers
Act, as applied in the Arleen Hughes
release, were elaborated upon:
The
doctrine of that case, in a nutshell, is that a firm which is acting as agent
or fiduciary for a customer, rather than as a principal in an ordinary dealer
transaction, is under a much stricter obligation than merely to refrain from
taking excessive mark-ups over the current market. Its duty as an agent or
fiduciary selling its own property to its principal is to make a scrupulously full disclosure of every element of its adverse
interest in, the transaction.
In
other words, when one is engaged as agent to act on behalf of another, the law
requires him to do just that. He must not
bring his own interests into conflict with his client's. If he does, he must explain in detail what
his own self-interest in the transaction is in order to give his client an
opportunity to make up his own mind whether to employ an agent who is riding
two horses. This requirement has nothing to do with good or bad motive. In
this kind of situation the law does not require proof of actual abuse. The law guards
against the potentiality of abuse which is inherent in a situation presenting
conflicts between self-interest and loyalty to principal or client. As the
Supreme Court said a hundred years ago, the law ‘acts not on the possibility,
that, in some cases the sense of duty may prevail over the motive of
self-interest, but it provides against the probability in many cases, and the
danger in all cases, that the dictates of self-interest will exercise a
predominant influence, and supersede that of duty.’ Or, as an eloquent Tennessee jurist put it
before the Civil War, the doctrine ‘has its foundation, not so much in the
commission of actual fraud, but in that profound knowledge of the human heart
which dictated that hallowed petition, 'Lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil,’ and that caused the announcement of the infallible
truth, that 'a man cannot serve two masters.'’
This time-honored dogma applies equally to any person
who is in a fiduciary relation toward another, whether he be a trustee, an executor or administrator of an estate, a
lawyer acting on behalf of a client, an employee acting on behalf of an
employer, an officer or director acting on behalf of a corporation, an investment adviser or any sort of
business adviser for that matter, or a broker. The law has always looked with
such suspicion upon a fiduciary's dealing for his own account with his client
or beneficiary that it permits the client or beneficiary at any time to set
aside the transaction without proving any actual abuse or damage. What the
recent Hughes case does is to say that such conduct, in addition ‘to laying the
basis for a private lawsuit, amounts to a violation of the fraud provisions
under the securities laws: This proposition, as a matter of fact, is found in a
number of earlier Commission opinions. The
significance of the recent Hughes opinion in this respect is that it elaborates
the doctrine and spells, out in detail exactly what disclosure is required when
a dealer who has put himself in a fiduciary position chooses to sell his own
securities to a client or buys the client's securities in his own name …
The nature and extent of disclosure with respect to
capacity will vary with the particular client involved. In some cases use of
the term ‘principal’ itself may suffice. In others, a more detailed explanation
will be required. In all cases, however, the burden is on the firm which acts
as fiduciary to make certain that the client understands that the firm is
selling its own securities …
[Emphasis added.]
[69] See, generally,
Pan Am Corp. v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,
175 B.R. 438 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y., 1994) (“The [fiduciary] relationship requires
that [the fiduciary must not] exert influence or pressure upon the other or
take selfish advantage of the trust in such a way as to benefit himself or
prejudice the [client]. A breach of
fiduciary duty has occurred when influence has been acquired and abused and
when confidence has been reposed and retained.”)
[70] “When a stock broker or financial advisor is providing
financial or investment advice, he or she is required to exercise the utmost
good faith, loyalty, and honesty toward the client.” Johnson v. John Hancock Funds, No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn.
App. 6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006).
[71] “The content of common-law fraud has not remained
static as the courts below seem to have assumed. It has varied, for example,
with the nature of the relief sought, the relationship between the parties, and
the merchandise in issue.” SEC vs.
Capital Gains Research Bureau, 375 U.S. 180, ___ (1963).
[72] See July 14,
2009 letter to Chairman Barney Frank and Ranking Member Spencer Baucus, House
Committee on Financial Services, from the CFP Board of Standards, Inc.,
Consumer Federation of America, Financial Planning Association, Fund Democracy,
Investment Adviser Association, North American Securities Administrators
Association, and National Association of Personal Financial Advisors, available
at http://www.consumerfed.org/pdfs/group_fiduciary_duty_letter_july_2009.pdf.
[73] See Stonemets v.
Head, 248 Mo. 243, 154 SW 108 (1913), in which Judge Lamb or the Missouri
Supreme Court stated:
Fraud
is kaleidoscopic, infinite. Fraud being
infinite and taking on protean form at will, were courts to cramp themselves by
defining it with a hard and fast definition, their jurisdiction would be
cunningly circumvented at once by new schemes beyond the definition. Messieurs, the fraud-feasors, would like
nothing half so well as for courts to say they would go thus far, and no
further in its pursuit.
See also
Justice Douglas in Pepper v. Litton,
308 U.S. 295, 311 (1939), wherein he stated:
He who
is in such a fiduciary position cannot serve
himself first and his cestuis second … He cannot use his power for his
personal advantage and to the detriment of [the cestuis], no matter how
absolute in terms that power may be and no matter how meticulous he is to
satisfy technical requirements. For that
power is at all times subject to the equitable limitation that it may not be
exercised for the aggrandizement, preference, or advantage of the fiduciary to
the exclusion or detriment of the cestuis , Where there is a violation of those
principles, equity will undo the wrong or intervene to prevent its consummation
… Otherwise, the fiduciary duties … would go for naught: exploitation would
become a substitute for justice; and equity would be perverted as an instrument
for approving what it was designed to thwart.
[74] Because fraud is by its very nature boundless, the one
fiduciary standard of conduct applicable to investment advisers should not be
subjected to attempts to “define” them legislatively, by means of any
particular definition. See speech
entitled “Diversiform Dishonesty” by Edward H. Cashion, Counsel to the
Corporation Finance Division, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, on
November 17, 1945 to the National Association of Securities Commissioners,
where in reference to Section 36 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, Mr.
Cashion stated:
Like fraud, abuse of
trust is not a fact but a conclusion to be drawn from facts. The
terms ‘gross abuse of trust’ or ‘gross misconduct’ should not be limited by any
hard and fast definition. Both
constitute fraud in it general sense” … the interpretation of gross misconduct
and gross abuse of trust as used in Section 36 will depend not only upon
relevant common law principles but also upon the declaration of policy as set
forth in the Act … I believe that any substantial deviation from that codification
of the fiduciary obligations imposed upon directors and officers of investment
companies, ipso facto, constitutes gross misconduct and gross abuse of
trust. [Emphasis added.]
[75] “[T]he duty of full disclosure was imposed as a matter
of general common law long before the passage of the Securities Exchange
Act.” In the Matter of Arleen W. Hughes, SEC Release No. 4048 (February
18, 1948).
[76] The distinction between arms-length relationships and
fiduciary relationships is illustrated in a chart found in the Professors’
letter (see exhibit).
[77] Frankel, Tamar, Fiduciary Law, 71 Calif. L. Rev. 795
(1983).
[78] Frankel, Tamar, “Fiduciary Duties of
Brokers-Advisers-Financial Planners and Money Managers” (August 10, 2009).
Boston Univ. School of Law Working Paper No. 09-36. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1446750.
[79] Frankel, Tamar, “Fiduciary Duties of
Brokers-Advisers-Financial Planners and Money Managers” (August 10, 2009).
Boston Univ. School of Law Working Paper No. 09-36. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1446750.
[80] Id.
[81] 208 N.J.Super. 264, 505 A.2d 220 (N.J.Super.L., 1984).
[82] Peck v.
Meda-Care Ambulance Corp., 457 N.W.2d 538, 542 (Wis.Ct.App.1990). In an earlier Montana Supreme Court decision
the consumer argued that a publication of the American Institute of Architects
(AIA), “The Architects' Handbook of Professional Practice” (AIA Handbook)
should have been admitted into evidence as controlling authority to establish
the architects' standard of care. The
trial court allowed the AIA Handbook book into evidence. On appeal, the Montana
Supreme Court acknowledged that, “The [AIA] handbook describes the standard of
practice for architects in the United States.”
The consumer desired a ruling a ruling that any deviation from the
standards set forth in that AIA Handbook should be deemed outright negligence,
without any further proof (a legal theory known as “negligence per se”), as
occurs with deviations from statutory requirements. The Montana Supreme Court
would not go that far, however, and instead ruled that: “While violation of a
statute may be classed as negligence per se, violation of other regulations is
not generally classed as negligence per se. More precisely on point, absent
specific statutory incorporation, the provisions of a national code are only
evidence of negligence, not conclusive proof thereof.” Taylor, Thon, Thompson & Peterson v. Cannaday, 230 Mont. 151,
749 P.2d 63, 65 (Mont. 1988). See also Elledge v. Richland/Lexington
School Dist., 534 S.E.2d 289 (S.C. Ct. App., 2000), stating: “Evidence of
industry standards, customs, and practices is ‘often highly probative when
defining a standard of care.’ 57A Am.
Jur. 2d Negligence 185 (1999) ... (‘[E]vidence of custom within a
particular industry, group, or organization is admissible as bearing on the
standard of care in determining negligence.’ (quoting Muncie Aviation Corp. v. Party Doll Fleet, Inc., 519 F.2d
1178, 1180 (5th Cir. 1975))); Brown v.
Clark Equip. Co., 618 P.2d 267, 276 (Haw. 1980) (finding safety data, codes
or standards promulgated by voluntary industry organizations ‘admissible as
evidence on the issue of negligence’ and ‘as an alternative to or utilized to
buttress expert testimony’).”
[83] (For a listing of the standards for admission of
expert testimony used in each state, see
[84] Tennessee law now appears to incorporate at least
seven "non-exclusive" factors for determining the admissibility of an
expert's testimony: (1) whether scientific evidence has been tested and the
methodology with which it has been tested; (2) whether the evidence has been
subjected to peer review or publication; (3) whether a potential rate of error
is known; (4) whether, as formerly required by Frye, the evidence is generally
accepted in the scientific community; (5) whether the expert's research in the
field has been conducted independent of litigation; (6) the expert's
qualifications for testifying on the subject at issue (this factor is
particularly important when the expert's personal experience is an essential
part of his or her methodology or analysis); and (7) the connection between the
expert's knowledge and the basis for the expert's opinion. This factor enables
the courts to make sure that no analytical gap exists between the expert's
knowledge and the basis for his or her opinion.
See Johnson v. John Hancock Funds, No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App.
6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006).
[85] See Rhoades,
“Estimating the Total Fees and Costs of Stock Mutual Funds and ETFs” (April 22,
2009), available at http://fpcompliance.com/EstimatingTotalFeesCostsofStockMutualFunds042009.pdf.
[86] See Chapter
2 for a general discussion of arms-length (contractual) relationships and the
duty of good faith implied in every contract; see also Teachers Ins. &
Annuity Ass'n of America v. Butler, 626 F.Supp. 1229, 1231-2 (S.D.N.Y.,
1986) (“a duty of fair dealing and good faith is implied in every
contract. As this Court has said: ‘Where
the parties are under a duty to perform that is definite and certain the courts
will enforce a duty of good faith, including good faith negotiation, in order
that a party not escape from the obligation he has contracted to perform.’); see also Original Great American Chocolate Chip Cookie Co., Inc. v. River Valley
Cookies, Ltd., 970 F.2d 273 (C.A.7 (Ill.), 1992), in which Judge Posner
stated: ‘There is no blanket duty of good faith; nor is reasonableness the test
of good faith. Contract law does not
require parties to behave altruistically toward each other; it does not proceed
on the philosophy that I am my brother's keeper. That philosophy may animate
the law of fiduciary obligations but parties to a contract are not each other's
fiduciaries … Contract law imposes a duty, not to ‘be reasonable,’ but to avoid
taking advantage of gaps in a contract in order to exploit the vulnerabilities
that arise when contractual performance is sequential rather than simultaneous
… Suppose A hires B to paint his portrait to his satisfaction, and B paints it
and A in fact is satisfied but says he is not in the hope of chivvying down the
agreed-upon price because the portrait may be unsaleable to anyone else. This …
would be bad faith, not because any provision of the contract was unreasonable
and had to be reformed but because a provision had been invoked dishonestly to
achieve a purpose contrary to that for which the contract had been made. The
same would be true here, we may assume, if the Sigels had through their efforts
built the Aurora cookie store into an immensely successful franchise and the
Cookie Company had tried to appropriate the value they had created by canceling
the franchise on a pretext: three (or four, or five, or for that matter a
dozen) utterly trivial violations of the contract that the company would have
overlooked but for its desire to take advantage of the Sigels' vulnerable
position.’ Id. at 280 (citations omitted).”)
[87] Pargendler, Mariana, “Modes of Gap Filling: Good Faith
and Fiduciary Duties Reconsidered,” Tulane Law Review, Vol. 82, 2008, at p.2,
available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1008400.
[88] Id, in which
Professor Pargendler states: “good faith serves as a doctrinal rubric for a
‘tailored’ gap-filling provision. The most universal formulation of the
doctrine of good faith states that a party cannot act to prevent the other from
obtaining the fruits of the contract. The lack of a more precise definition for
the duty of good faith provides the ideal framework for courts to fill the gaps
with a case-specific hypothetical bargain method. Some restrictions imposed on
the doctrine of good faith, such as the notion that the doctrine does not
create an independent duty divorced from the specific clauses of the contract,
reinforce the claim that good faith operates to provide the most appropriate
gap-filling provisions taking into account the precise characteristics of the
deal in question.” Yet, the good faith doctrine requires in every contract
‘honesty in fact.’” Id. at pp 4-5. As
further stated by Professor Pargendler: “A second and related prong of the
doctrine of contractual good faith prohibits bad faith or malicious
advantage-taking in contract performance (i.e., it requires, in the wording of
the UCC, that the parties behave with “honesty in fact”, also known as the rule
of “pure heart and empty head”). The requirement of honesty in fact can be
understood as a corollary of the gap-filling character of good faith; however,
its more universal application is due to the plausible assumption that no one
would agree to being taken advantage of maliciously. Unlike other contractual duties derived from
good faith, which vary according to the express terms and characteristics of
the deal in question, the requirement of honesty in fact applies to every
contract as a floor to the parties’ bargained for duties.” Id at p.19.
[89] Id. at p.28.
[90] See In re
Enivid. Inc., 345 B.R. 426 (Bankr.Mass., 2006) (“Several Delaware cases
have examined whether good faith is an independent fiduciary duty or a
component of the traditional fiduciary duties of care and loyalty under
Delaware law. See Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345, 361
(De1.1993) … (referring to the duty of good faith as a separate duty within the
triad of duties of good faith, loyalty and due care); but see In re Gaylord Container Corp. S'holder, Litig., 753 A.2d
462, 475-76, n. 41 (Del.Ch.2000) (referring to good faith as a subsidiary
requirement of the duty of loyalty).”)
[91] BLACK’S LAW
DICTIONARY 1520 (6th ed. 1990).
[92] See In re Cannon, 230 B.R. 546 (Bankr. W.D.
Tenn., 1999), addressing good faith in the context of transfers by a debtor to
a creditor and 11 U.S.C. §548(c); (“Good faith is to be measured objectively,
rather than subjectively … Courts have found mere failure to inquire in the
face of unusual circumstances to be sufficient. In M & L Business Machine, 84 F.3d 1330 (10th Circuit,
1996), the Tenth Circuit upheld the bankruptcy court's findings that payments
to a Ponzi scheme investor were not made in good faith. The court of appeals
concluded that a reasonably prudent investor in the defendant's position should
have known of the debtor's fraudulent intent and impending insolvency based on
the extraordinary rate of returns promised, the use of postdated checks, and
implausible explanations as to how the debtor could pay such high rates. In
addressing the standard of good faith, the court noted that the Bankruptcy Code
does not define the term ‘good faith’ and, citing Collier, that ‘[t]he unpredictable circumstances in which the
courts may find its presence or absence render any definition of `good faith'
inadequate, if not unwise.’ 84 F.3d at 1335.
The Tenth Circuit further stated: ‘Nevertheless, contrary to Mr. McKay's
contention `good faith' has frequently been construed to include an objective
component.’ After noting that `[g]ood
faith is an intangible and abstract quantity with no technical meaning,' Black's Law Dictionary states that the
term includes not only `honest belief,
and absence of malice and the absence of design to defraud or to seek an
unconscionable advantage' but also `freedom from knowledge of circumstances
which ought to put the holder on inquiry.' Black's Law Dictionary at 693
(6th ed.1990) (emphasis supplied).
Prominent bankruptcy scholars agree: `[t]he presence of any circumstances
placing the transferee on inquiry as to the financial condition of the
transferor may be a contributing factor in depriving the former of any claimed
good faith unless investigation actually disclosed no reason to suspect financial
embarrassment.' 4 Collier on Bankruptcy,
supra, § 548.07 at 548-73. M &
L Business Machine, 84 F.3d at 1335-36.”) In
re Cannon at 592-3.
[93] Melvin A.
Eisenberg, “The Duty of Good Faith in Corporate Law,” 31 DEL. J. CORP. L. 1, 23
(2006) (“Good faith in law ... is not to be measured always by a man’s own
standard of right, but by that which the law has adopted and prescribed as a
standard for the observance of all men in their dealings with each other.
Indeed, in law generally, the objective elements of good faith dominate the
subjective element.”). As Professor Deborah De Mott puts it, in discussing the
fiduciary duties of corporate directors: “Wholly apart from these practical
issues of proof, a standard for good faith that looks solely to directors'
motives ignores the function to be served by the standard. As applied to
directors' decisions, a standard of good faith tests directors’ fidelity to the
interests they may appropriately consider or serve. Subjective motivation and
sincere belief are, at best, imprecise surrogates to measure fidelity.
Directors, like other people, are capable of deceiving themselves about the
point and effect of their actions. Sincere self-deception is not responsive to
the obligation to which directors, as fiduciaries, are subject. Fiduciary norms
are stringent: they prohibit the fiduciary from creating interests in conflict
with interests of the beneficiary protected by the relationship, and they deny
a fiduciary the profit derived from a breach of duty even when the breach
caused no demonstrable injury to the beneficiary. One explanation for this stringency is the
persistent capacity of decisionmakers for sincere self-deception when self
interest is at stake.” Deborah DeMott,
“Puzzles and Parables: Defining Good Faith in the MBO Context,” 25 WAKE FOREST
L. REV. 15, 22-23 (1990).
[94] Mark Lowenstein, “The Diverging Meaning of Good
Faith,” Colorado Law School Legal Studies Research Paper Series No. 08-28
(2008), p.8, available at SSRN: at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1285135.
[95] “[T]he Delaware Supreme Court announced in Stone v. Ritter that good faith was not
an independent fiduciary duty and that the failure to act in good faith “is not
conduct that results, ipso facto, in the direct imposition of fiduciary
liability.” Rather, the Stone Court
characterized the duty to act in good faith as a “subsidiary element, i.e., a
condition, of the fundamental duty of loyalty” despite previously having
referred to good faith as one of the “triad” duties of care, loyalty and good
faith.” Lowenstein, supra n.___, at pp.8-9, citing
Stone ex. rel. AmSouth Bancorporation v. Ritter, 911 A.2d 362, 369 (Del.
2006).
[96] Most courts have adopted the definition of
recklessness first set forth by the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in the
case of Sundstrand Corporation v. Sun
Chemical Corporation, 553 F.2d 1033, 1045 (7th Cir. 1977): “Reckless
conduct may be defined as … highly unreasonable [conduct], involving not merely
simple, or even inexcusable negligence, but an extreme departure from the
standards of ordinary care … which presents a danger of misleading buyers or
sellers that is either known to the defendant or is so obvious that the actor
must have been aware of it.” The
distinction between negligent and reckless conduct is an important one, as
reckless conduct can support an application of the harsher remedies available
when scienter must be demonstrated. See also In re Enivid. Inc., 345 B.R.
426 (Bankr.Mass., 2006) [holding that a separate claim existed for breach of
the duty of good faith by directors and officers in approaching the operation
of the corporation with a level of indifference or egregiousness that amounted
to bad faith., and stating: “Several Delaware cases have examined whether good
faith is an independent fiduciary duty or a component of the traditional
fiduciary duties of care and loyalty under Delaware law. See Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., 634 A.2d 345, 361
(De1.1993) … (referring to the duty of good faith as a separate duty within the
triad of duties of good faith, loyalty and due care); but see In re Gaylord Container Corp. S'holder, Litig., 753 A.2d
462, 475-76, n. 41 (Del.Ch.2000) (referring to good faith as a subsidiary
requirement of the duty of loyalty).”]
[i] The fiduciary
standard of conduct is consistently described by the courts as the “highest
standard of duty imposed by law.” See,
generally Black's Law Dictionary
523 (7th ed. 1999) ("A duty of utmost good faith, trust, confidence, and
candor owed by a fiduciary (such as a lawyer or corporate officer) to the
beneficiary (such as a lawyer's client or a shareholder); a duty to act with
the highest degree of honesty and loyalty toward another person and in the best
interests of the other person (such as the duty that one partner owes to
another."); also see F.D.I.C. v. Stahl, 854 F.Supp. 1565,
1571 (S.D. Fla., 1994) (“Fiduciary duty, the highest standard of duty implied
by law, is the duty to act for someone else's benefit, while subordinating
one's personal interest to that of the other person); and see Perez v. Pappas,
98 Wash.2d 835, 659 P.2d 475, 479 (1983) (“Under Washington law, it is well
established that ‘the attorney-client relationship is a fiduciary one as a
matter of law and thus the attorney owes the highest duty to the client.’”), cited by Bertelsen v. Harris, 537 F.3d 1047 (9th Cir., 2008).
[ii] As stated by the U.S. Supreme Court: “As we have
previously recognized, §206 [of the Advisers Act] establishes ‘federal
fiduciary standards’ to govern the conduct of investment advisers, Santa Fe Industries, Inc. v. Green, supra,
430 U.S., at 471, n. 11, 97 S.Ct., at 1300; Burks
v. Lasker, 441 U.S. 471, 481-482, n. 10, 99 S.Ct. 1831, 1839, 60 L.Ed.2d
404; SEC v. Capital Gains Research
Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 191-192, 84 S.Ct. 275, 282-283, 11 L.Ed.2d 237.
Indeed, the Act's legislative history leaves no doubt that Congress intended to
impose enforceable fiduciary obligations. See
H.R.Rep.No.2639, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., 28 (1940); S.Rep.No.1775, 76th
Cong., 3d Sess., 21 (1940); SEC, Report on Investment Trusts and Investment
Companies (Investment Counsel and Investment Advisory Services), H.R.Doc.
No.477, 76th Cong., 2d Sess., 27-30 (1939).” Transamerica Mortgage Advisors, Inc v. Lewis, 444 U.S. 11, 17-18,
100 S.Ct. 242, 62 L.Ed.2d 146 (1979).
The Advisers Act’s fiduciary
duties are based upon, and codified, state common law which applied fiduciary
duties upon relationships based on trust and confidence as a means of
preventing constructive fraud. As stated
by the U.S. Supreme Court: “Congress codified the common law ‘remedially’ as
the courts had adapted it to the prevention of fraudulent securities
transactions by fiduciaries … Congress intended the Investment Advisers Act of
1940 to be construed like other securities legislation ‘enacted for the purpose
of avoiding frauds,’ not technically and restrictively, but flexibly to
effectuate its remedial purposes.” SEC vs. Capital Gains Research Bureau,
375 U.S. 180 (1963).
The Congress has continuously
incorporated the common law of fiduciary duty into numerous federal statutes by
simply using the words “fiduciary duty”- see,
e.g., §36(b), Investment Company Act, and ERISA. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that
“where Congress uses terms that have settled meaning under common law ...
Congress means to incorporate the established meanings of these terms.” NLRB v. Amax Coal Co., 53 U.S. 322, 101
S.Ct. 2789, 69 L.Ed.2d 672 (U.S.1981) (adopting Meinhard's fiduciary standard).
The existence of a “federal
fiduciary standard” under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 does not mean
that deference is not provided to the scope of fiduciary duties as they exist
under state common law. See U.S. v.
Brennan, 938 F.Supp. 1111 (E.D.N.Y., 1996) (“Other spheres in which the
existence and scope of a fiduciary duty are matters of federal concern are
ERISA and § 523(a)(4) of the Bankruptcy code. The analysis under each of these
statutes continues to be informed by state and common law. See, e.g., Varity v. Howe, 516 U.S. 489, 116 S.Ct. 1065, 1070, 134
L.Ed.2d 130 (1996); F.D.I.C. v. Wright,
87 B.R. 1011 (D.S.D. 1988) (bankruptcy).”) Id.
at 1119.
[iii] The recognition of the existence of a fiduciary
relationship under the common law is said to consist of two main branches. The first branch of fiduciary status
consists of a list of accepted and prescribed relationships — principal and
agent, attorney and client, executor or trustee and beneficiary, director or
officer in the corporation, partners, joint venturers, guardian and ward, and
parent and child. The common law has
defined, over the years, these relationships to be fiduciary in nature, and
they are generally accepted as such.
When a personal financial advisor accepts actual discretion over a
client’s account, under this branch of fiduciary relationships fiduciary status
for the advisor will result (due to the application of agency law). Various court decisions note that common law
fiduciary duties arise from the principal-agent relationship, and that these
duties will usually be interpreted quite broadly. In essence, since the scope of the agency
includes the exercise of discretionary authority to undertake sales and
purchases in the account, the agent (registered representative) owes a
fiduciary duty to the principal (the customer) in the actions undertaken which
exercise that discretion.
The second branch of fiduciary status
arises from those relationships which, on their particular facts, are
appropriately categorized as fiduciary in nature. Under this test, a variety of circumstances
may indicate that a fiduciary relationship exists, as opposed to an arms-length
relationship. Such circumstances, or indicia or evidential factors, include
influence, placement of trust, vulnerability or dependency, substantial
disparity in knowledge, the ability to exert influence, and placement of
confidence. Another factor may lie in
the ability of the fiduciary, by virtue of his or her position or authority, to
derive profits at the expense of his or her client. It is under this branch that most financial
advisors will find fiduciary status applied by the common law.
The development of this
second branch of fiduciary relationships accelerated during the 20th
Century and continues today, in response to the increased complexity of our
modern world. Increased amounts of
specialization are required in modern society, and this in turn leads to
greater reliance on others in order to obtain greater affluence. As stated by Professor Frankel, “Courts,
legislatures, and administrative agencies increasingly draw on fiduciary law to
answer problems caused by these social changes.” Tamar Frankel, Fiduciary Law, 71 Calif. L. Rev. 795, 796 (1983).
Many state courts, applying state common
law to relationships based upon trust and confidence, have held that the
relationship is or may constitute a fiduciary relationship between the
financial advisor and/or investment adviser and the client. Western
Reserve Life Assurance Company of Ohio vs. Graben, No. 2-05-328-CV (Tex.
App. 6/28/2007) (Tex. App., 2007) ("Obviously, when a person such as
Hutton is acting as a financial advisor, that role extends well beyond a simple
arms’-length business transaction. An unsophisticated investor is necessarily
entrusting his funds to one who is representing that he will place the funds in
a suitable investment and manage the funds appropriately for the benefit of his
investor/entrustor. The relationship goes well beyond a traditional arms’-length
business transaction that provides ‘mutual benefit’ for both
parties."). See also U.S. v. Williams, 441 F.3d 716, 724 (9th Cir. 2006); Sergeants Benevolent Assn. Annuity Fund v.
Renck, 4430 (NY 6/2/2005) (NY, 2005); Hatleberg
v. Norwest Bank Wisconsin, 2005 WI 109, 700 N.W.2d 15 (WI, 2005); Fraternity Fund v. Beacon Hill Asset,
376 F.Supp.2d 385, 414 (S.D.N.Y., 2005) (the customer “relied upon superior
knowledge. Asset Alliance allegedly was plaintiff's investment advisor and
committed to ‘monitor the status and performance of [Beacon Hill and Bristol]
at least once a month and [to] promptly inform Sanpaolo if, for any reason, it
believes that [Beacon Hill or Bristol] should be de-selected.’ These allegations are sufficient to plead a
fiduciary relationship.”); Mathias v.
Rosser, 2002 OH 2531 (OHCA, 2002) (“[T]he evidence established that Rosser
was a licensed stockbroker and held himself out as a financial advisor, and
that plaintiff was an unsophisticated investor who sought investment advice
from Rosser precisely because of his alleged expertise as a broker and
investment advisor. Further, Rosser testified that plaintiff had relied upon
his experience, knowledge, and expertise in seeking his advice. Therefore, we
conclude that plaintiff presented sufficient evidence to establish that she and
Rosser were in a fiduciary relationship.”); Cunningham
vs. PLI Life Insurance Company, 42 F.Supp.2d 872 (1990); MidAmerica Federal Savings and Loan Ass’n v. Shearson / American Express Inc.,
886 F.2d 1249 (10th Cir. 1989) (The court found a fiduciary relationship under
Oklahoma law between a broker and his client in circumstances where the broker
held himself out as having superior knowledge and expertise and the client
reasonably placed his confidence in the broker.); Koehler v. Pulvers, 614 F. Supp. 829 (USDC, Cal, 1985).
Neither federal nor state
securities laws generally preempt common law claims based upon breach of
fiduciary duty. This is because the
securities statutes were modeled after the common law actions of fraud and
deceit. Ernst & Ernst v. Hochfelder,
425 U.S. 185, 193-215, 96 S.Ct. 1375, 1381-1391, 47 L.Ed.2d 668 (1976) (review
of legislative history); see also
Securities Regulation, 69 Am.Jur.2d Sec. 1 et
seq.
It is noted that all agents,
including brokers and investment advisers, are, by definition, fiduciaries under common law, with the scope
of those fiduciary duties (care, loyalty, good faith and disclosure) dependent
on the powers and responsibilities assumed.
[iv] The text of Section 103 of the
proposed Investor Protection Act of 2009, as set forth in the “Discussion
Draft” as released by Subcommittee Chair Kanjorski on October 1, 2009
(available at
http://www.house.gov/apps/list/press/financialsvcs_dem/investor_protection_act_draft.pdf), provides:
SEC. 103. ESTABLISHMENT OF A FIDUCIARY DUTY FOR
BROKERS, DEALERS, AND INVESTMENT ADVISERS, AND HARMONIZATION OF REGULATION.
(a) IN GENERAL.—
(1) SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934.—Section
15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78) is amended—
(A) by redesignating the second subsection (i) as
subsection (j); and
(B) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
(k) STANDARDS
OF CONDUCT.—
(1) IN GENERAL.—Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Act or the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, the Commission shall
promulgate rules to provide that, with respect to a broker or dealer that is
providing investment advice to a retail customer (and such other customers as
the Commission may by rule provide), the standard of conduct for such broker or
dealer with respect to such customer shall be the same as the standard of
conduct applicable to an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940. The receipt of compensation based on commission shall not, in and of
itself, be considered a violation of such standard applied to a broker or dealer.
(2) RETAIL CUSTOMER DEFINED.—For purposes of this
subsection, the term ‘retail customer’ means an individual, or the legal
representative of such individual, who—
(A) receives personalized investment advice from a
broker or dealer; and
(B) uses such advice primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(l) OTHER
MATTERS.—The Commission shall—
(1) facilitate the provision of simple and clear
disclosures to investors regarding the terms of their relationships with
brokers, dealers, and investment advisers; and
(2) examine and, where appropriate, promulgate rules
prohibiting sales practices, conflicts
of interest, and compensation schemes for financial intermediaries (including
brokers, dealers, and investment advisers) that it deems contrary to the public
interest and the interests of investors.’’
(2)
INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT OF 1940.—Section 211 of the Investment Advisers Act of
1940, as amended by section 102(d), is further amended by adding at the end the
following new subsection:
(f)
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT.—
(1) IN GENERAL.—Notwithstanding any other provision of
this Act or the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Commission shall
promulgate rules to provide that the standards of conduct for all brokers,
dealers, and investment advisers, in providing investment advice to retail
customers (and such other customers as the Commission may by rule provide),
shall be to act in the best interest of the customer without regard to the
financial or other interest of the broker, dealer, or investment adviser
providing the advice.
(2) RETAIL CUSTOMER DEFINED.—For purposes of this
subsection, the term ‘retail customer’ means an individual, or the legal
representative of such individual, who—
(A) receives personalized investment advice from a
broker, dealer, or investment adviser; and
(B) uses such advice primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(g) OTHER
MATTERS.—The Commission shall—
(1) facilitate the provision of simple and clear
disclosures to investors regarding the terms of their 3 relationships with
brokers, dealers, and investment advisers; and
(2) examine and, where appropriate, promulgate rules
prohibiting sales practices, conflicts of interest, and compensation schemes
for financial intermediaries (including brokers, dealers, and investment
advisers) that it deems contrary to the public interest and the interests of
investors.
(b) HARMONIZATION OF ENFORCEMENT AND REMEDY
REGULATIONS.—Section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended by
subsection (a), is further amended by adding at the end the following new
subsection:
(m) HARMONIZATION OF ENFORCEMENT AND REMEDY
REGULATIONS.—The Commission shall issue regulations to ensure, to the extent
practicable, that the enforcement options and remedies available for violations
of the standard of conduct applicable to a broker or dealer providing
investment advice to a retail customer are commensurate with those enforcement
options and remedies available for violations of the standard of conduct
applicable to investment advisers under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
[v] SIFMA desires Congress to exclude all non-retail
clients from the application of the Advisers Act, which would represent a
significant narrowing of the current application of the Advisers Act. Mr. Taft, representing SIFMA, stated: “The federal
fiduciary standard that SIFMA supports should apply to individual investors
only based on our view that institutional clients are better able to – and in
practice do in fact – appreciate and appropriately define the terms of their
relationships with investment advisory service providers.” U.S. House Of Representatives Committee On
Financial Services Hearing On: Capital
Markets Regulatory Reform: Strengthening Investor Protection, Enhancing
Oversight Of Private Pools Of Capital, And Creating A National Insurance Office,
October 6, 2009, written testimony of John Taft, Head Of U.S. Wealth
Management, RBC Wealth Management, Chairman, Private Client Group Steering
Committee, Securities Industry And Financial Markets Association.
[vi] Rule § 275.203A-3(a)(2)(ii) defines “Impersonal
investment advice” to mean “investment advisory services provided by means of
written material or oral statements that do not purport to meet the objectives
or needs of specific individuals or accounts.”
The term “accounts” refers to accounts of both retail and non-retail
clients.
The Investment Advisers Act
of 1940 applies to all clients of investment advisers, whether they are
“retail clients” or “institutional clients.”
The Advisers Act was intended to apply to “personalized investment
advice” and to “fiduciary, person-to-person relationships … and that are
characteristic of investment adviser-client relationships.” Lowe v. SEC, 472 U. S. 181, 210
(1985). Investment counsel was
characterized in the testimony leading up to the enactment of the Advisers Act
“as a personal service profession, and depends for its success upon a close
personal and confidential relationship between the investment counsel firm and
its client. It requires frequent and personal contact of a professional nature
between us and our clients … We must establish with each client a relationship
of trust and confidence designed to last over a period of time because economic
forces work themselves out slowly.” Id.
at 196-7. “The [Advisers] Act was
designed to apply to those persons engaged in the investment-advisory
profession -- those who provide personalized advice attuned to a client's
concerns, whether by written or verbal communication.” Id. at
207-8. It is submitted that the term
“personalized” refers not to the nature of the client, but rather to the nature
of the advice being provided.
Moreover, given the existence
of many forms of non-retail clients (i.e., hedge funds, pension funds, mutual
funds, small endowment funds, trustees of charitable and private trusts, public
entities such as villages, nonqualified retirement fund trustees, etc.) who
could easily be taken advantage as a result of the vast disparity of knowledge
between an investment adviser and client, and given the lack of the substantial
resources to engage third party experts to monitor the actions of those
providing investment advice, there appears insufficient rationale to now deny
to non-retail clients of investment advisers the protections afforded by
fiduciary law which they presently enjoy.
[vii] Despite
assertions to the contrary, the fiduciary standard of conduct is nearly
uniformly applied by the courts, whether the standard is imposed by the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or state common law. The advocates for a “new federal fiduciary standard”
unpersuasively argue that there exist “51” different fiduciary standards. They confuse the distinction between the
various bodies of law which impose fiduciary status (i.e., when
fiduciary duties are imposed) and the fiduciary principles which are applied
when fiduciary status is found (i.e., what
fiduciary duties exist). “The laws
applicable to the situations in which fiduciary power is delegated should not
be confused with the principles of fiduciary law. The same fiduciary principles apply to fiduciary power, and are
superimposed on the different bodies
of law governing the contexts in which that power appears.” Tamar Frankel, Fiduciary Law, 71 Calif. L.
Rev. 795 (1983).
At the U.S. House Of Representatives Committee On
Financial Services Hearing On: Capital
Markets Regulatory Reform: Strengthening Investor Protection, Enhancing
Oversight Of Private Pools Of Capital, And Creating A National Insurance Office,
October 6, 2009, written and oral testimony in support of a “new federal
fiduciary standard” was provided on behalf of SIFMA, the broker-dealer trade
association, by John Taft, Head Of U.S. Wealth Management, RBC Wealth
Management, Chairman, Private Client Group Steering Committee, Securities
Industry And Financial Markets Association.
In the written testimony, at page 8, in footnote 18, Mr. Taft cites
several cases which, he concludes, support the proposition that: “fiduciary law
has developed haphazardly and often inconsistently among the 50 states.
Consequently, investor protection can actually grow or diminish as an individual
investor moves from state to state.” However, all of these cases only address
when fiduciary status is
applied upon providers of financial advice.
Under the second branch of fiduciary relationships – those which are
implied by law on the basis of particular facts and circumstances evidencing a
relationship based on trust and confidence.
The cases provide no support for the proposition that the broad
fiduciary duties of due care, loyalty and utmost good faith are unevenly
applied. Again, Mr. Taft has mixed up
the context to which fiduciary duties
are applied, and fails to note that the fiduciary principles, once applied by
the courts, are very uniformly applied.
There does not exist “51” different fiduciary standards of conduct, as
Mr. Taft suggests – there is only one fiduciary standard of conduct, and it is
well-developed under the law and evenly applied by the courts of all fifty
states and the federal courts.
Moreover, the question before Congress is whether to
reverse the direction taken by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC) in recent years, in which it has permitted stockbrokers to engage in the
delivery of financial and investment advice in an amount which clearly exceeds
that permitted under the “solely incidental” language found in the
broker-dealer exemption from the Advisers Act.
A clear statement by Congress to apply fiduciary standards of conduct to
all those who provide investment and financial advice is suggested as a means
of rectifying the SEC’s interpretation of the “solely incidental” language in
such a broad manner that it challenges both the expressed intent of Congress in
its enactment of the Advisers Act as well as the validity of the phrase, “words
have meaning.” Legislation which
reverses the SEC’s course, by clearly applying fiduciary standards to all
providers of financial and investment advice, would create the very uniform
application of fiduciary standards which SIFMA complains about does not
exist. Moreover, it will avoid continued
judicial challenges to the efficacy of the SEC’s exercise of its rule-making
authority.
In conclusion, as stated by one of our current SEC
Commissioners: “There is only one fiduciary standard ….” SEC Commissioner Luis A. Aguilar, Speech,
“SEC's Oversight of the Adviser Industry Bolsters Investor Protection” (May 7,
2009).
It should be noted that this one fiduciary standard is
then given further elaboration in the United States through the
frequently-referred to triad of broad fiduciary duties – due care, loyalty, and
utmost good faith. See, e.g., Emerald Partners v. Berlin, 787 A.2d 85, 91 (Del. 2001)
(“The presumption [afforded by the business judgment rule] can be rebutted by
showing that the board violated "any one of its triad of fiduciary duties:
due care, loyalty, or good faith."); also
see Malone v. Brincat, 722 A.2d 5
(DE, 1998) (“The director's fiduciary duty to both the corporation and its
shareholders has been characterized by this Court as a triad: due care, good
faith, and loyalty. That triparte fiduciary duty does not operate
intermittently but is the constant compass by which all director actions for
the corporation and interactions with its shareholders must be guided.”) See also Von Noy v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, 2001 WA
80 (WA, 2001) (Justice Philip Talmadge, concurring opinion) (““A fiduciary
relationship is a relationship of trust, which necessarily involves
vulnerability for the party reposing trust in another. One's guard is down. One
is trusting another to take actions on one's behalf. Under such circum-stances,
to violate a trust is to violate grossly the expectations of the person
reposing the trust. Because of this, the
law creates a special status for fiduciaries, imposing duties of loyalty, care,
and full disclosure upon them. One can
call this the fiduciary principle.”)
Very recent cases applying
fiduciary law in other contexts confirm the uniformity of the application of
the fiduciary standard of conduct. See Robinson
v. Global Resources, Inc., A09A1682 (Ga. App. 9/3/2009) (Ga. App., 2009)
(“Defendants were in a confidential fiduciary relationship with 1st Affinity
(or ABI) and owed Plaintiff the highest duties of due care, loyalty, honesty,
good faith, and fair dealing.”) Dubroff v. Wren Holdings, LLC, C.A. No.
3940-VCN (Del. Ch. 5/22/2009) (Del. Ch., 2009) (“The Delaware Supreme Court has
held that [w]henever directors communicate publicly or directly with
shareholders about the corporation's affairs, with or without a request for
shareholder action, directors have a fiduciary duty to shareholders to exercise
due care, good faith and loyalty.”).
[viii] Fiduciary duties must evolve over time to meet the
ever-changing business practices of advisors and fraudulent conduct
successfully circumscribed. See Stonemets v. Head, 248 Mo. 243, 154
SW 108 (1913), in which Judge Lamb of the Missouri Supreme Court stated:
Fraud
is kaleidoscopic, infinite. Fraud being
infinite and taking on protean form at will, were courts to cramp themselves by
defining it with a hard and fast definition, their jurisdiction would be
cunningly circumvented at once by new schemes beyond the definition. Messieurs, the fraud-feasors, would like
nothing half so well as for courts to say they would go thus far, and no
further in its pursuit.
See also
Justice Douglas in Pepper v. Litton,
308 U.S. 295, 311 (1939), wherein he stated:
He who
is in such a fiduciary position cannot serve
himself first and his cestuis second … He cannot use his power for his
personal advantage and to the detriment of [the cestuis], no matter how
absolute in terms that power may be and no matter how meticulous he is to
satisfy technical requirements. For that
power is at all times subject to the equitable limitation that it may not be
exercised for the aggrandizement, preference, or advantage of the fiduciary to
the exclusion or detriment of the cestuis , Where there is a violation of those
principles, equity will undo the wrong or intervene to prevent its consummation
… Otherwise, the fiduciary duties … would go for naught: exploitation would become
a substitute for justice; and equity would be perverted as an instrument for
approving what it was designed to thwart.
[ix] The broad judicial descriptions of the fiduciary duty
of loyalty, e.g., by Justice Cardozo
in Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 N.Y. 458, 164
N.E. 545 (1928), and by the U.S. Supreme Court in Michoud v. Girod, 45 U.S. 503, 4 How. 503, 11 L.Ed. 1076 (1846),
were deliberately designed to discourage marginal conduct by making it
difficult for fiduciaries to determine the point at which self-serving conduct
will be prohibited and thus encouraging conduct well within the borders--the
common law of fiduciary duties was developed to perform a prophylactic
function; as one court more recently stated, the judicial platitudes on
fiduciary duty are “a judicial attempt to emphasize that the heart of a
fiduciary's duty is an attitude...and a fiduciary who follows it will fulfill
its obligations without the need to worry about detailed rules.” Chiles v. Robertson, 784 P.2d 1099, 308
Or. 592 (Or., 1989).
Because fraud is by its very nature boundless, the one
fiduciary standard of conduct applicable to investment advisers should not be
subjected to attempts to define or restrict it legislatively, by means of any
particular definition. See Speech,
“Diversiform Dishonesty” by Edward H. Cashion, Counsel to the Corporation
Finance Division, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, on November 17, 1945
to the National Association of Securities Commissioners, where in reference to
Section 36 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, Mr. Cashion stated:
Like
fraud, abuse of trust is not a fact but a conclusion to be drawn from
facts. The terms ‘gross abuse of trust’ or ‘gross misconduct’ should not be
limited by any hard and fast definition.
Both constitute fraud in its general sense … the interpretation of gross
misconduct and gross abuse of trust as used in Section 36 will depend not only
upon relevant common law principles but also upon the declaration of policy as
set forth in the Act … I believe that any substantial deviation from that
codification of the fiduciary obligations imposed upon directors and officers
of investment companies, ipso facto, constitutes gross misconduct and gross
abuse of trust. [Emphasis added.]
The
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 “recognizes that, with respect to a certain
class of investment advisers, a type of personalized relationship may exist
with their clients … The essential purpose of [the Advisers Act] is to protect
the public from the frauds and misrepresentations of unscrupulous tipsters and
touts and to safeguard the honest investment adviser against the stigma of the
activities of these individuals by making fraudulent practices by investment
advisers unlawful.” Lowe v. SEC, 472 U.S. 181, 200, 201 (1985). “The Act was designed to apply to those
persons engaged in the investment-advisory profession -- those who provide
personalized advice attuned to a client's concerns, whether by written or
verbal communication.” Id. at
208. “The dangers of fraud, deception,
or overreaching that motivated the enactment of the statute are present in
personalized communications ….” Id. at
210.
[x] The distinction between arms-length relationships and
fiduciary relationships is illustrated in Exhibit A.
[xi] “Courts have imposed on a fiduciary an affirmative
duty of `utmost good faith and full and fair disclosure of all material facts,’
as well as an affirmative obligation `to employ reasonable care to avoid
misleading' his customers.” SEC v.
Capital Gains Research Bureau, Inc., 375 U.S. 180, 194, 84 S.Ct. 275, 11
L.Ed.2d 237 (1963).
“When a stock broker or financial advisor is providing
financial or investment advice, he or she … is required to disclose facts that
are material to the client's decision-making.”
Johnson v. John Hancock Funds,
No. M2005-00356-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. App. 6/30/2006) (Tenn. App., 2006). A material fact is “anything which might
affect the (client’s) decision whether or how to act.” Allen
Realty Corp. v. Holbert, 318 S.E.2d 592, 227 Va. 441 (Va., 1984). As stated by Justice Cardoza: “If dual
interests are to be served, the disclosure to be effective must lay bare the
truth, without ambiguity of reservation, in all its stark significance ….” Wendt
v. Fischer, 243 N.Y. 439, 154 N.E. 303 (1926).
An example of the type of disclosure, when a conflict
of interest is present, is revealed in a recent decision arising under the
Advisers Act: “[W]hen a firm has a fiduciary relationship with a customer, it
may not execute principal trades with that customer absent full disclosure of
its principal capacity, as well as all other information that bears on the
desirability of the transaction from the customer's perspective.’… Other
authorities are in agreement. For example, the general rule is that an agent
charged by his principal with buying or selling an asset may not effect the
transaction on his own account without full disclosure which ‘must include not
only the fact that the agent is acting on his own account, but also all other
facts which he should realize have or are likely to have a bearing upon the
desirability of the transaction, from the viewpoint of the principal.’” Geman v. S.E.C., 334 F.3d 1183, 1189
(10th Cir., 2003), quoting Arst v.
Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., 86 F.3d 973, 979 (10th Cir.1996) (applying
Kansas law) (quoting Restatement (Second)
of Agency § 390 cmt. a (1958)).
“[T]he duty of full disclosure was imposed as a matter
of general common law long before the passage of the Securities Exchange
Act.” In the Matter of Arleen W. Hughes, SEC Release No. 4048 (February
18, 1948).
Disclosure must be timely provided. “[D]isclosure, if it is to be meaningful and
effective, must be timely. It must be provided before the completion of the
transaction so that the client will know all the facts at the time that he is
asked to give his consent.” In the Matter of Arleeen W. Hughes, SEC
Release No. 4048 (February 17, 1948), affirmed
174 F.2d 969 (D.C. Cir. 1949).
The duty to disclose is an affirmative one, and the
failure to disclose by an investment adviser is a violation of the Advisers
Act. The fiduciary is required to ensure
that the disclosure is received by the client; the “access equals delivery”
approach undertaken with regard to disclosures required by the SEC under the
’33 and ’34 Acts would not qualify as an appropriate disclosure by a fiduciary
financial advisor to her or his client.
As stated in an early case applying the Advisers Act:
It is
not enough that one who acts as an admitted fiduciary proclaim that he or she
stands ever ready to divulge material facts to the ones whose interests she is
being paid to protect. Some knowledge is prerequisite to intelligent
questioning. This is particularly true in the securities field. Readiness and
willingness to disclose are not equivalent to disclosure. The statutes and
rules discussed above make it unlawful to omit to state material facts
irrespective of alleged (or proven) willingness or readiness to supply that
which has been omitted.
Hughes v. SEC, 174 F.2d 969 (D.C. Cir., 1949).
The purpose of the fiduciary duty of disclosure is
arming the client with sufficient information to undertake an informed
decision, when the client is called upon to do so. In the context of conflicts of interest
which may exist between the fiduciary and the client, the purpose of full and
affirmative disclosure of material facts by a fiduciary financial planner is
also to obtain the client’s informed consent to proceeding with a
recommendation or transaction. Indeed,
under traditional notions of fiduciary law, conflicts of interest must be
avoided absent the informed consent of the client. However, “informed consent” does not exist
if full disclosure of all facts is not undertaken, if the consent is induced,
or if the transaction does not remain fair and reasonable to the client. As one court stated:
One of
the most stringent precepts in the law is that a fiduciary shall not engage in
self-dealing and when he is so charged, his actions will be scrutinized most
carefully. When a fiduciary engages in self-dealing, there is inevitably a
conflict of interest: as fiduciary he is
bound to secure the greatest advantage for the beneficiaries; yet to do so
might work to his personal disadvantage. Because of the conflict inherent in
such transaction, it is voidable by the beneficiaries unless they have
consented. Even then, it is voidable if the fiduciary fails to disclose
material facts which he knew or should have known, if he used the influence of
his position to induce the consent or if the transaction was not in all
respects fair and reasonable.
Birnbaum v. Birnbaum, 117 A.D.2d 409, 503 N.Y.S.2d 451 (N.Y.A.D. 4 Dept.,
1986).
The informed consent of the client to proceed with a
transaction recommended by a fiduciary advisor in the presence of a conflict of
interest would rarely be given by an informed client if the conflict of
interest were not managed to keep the best interests of the client paramount at
all times; clients rarely undertake gratuitous transfers to their financial
advisors. Hence, courts appear to often
find that there was not full disclosure, or that it was not affirmatively
undertaken, or that the terms of the transaction were not fair, where the
voluntary nature of the consent, or the understanding by the client of the
material facts, is suspect. Such cases
often arise in the context of the attorney-client relationship. See,
e.g. Schenk v. Hill, Lent &
Troescher, 530 N.Y.S.2d 486, 487 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1988) (a lawyer hired to
sue another lawyer for malpractice was
himself a potential defendant in the same action, and obtained client consent
to waive the conflict of interest. In disqualifying the lawyer, the court said:
“[T]he consent obtained in this case does not reflect a full understanding of
the legal rights being waived … [T]he unsophisticated client, relying upon the
confidential relationship with his lawyer, may not be regarded as able to
understand the ramifications of the conflict, however much explained to him.”);
Wade v. Clemmons, 377 N.Y.S.2d 415,
419 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1975) (striking down contingent fee because client would
have refused to agree to settlement offer yielding fee if properly advised).
The fiduciary duty to avoid conflicts of interest, and
the necessity to obtain the informed consent of the client as to conflicts of
interest not avoided, were well known in the early history of the Advisers
Act. In an address entitled “The SEC and
the Broker-Dealer” by Louis Loss, Chief Counsel, Trading and Exchange Division,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on March 16, 1948, before the Stock Brokers’
Associates of Chicago, the fiduciary duties arising under the Advisers Act, as
applied in the Arleen Hughes release,
were elaborated upon:
The
doctrine of that case, in a nutshell, is that a firm which is acting as agent
or fiduciary for a customer, rather than as a principal in an ordinary dealer
transaction, is under a much stricter obligation than merely to refrain from
taking excessive mark-ups over the current market. Its duty as an agent or
fiduciary selling its own property to its principal is to make a scrupulously full disclosure of every element of its adverse
interest in the transaction.
In
other words, when one is engaged as agent to act on behalf of another, the law
requires him to do just that. He must not
bring his own interests into conflict with his client's. If he does, he must explain in detail what
his own self-interest in the transaction is in order to give his client an
opportunity to make up his own mind whether to employ an agent who is riding
two horses. This requirement has nothing to do with good or bad motive. In
this kind of situation the law does not require proof of actual abuse. The law
guards against the potentiality of abuse which is inherent in a situation
presenting conflicts between self-interest and loyalty to principal or client.
As the Supreme Court said a hundred years ago, the law ‘acts not on the
possibility, that, in some cases the sense of duty may prevail over the motive
of self-interest, but it provides against the probability in many cases, and
the danger in all cases, that the dictates of self-interest will exercise a
predominant influence, and supersede that of duty.’ Or, as an eloquent Tennessee jurist put it
before the Civil War, the doctrine ‘has its foundation, not so much in the
commission of actual fraud, but in that profound knowledge of the human heart
which dictated that hallowed petition, 'Lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil,’ and that caused the announcement of the infallible
truth, that 'a man cannot serve two masters.’
This time-honored dogma applies equally to any person
who is in a fiduciary relation toward another, whether he be a trustee, an executor or administrator of an estate, a
lawyer acting on behalf of a client, an employee acting on behalf of an
employer, an officer or director acting on behalf of a corporation, an investment adviser or any sort of
business adviser for that matter, or a broker. The law has always looked with
such suspicion upon a fiduciary's dealing for his own account with his client
or beneficiary that it permits the client or beneficiary at any time to set
aside the transaction without proving any actual abuse or damage. What the
recent Hughes case does is to say that such conduct, in addition ‘to laying the
basis for a private lawsuit, amounts to a violation of the fraud provisions under
the securities laws: This proposition, as a matter of fact, is found in a
number of earlier Commission opinions. The
significance of the recent Hughes opinion in this respect is that it elaborates
the doctrine and spells, out in detail exactly what disclosure is required when
a dealer who has put himself in a fiduciary position chooses to sell his own
securities to a client or buys the client's securities in his own name …
The nature and extent of disclosure with respect to
capacity will vary with the particular client involved. In some cases use of
the term ‘principal’ itself may suffice. In others, a more detailed explanation
will be required. In all cases, however, the burden is on the firm which acts
as fiduciary to make certain that the client understands that the firm is
selling its own securities …
Id. [Emphasis added.]
[xii] Should brokers not be providing investment advice, but
instead limit their activities to the sale of an investment product in which
only information about the investment product is provided (such as its
characteristics, risks, fees, costs), brokers would be able to continue to
engage in product sales. However, once
brokers provide investment advice, they should be subject to the restrictions
on conduct imposed by the fiduciary
standard of conduct. This does not
restrict what investment products may be sold.
Since investment advisers possess a fiduciary duty of care, and in
connection therewith are required to consider the total fees and costs clients
bear in association with any securities recommended, it is likely that the rise
of investment advisers will serve to lower the fees and costs of many
investment products, as increased competition is created due to increased
demand from the knowledgeable representatives of their clients.
[xiii] Brokers have, in recent years, begun to utilize titles
which imply relationships based upon trust and confidence, to which fiduciary
duties should apply, such as “financial advisor,” “financial consultant,”
“wealth manager,” etc. Under state
common law, the utilization of such titles remains a significant factor in
determining whether a fiduciary relationship exists. See,
e.g., Hatleberg v. Norwest Bank Wisconsin, 2005 WI 109, 700 N.W.2d 15 (WI,
2005) (When a bank held out as either an “investment planner,” “financial
planner,” or “financial advisor,” the Wisconsin Supreme Court held that a
fiduciary duty may arise in such circumstances.) To alleviate consumer confusion, only those
bound by the fiduciary standard of conduct should be permitted to utilize these
or similar titles, as consumers often infer that an advisory (fiduciary)
relationship as opposed to a sales (arms-length) relationship exists by those
who utilize such titles.
[xiv] Once a relation between two parties is established,
its classification as fiduciary and its legal consequences are primarily
determined by the law rather than the parties. “A fiduciary relation does not
depend on some technical relation created by or defined in law. It may exist
under a variety of circumstances and does exist in cases where there has been a
special confidence reposed in one who, in equity and good conscience, is bound
to act in good faith and with due regard to the interests of the one reposing
the confidence.” In re Clarkeies Market, L.L.C., 322 B.R. 487, 495 (Bankr. N.H.,
2005).
One
commentator noted the danger of the “check-the-box” approach: “In its written testimony to the House
Financial Services Committee, SIFMA argued that investors should have the
‘choice to define or modify relationships with their financial services
provider based upon the investor's preference’ ... as a means of preserving
investor choice. Under one interpretation of SIFMA’s proposal, Wall Street
firms could have their customers sign away the fiduciary standards of conduct by
simply signing a lengthy, incomprehensible, multi-page, small print agreement
when they enter into a relationship with a broker. This is contrary to
fiduciary law, which clearly provides that blanket waivers of fiduciary
standards are not permitted. Fiduciary standards of conduct are imposed by law
on relationships based on trust and confidence, in recognition of the fact that
consumers lack the ability to bargain for the correct standard of
conduct.” Rhoades, SIFMA’s Proposed “New
Federal Fiduciary Standard”: Consumer Protection … or “A Wolf in Sheep’s
Clothing”? (Advisor Perspectives, July 21, 2009), available at
[xv] Marketing investment advisory services or financial
planning services as a means to effect the sale of securities may well violate
the anti-fraud provisions of Section 206 of the Advisers Act. See Elmer D. Robinson, SEC No-Action
Letter (Jan. 6, 1986); Nathan & Lewis,
SEC No-Action Letter (Apr. 4, 1988). [However, a broker-dealer that employs
terms such as "financial planner" merely as a device to induce the
sale of securities might violate the antifraud provisions of the Securities Act
of 1933 and the Exchange Act. Cf. In re
Haight & Co., Inc., Securities Exchange Act Release No. 9082 (Feb. 19,
1971) (Broker-dealer defrauded its customers in the offer and sale of
securities by holding itself out as a financial planner that would give
comprehensive and expert planning advice and choose the best investments for
its clients from all available securities, when in fact it was not an expert in
planning and made its decisions based on the receipt of commissions and upon
its inventory of securities.)]”
Professor Tuch noted that:
“The standard of conduct required of the fiduciary is not diminished by reason
of its organizational structure.” Tuch,
Andrew, “The Paradox of Financial Services Regulation: Preserving Client
Expectations of Loyalty in an Industry Rife with Conflicts of Interest”
(January 2008).
[xvi] A review of the reasons behind the imposition of
fiduciary status is essential to gaining an understanding of subsequent issues
which arise in the application of fiduciary duties. The rationale for imposition of fiduciary
duties involves a combination of the disparity in knowledge between fiduciaries
and their entrustors (clients), the high costs of monitoring fiduciary conduct,
and the promotion of public policy.
A. The
Increased Knowledge Gap Between Financial Advisors and Consumers in Today’s
Complex Financial World. Without question there exists a substantial
knowledge gap between fiduciary investment advisers and the vast majority of
their clients in today’s modern, complex financial world. Indeed, the world is
far more complex for individual investors today than it was just a generation
ago. There exists a broader variety of
investment products, including many types of pooled and/or hybrid products,
employing a broad range of strategies.
This explosion of products has hampered the ability of individual
investors to sort through the many thousands of investment products to find
those very few which best fit within the investor’s portfolios. Furthermore, as such investment vehicles have
proliferated, individual investors are challenged to discern an investment
product’s true ‘total fees and costs,’ investment characteristics, tax
consequences, and risks. Additionally,
U.S. tax laws have increasingly become more complex, presenting both
opportunities for the wise through proper planning, but also traps for the
unwary. As the sophistication of our
capital markets had increased, so has the knowledge gap between individual
consumers and financial advisors.
Investment theory continues to evolve, with new insights gained from
academic research each year. In
constructing an investment portfolio today a financial advisor must take into
account not only the individual investor’s risk tolerance and investment time
horizon, but also the investor’s tax situation (present and future) and risks
to which the investor is exposed in other aspects of his or her life.
“With
the increasing complexity of the financial system, the wide range of choices available
and the role of compulsory savings, advice is playing an ever important role
for consumers … Deregulation has created a large number of investment
alternatives and means of accessing them … that the first priority for most
people is to seek advice on the financial strategy that best suits their
circumstances. The selection of
investment products is secondary, yet still this requires access not only to
information on the numerous investments available in the market but also
analysis and application of that information to individual circumstances …
Strategy plays a key role in effective financial decision making and most
consumers will not be in a position to develop their own strategy … The average person will no more become an
instant financial planner simply because of direct access to products and
information than they will a doctor, lawyer or accountant. Despite extensive information being available
on drugs (via the internet and by other means) people still seek the advice of
a doctor to determine an appropriate response to a medical problem and, where
necessary, to prescribe the most suitable drug.” “Submission to the Financial System Inquiry
by the Financial Planning Association of Australia Limited,” December 1996. [Emphasis in original.]
B.
The 1995 Tully Report Recognized the Knowledge Gap. Even the
broker-dealer industry, after careful study, acknowledged the wide disparity of
knowledge between brokers and their customers in the Tully Report:
As a
general rule, RRs [registered representatives] and their clients are separated
by a wide gap of knowledge – knowledge of the technical and financial
management aspects of investing. The
pace of product innovation in the securities industry has only widened this
gap. It is a rare client who truly understands
the risks and market behaviors of his or her investments, and the language of
prospectuses intended to communicate those understandings is impenetrable to
many. This knowledge gap represents a
potential source of client abuse, since uninformed investors have no basis for
evaluating the merits of the advice they are given.
Report of
the Committee on Compensation Practices (April 10, 1995), also called the
“Tully Report,” at p. 15.
Yet, the
Tully Report, under the influence of the Committee Chairman, Daniel P. Tully
(at the time Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Merrill Lynch & Co.,
Inc.), did not call for the imposition of fiduciary duties upon registered
representatives (and did not even mention the word “fiduciary.”). Instead, the Report stated that the knowledge
gap “makes communication between a registered representative and an investor
difficult and puts too much responsibility for decision-making on the shoulders
of RRs [registered representatives] - a responsibility that belongs with the
investor.” Tully Report at p. 15.
Emotional
biases limit consumers’ ability to close the knowledge gap. Recent insights from behavioral science call
into substantial doubt some cherished pro-regulatory strategies, including the
view that if regulators force delivery of better disclosures and transparency
to investors that such can be utilized effectively. Calls have been heard that the SEC’s emphasis
on disclosure is only part of the equation for the protection for
consumers. “Two things are needed for
the federal securities laws, or any disclosure-based regulatory regime, to be
effective. The first is straightforward: information has to be disclosed. The second is equally straightforward, but
often overlooked. That is, the users of the information – for example,
investors, securities analysts, brokers, and money managers – need to use the
disclosed information effectively. The federal securities laws primarily focus
on the former – mandating disclosure.”
Paredes, Troy A., “Blinded by the Light: Information Overload and its
Consequences for Securities Regulation” (2003), available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=413180 or DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.413180. For years it has been
known that that investors do not read disclosure documents. See, generally, Homer Kripke, The SEC and Corporate Disclosure: Regulation
In Search Of A Purpose (1979); Homer Kripke, The Myth of the Informed
Layman, 28 Bus.Law.. 631 (1973). See also Baruch Lev & Meiring de Villiers,
Stock Price Crashes and 10b-5 Damages: A Legal, Economic, and Policy Analysis,
47 Stan. L. Rev. 7, 19 (1994) (“[M]ost investors do not read, let alone
thoroughly analyze, financial statements, prospectuses, or other corporate
disclosures ….”); Kenneth B. Firtel, Note,
“Plain English: A Reappraisal of the Intended Audience of Disclosure Under the
Securities Act of 1933, 72 S. Cal. L. Rev. 851, 870 (1999) (“[T]he average
investor does not read the prospectus ….”).
For an overview of various individual investor bias such as bounded
irrationality, rational ignorance, overoptimism, overconfidence, the false
consensus effect, insensitivity to the source of information, the fact that
oral communications trump written communications, and other heuristics and
bias, see Robert Prentice, “Whither
Securities Regulation? Some Behavioral Observations Regarding Proposals for its
Future,” 51 Duke L. J. 1397 (2002).
The SEC’s emphasis on disclosure, drawn from
the focus of the 1933 and 1934 Securities Acts on enhanced disclosures, results
from the myth that investors carefully peruse the details of disclosure
documents that regulation delivers.
However, under the scrutinizing lens of stark reality, this picture
gives way to an image a vast majority of investors who are unable, due to behavioral
biases and lack of knowledge of our complicated financial markets, to undertake
sound investment decision-making. As stated by Professor (now SEC Commissioner)
Troy A. Paredes:
The
federal securities laws generally assume that investors and other capital
market participants are perfectly rational, from which it follows that more
disclosure is always better than less. However, investors are not perfectly
rational. Herbert Simon was among the
first to point out that people are boundedly rational, and numerous studies
have since supported Simon’s claim. Simon recognized that people have limited
cognitive abilities to process information. As a result, people tend to
economize on cognitive effort when making decisions by adopting heuristics that
simplify complicated tasks. In Simon’s terms, when faced with complicated
tasks, people tend to “satisfice” rather than “optimize,” and might fail to
search and process certain information.[xvi]
Troy A.
Parades, Blinded by the Light: Information Overload and its Consequences for
Securities Regulation, 83 Wash.Univ.L.Q. 907, 931-2 (2003).
Note as
well that “instead of leading investors away from their behavioral biases,
financial professionals may prey upon investors’ behavioral quirks … Having
placed their trust in their brokers, investors may give them substantial
leeway, opening the door to opportunistic behavior by brokers, who may steer
investors toward poor or inappropriate investments.” Stephen J. Choi and A.C. Pritchard,
“Behavioral Economics and the SEC” (2003), at p.18.
Indeed,
“when faced with complex, difficult and affect-laden choices (and hence a
strong anticipation of regret should those choices be wrong), many investors
seek to shift responsibility for the investments to others. This is an opportunity – the core of the
full-service brokerage business – to use trust-based selling techniques,
offering advice that customers sometimes too readily accept. Once trust is
induced, the ability to sell vastly more complicated, multi-attribute
investment products goes up. Complex products that have become widespread in
the retail sector, like equity index annuities, can only be sold by intensive,
time-consuming sales effort. As a result the sales fees (and embedded
incentives) are very large, creating the temptation to oversell. In the mutual fund area, the broker channel –
once again, driven by generous incentives - sells funds aggressively. Recent
empirical research suggests that buyers purchase funds in this channel at much
higher cost but performance on average is no better, and often worse, than
readily available no-load funds.” Donald
C. Langevoort, “The SEC, Retail Investors, and the Institutionalization of the
Securities Markets” (Jan. 2009), prior version available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1262322.
Moreover,
“not only can marketers who are familiar with behavioral research manipulate
consumers by taking advantage of weaknesses in human cognition, but …
competitive pressures almost guarantee that they will do so.” Robert Prentice, “Contract-Based Defenses In
Securities Fraud Litigation: A Behavioral Analysis,” 2003 U.Ill.L.Rev. 337,
343-4 (2003), citing Jon D. Hanson
& Douglas A. Kysar, “Taking Behavioralism Seriously: The Problem of Market
Manipulation,” 74 N.Y.U.L.REV. 630 (1999) and citing Jon D. Hanson & Douglas A. Kysar, “Taking Behavioralism
Seriously: Some Evidence of Market Manipulation,” 112 Harv.L.Rev. 1420
(1999). It should be noted that much
training of brokers and advisers involves how to establish a relationship of
trust and confidence with the client, following which it is well known that
customers / clients, respectively, will generally accede to the recommendations
mde by the broker or adviser.
C.
Financial Literacy Efforts, While Important, are Known
to be Ineffective. Financial
literacy is important, for the more educated the individual American the better
he or she will undertake financial decisions, with or without the aid of an
advisor. However, as recently stated by
Professor Lauren E. Willis:
The gulf
between the literacy levels of most Americans and that required to assess the
plethora of credit, insurance, and investment products sold today—and new
products as they are invented tomorrow—cannot realistically be bridged.
Educators would need to impart a sophisticated understanding of finance because
rules of thumb are not useful for decisions about complex products in a
volatile market. Further, high financial literacy can be necessary for good
financial decisionmaking, but is not sufficient; heuristics, biases, and
emotional coping mechanisms that interfere with welfare-enhancing personal
finance behaviors are unlikely to be eradicated through education, particularly
in a dynamic market. To the contrary, the advantage in resources with which to
reach consumers that financial services firms enjoy puts firms in a better
position to capitalize on decisionmaking biases than educators who seek to
train consumers out of them.
Willis,
Lauren E., “Against Financial Literacy Education,” Iowa Law Review, Vol. 94,
2008, at p.3; U of Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 08-10;
Loyola-LA Legal Studies Paper No. 2008-13. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1105384. See also
Lusardi, Annamaria and Mitchell, Olivia S., “Financial Literacy and Planning:
Implications for Retirement Wellbeing” (2005). Michigan Retirement Research
Center Research Paper No. WP 2005-108, available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=881847 noting that “consumers making retirement saving
decisions require substantial financial literacy, in addition to the ability
and tools needed to plan and carry out retirement saving plans” and confirming
“survey findings about financial literacy from Bernheim (1995, 1998), Hogarth
and Hilgerth (2002), and Moore (2003), who report that most respondents do not
understand financial economics concepts, particularly those relating to bonds,
stocks, mutual funds, and the working of compound interest; they also report
that people often fail to understand loans and interest rates.”
D.
Due to the Knowledge Gap, the Advisor Has The Ability
to Abuse Trust and Power. The expert services of the fiduciary personal
financial advisor are socially desirable.
As in medicine or law, it can take many years to acquire the requisite
degree of knowledge, skill, and experience to be a competent and effective
personal financial advisor. Yet it is
this very expertise renders clients of personal financial advisors vulnerable
to abuse of trust and lack of care.
Moreover, the advisory services undertaken by investment advisers are
often subject to only general prescriptions, as investment advisors must be
free to react to a changing market environment.
If the fiduciary does not utilize his or her greater knowledge to
promote the client’s best interests, the fiduciary could usurp the delegated
power, authority, or trust in advice for the fiduciary’s own benefit.
E.
Reduction of Transaction Costs, when Monitoring Costs are
High. In service provider relationships which arise
to the level of fiduciary relations, it is highly costly for the client to
monitor, verify and ensure that the fiduciary will abide by the fiduciary’s
promise and deal with the entrusted power only for the benefit of the
client. Indeed, if a client could easily
protect himself or herself from an abuse of the fiduciary advisor’s power,
authority, or delegation of trust, then there would be no need for imposition of
fiduciary duties. Hence, fiduciary status
is imposed as a means of aiding consumers in navigating the complex financial
world.
The authors of the Federal Securities Acts
contemplated fiduciary advisors, given the inability of individual consumers to
interpret complex financial data and concepts.
As stated by Professor Steven L. Schwarcz: “Analysis of the tension between investor
understanding and complexity remains scant.
During the debate over the original enactment of the federal securities
laws, Congress did not focus on the ability of investors to understand
disclosure of complex transactions. Although scholars assumed that ordinary
investors would not have that ability, they anticipated that sophisticated
market intermediaries – such as brokers, bankers, investment advisers, publishers
of investment advisory literature, and even lawyers - would help filter the
information down to investors.” Steven
L. Schwarcz, “Rethinking The Disclosure Paradigm In A World Of Complexity,”
Univ.Ill.L.R. Vol. 2004, p.1, 7 (2004),
citing “Disclosure To Investors: A Reappraisal Of Federal Administrative
Policies Under The ‘33 And ‘34 Acts” (The Wheat Report), 52 (1969); accord William O. Douglas,
"Protecting the Investor," 23 Yale Rev. 521, 524 (1934).
F.
Difficulty in Tying Performance Results to One’s Obedience
to His or Her Fiduciary Duties. The results of the services provided by a
fiduciary advisor are not always related to the honesty of the fiduciary or the
quality of the services. For example, an
investment adviser may be both honest and diligent, but the value of the
client’s portfolio may fall as the result of market events. Indeed, rare is the instance in which an
investment adviser provides substantial positive returns for each period over
long periods of time – and in such instances the honesty of the investment
adviser should be suspect (as was the situation with Madoff).
G.
Difficulty in Identifying and Understanding Conflicts
of Interest. Most individual consumers of financial
services in America today are unable to identify and understand the many
conflicts of interest which can exist in financial services. For example, a customer of a broker-dealer
firm might be aware of the existence of a commission for the sale of a mutual
fund, but possess no understanding that there are many mutual funds available
which are available without commissions (i.e., sales loads). Moreover, brokerage firms have evolved into
successful disguisers of conflicts of interest arising from third-party
payments, including payments through such mechanisms as contingent deferred
sales charges, 12b-1 fees, payment for order flow, payment for shelf space, and
soft dollar compensation.
Transparency is important, but even when
compensation is fully disclosed, few individual investors realize the impact
high fees and costs can possess on their long-term investment returns; often
individual investors believe that a more expensive product will possess higher
returns. In a recent study, Professors
“Madrian, Choi and Laibson recruited two groups of students in the summer of
2005 -- MBA students about to begin their first semester at Wharton, and
undergraduates (freshmen through seniors) at Harvard. All participants were asked to make
hypothetical investments of $10,000, choosing from among four S&P 500 index
funds. They could put all their money into one fund or divide it among two or
more. ‘We chose the index funds because they are all tracking the same index,
and there is no variation in the objective of the funds,’ Madrian says …
‘Participants received the prospectuses that fund companies provide real
investors … the students ‘overwhelmingly fail to minimize index fund fees,’ the
researchers write. ‘When we make fund fees salient and transparent, subjects'
portfolios shift towards lower-fee index funds, but over 80% still do not invest
everything in the lowest-fee fund’ … [Said Professor Madrian,] ‘What our study
suggests is that people do not know how to use information well.... My guess is
it has to do with the general level of financial literacy, but also because the
prospectus is so long."
Knowledge@Wharton, “Today's Research Question: Why Do Investors Choose
High-fee Mutual Funds Despite the Lower Returns?” citing Choi, James J.,
Laibson, David I. and Madrian, Brigitte C., “Why Does the Law of One Price
Fail? An Experiment on Index Mutual Funds” (March 6, 2008). Yale ICF Working
Paper No. 08-14. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1125023.
H.
Shifting of Monitoring and Verification Costs to
Government. It is common that fiduciary duties, once they
are imposed, result in oversight (monitoring and verification) and enforcement
by agencies of government. As stated in
a recent Government Accounting Office report:
In
general, regulators help protect consumers/investors who may not have the
information or expertise necessary to protect themselves from fraud and other
deceptive practices … that the marketplace may not necessarily provide. Through
monitoring activities, examinations, and inspections, regulators oversee the
conduct of institutions in an effort to ensure that they do not engage in
fraudulent activity and do provide consumers/investors with the information
they need to make appropriate decisions of financial institutions in the
marketplace. However, in some areas
providing information through disclosure and assuring compliance with laws are
still not adequate to allow consumers/investors to influence firm behavior.
GAO-05-61,
"Financial Regulation: Industry Changes Prompt Need to Reconsider U.S.
Regulatory Structure," Report to the Chairman, Committee on Banking, Housing,
and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate, October 2004.
Fiduciary relationships are relationships in
which the fiduciary provides to the client a service that public policy
encourages. When such services are
provided, the law recognizes that the client does not possess the ability,
except at great cost, to monitor the exercise of the fiduciary’s powers. Usually the client cannot afford the expense
of engaging separate counsel or experts to monitor the conflicts of interest
the person in the superior position will possess, as such costs might outweigh
the benefits the client receives from the relationship with the fiduciary. Enforcement of the protections thereby
afforded to the client by the presence of fiduciary duties is shifted to the
courts and/or to regulatory bodies. Accordingly, a significant portion of the
cost of enforcement of fiduciary duties is shifted from individual clients to
the taxpayers, although licensing and related fees, as well as fines, may shift
monitoring costs back to all of the fiduciaries which are regulated.
I.
The Lack of Desire to Expend Time, Resources on
Monitoring. The inability of clients to protect
themselves while receiving guidance from a fiduciary does not arise solely due
to a significant knowledge gap or due to the inability to expend funds for
monitoring of the fiduciary. Even highly
knowledgeable and sophisticated clients (including many financial institutions)
rely upon fiduciaries. While they may
possess the financial resources to engage in stringent monitoring, and may even
possess the requisite knowledge and skill to undertake monitoring themselves,
the expenditure of time and money to undertake monitoring would deprive the
investors of time to engage in other activities. Indeed, since sophisticated and wealthy
investors have the ability to protect themselves, one might argue they might as
well manage their investments themselves and save the fees. Yet, reliance upon
fiduciaries is undertaken by wealthy and highly knowledgeable investors and
without expenditures of time and money for monitoring of the fiduciary. In this manner, “fiduciary duties are linked
to a social structure that values specialization of talents and functions.”
Tamar Frankel, Ch. 12, United States Mutual Fund Investors, Their Managers and
Distributors, in Conflicts of Interest:
Corporate Governance and Financial Markets (Kluwer Law International,
The Netherlands, 2007), edited by Luc Thévenoz and Rashid Barhar.
J.
For Fiduciaries, the Cost of Proving Trustworthiness is
Quite High. How does one prove one to be “honest” and
“loyal”? The cost to a fiduciary in
proving that the advisor is trustworthy could be extremely high – so high as to
exceed the compensation gained from the relationships with the advisors’ clients. This is why it is important to fiduciary
advisors to be able to distinguish themselves from non-fiduciaries. A recent example of the problems faced by
investment advisers was the “fee-based brokerage accounts” adopted by the SEC
in 2005, which would have permitted brokers to provide the same functional
investment advisory services as investment advisers but without application of
fiduciary standards of conduct. This
would have negated to a large degree economic incentives for persons to become
investment advisers and be subject to the higher standard of conduct. The SEC’s fee-based accounts rule was
overturned in Financial Planning Ass'n v.
S.E.C., 482 F.3d 481 (D.C. Cir., 2007).
K.
Monitoring and Reputational Threats are Largely
Ineffective. The ability of “the market” to monitor and
enforce a fiduciary’s obligations, such as through the compulsion to preserve a
firm’s reputation, is often ineffective in fiduciary relationships. This is
because revelations about abuses of trust by fiduciaries can be well hidden
(such as through mandatory arbitration clauses and secrecy agreements regarding
settlements), or because marketing efforts by fiduciary firms are so strong
that they overwhelm the reported instances of breaches of fiduciary duties.
L.
Public Policy Encourages Specialization, Which Necessitates
Fiduciary Duties. As Professor Tamar Frankel, long the leading
scholar in the area of fiduciary law as applied to securities regulation, once
noted: “[A] prosperous economy develops specialization. Specialization requires
interdependence. And interdependence cannot exist without a measure of
trusting. In an entirely non-trusting relationship interaction would be too
expensive and too risky to maintain. Studies have shown a correlation between
the level of trusting relationships on which members of a society operate and
the level of that society’s trade and economic prosperity.” Tamar Frankel,
Trusting And Non-Trusting: Comparing Benefits, Cost And Risk, Working Paper
99-12, Boston University School of Law. Fiduciary duties are imposed by law
when public policy encourages specialization in particular services, such as
investment management or law, in recognition of the value such services provide
to our society. For example, the
provision of investment consulting services under fiduciary duties of loyalty
and due care encourages participation by investors in our capital markets
system. Hence, in order to promote
public policy goals, the law requires the imposition of fiduciary status upon
the party in the dominant position.
Through the imposition of such fiduciary status the client is thereby
afforded various protections. These
protections serve to reduce the risks to the client which relate to the
service, and encourage the client to utilize the service. Fiduciary status thereby furthers the public
interest.
[xvii] The world is far more complex for individual investors
today than it was just a generation ago.
There exist a broader variety of investment products, including many
types of pooled and/or hybrid products, employing a broad range of strategies. This explosion of products has hampered the
ability of individual investors to sort through the many thousands of
investment products to find those very few which best fit within the investor’s
portfolios. Furthermore, as such
investment vehicles have proliferated, individual investors are challenged to
discern an investment product’s true total fees and costs, investment
characteristics, tax consequences, and risks.
Additionally, U.S. tax laws relating to financial planning and
investment decisions have increasingly become more complex, presenting both
opportunities for the wise through proper planning, but also traps for the
unwary.
As the sophistication of our
capital markets had increased, so has the knowledge gap between individual
consumers and financial advisors.
Investment theory continues to evolve, with new insights gained from
academic research each year. In
constructing an investment portfolio today a financial advisor must take into
account not only the individual investor’s risk tolerance and investment time
horizon, but also the investor’s tax situation (present and future) and risks
to which the investor is exposed in other aspects of his or her life.
Survey after survey
(including the Rand Report cited by SIFMA) has concluded that consumers place a
very high degree of trust and confidence in their investment adviser,
stockbroker, or financial planner. These
consumers deal with their advisors on unequal terms. As evidence of the lack of knowledge
possessed by consumers, the Rand Report noted that 30% of investors believed
that they did not pay their financial consultant any fees! This calls into substantial question the
conclusion derived from the Rand Report’s survey that most customers of brokers
are happy with their financial consultant.
[xviii] We urge Congress not to proceed down the path which
will result in an erosion of the fiduciary standard of conduct – a path so long
warned about by Justice Benjamin Cardoza:
Many forms of conduct
permissible in a workaday world for those acting at arm’s length are forbidden to
those bound by fiduciary ties. A trustee is held to something stricter than the
morals of the marketplace. Not honesty
alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive is then the standard of
behavior. As to this there has developed a tradition that is unbending and
inveterate. Uncompromising rigidity has been the attitude of courts of equity
when petitioned to undermine the rule of undivided loyalty by the
‘disintegrating erosion of particular exceptions’ (Wendt v.
Fisher, 243 N.Y. 439, 444). Only thus has the level of conduct for
fiduciaries been kept at a level higher than that trodden by the crowd. It
will not consciously be
lowered by any judgment of this court. [Emphasis added.]
Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 N.Y. 458, 463-4, 164 N.E. 545 (1928).
[xix] “First, there must be recognition that brokers have
changed their business practices to become more like advisers—who have
generally been successfully regulated under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
for nearly seven decades. ‘Harmonization’ that seeks to make advisers more like
brokers has no foundation in investor protection.” Testimony of Paul Schott
Stevens, President and CEO, Investment Company Institute, before the Committee
on Financial Services, United States House of Representatives, on “Industry
Perspectives on The Obama Administration’s Financial Regulatory Reform
Proposals” (July 17, 2009).
[xx] The framing of the debate by the broker-dealer
industry as one of “harmonization” serves to mislead Congress as to the reality
of the issue before it and the present circumstances. “To the extent that securities firms that
were predominantly broker-dealers are now entering into on-going relationships
with clients by emphasizing the offer of investment advice in exchange for a
fee based on assets under management, the brokerage industry is moving closer
to the investment adviser industry. There is a significant conflict of interest
that results when the same entity serves both as an agent selling a security
and as one providing investment advice.
As a result of this movement by broker-dealers, there has been a great
deal of discourse about ‘harmonizing’ the regulations of broker-dealer versus
investment advisers. I think the better way to frame the issue is to ask how
broker-dealers who provide investment advice should be regulated. There is a
reason that investment adviser services are regulated differently than
broker-dealer services.” Speech, SEC
Commissioner Luis A. Aguilar, “SEC's Oversight of the Adviser Industry Bolsters
Investor Protection” (May 7, 2009).
Moreover,
as explained by Professor Tamar Frankel, “harmonizing”
has been used in reference to only the fiduciary duty of care; the real
problem of broker dealers (“b/ds”) involves the duty of loyalty when brokers
provide investment advice. “In light of
the confusing state of the law and the different treatment of b/ds, advisers,
and financial planners, proposals have used the word “harmonizing” as the
objective for rationalizing the current law. However, the word harmonizing has
been used to apply to fiduciaries’ duty of care rather than to the prohibition
of fiduciaries’ conflict of interest. [Citation to Lemke/Stone article.] I believe that the emphasis on the duty of
care diverts attention from the real problem posed by b/ds and their activities
that might lead to fraud. The two duties are fundamentally different. The duty
of loyalty aims at preventing the abuse of entrusted property or power. The
duty of care is aimed to ensuring expert services and avoiding negligence in
the performance of the services.” Frankel, Tamar , “Fiduciary Duties of
Brokers-Advisers-Financial Planners and Money Managers” (August 10, 2009).
Boston Univ. School of Law Working Paper No. 09-36.
As more succinctly set forth
by the North American Securities Administrators Association: “We recognize that
so-called ‘harmonization’ of standards is simply code for adoption of a lower
standard and is therefore unacceptable.”
Speech, Denise Voigt Crawford, Texas Securities Commissioner and current
NASAA President, before the NASAA Annual Conference (Sept. 15, 2009).
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