Has the DOL Rule Really Changed 401k Rollovers?

What do advisors need to know?

What do advisors need to know?


The Department of Labor’s final fiduciary rule applies to rollover, transfer and distribution recommendations made by financial professionals to retail retirement investors.[1]

A quick note on the term financial professionals. The DOL Rule will only be “new” to commission based financial advisors and insurance oriented reps. Financial professionals that are registered as an Investment Advisor Representative through an RIA are already held to this fiduciary standard and inherently adhere to the new DOL Rule.

In addition, FINRA rules only apply to broker-dealers and not fee only advisors or fixed insurance agents. That said, if and when the compliance date for the rule takes effect in April,[2] financial institutions and advisors will be deemed to act as fiduciaries when recommending that a client take a rollover or distribution from an ERISA plan or an individual retirement account (“IRA”).[3]

Much of the trade press commentary has focused on predictions of doom and gloom, waves of class action lawsuits, huge increases in compliance costs, and a sea change in the way advisors interact with customers.

We disagree. For some time now, securities regulators, led by FINRA, have been policing rollover recommendations with enhanced vigor. In our experience, most financial advisors already have adapted their practices to conform to fiduciary standards when recommending rollovers, similar to what the DOL Rule will mandate.

FINRA Regulatory Notice 13-45

The regulatory landscape for rollover advice changed significantly when FINRA issued specific guidance in 2013[4] “remind[ing] firms of their responsibilities” when recommending rollovers to IRAs and marketing IRAs and associated services.  FINRA noted that a recommendation to roll over retirement plan assets to an IRA typically involves securities recommendations subject to FINRA rules regarding suitability, and that related marketing must be “fair, balanced and not misleading.” Highlights of the guidance include:

To properly evaluate these factors, an advisor needs detailed information about the plan in which a client’s assets are currently invested, including information about investment options and related expenses, plan-level fees (including recordkeeping, compliance, and trustee fees), and plan features (including distribution rights and services related to the plan).  If the client is eligible to transfer assets to a new employer’s plan, the advisor will need to evaluate similar information about the new employer’s plan.

 A central failing FINRA has observed is firms not putting customers’ interests first. The harm caused by this may be compounded when it involves vulnerable investors (e.g., senior investors) or a major liquidity or wealth event in an investor’s life (e.g., an inheritance or Individual Retirement Account rollover).  Poor advice and investments in these situations can have especially devastating and lasting consequences for the investor.  Irrespective of whether a firm must meet a suitability or fiduciary standard, FINRA believes that firms best serve their customers—and reduce their regulatory risk—by putting customers’ interests first. This requires the firm to align its interests with those of its customers.[7]

Thus it is clear that even without the DOL Rule, advisors are being watched carefully by the regulators in connection with rollover recommendations.

Summing Up

For the first time, the DOL Rule will subject financial advisors to ERISA’s fiduciary standards and prohibited transaction rules with respect to IRA rollover recommendations.  While this may seem like an Earth-shattering development, it really is not.  Today, most financial advisors have conformed their practices to regulatory expectations (and those who have not should take note and act accordingly).  Whether or not the new Administration or Congress take steps to delay, pare back or scuttle the DOL Rule, advisors would be well advised to treat rollover advice as a fiduciary responsibility.

By Jeffrey S. Holik and Paul Alegi.  Mr. Holik is a financial services regulatory lawyer with Shulman, Rogers, Gandal, Pordy and Ecker in suburban Washington, D.C.  Mr. Alegi is an Investment Advisor with ISC Financial Advisors.


[1] The final rule was available at: https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/regs/conflictsofinterest.html. [2] There has been much speculation about whether the Trump Administration will delay the compliance date or take action to pare back or scuttle the rule. [3] The DOL rule defines a recommendation as a communication that, based on its content, context and presentation, would reasonably be viewed as a suggestion that the client engage in or refrain from taking a particular course of action. [4] http://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/NoticeDocument/p418695.pdf [5] IRS rules provide that if an investor receives a lump-sum distribution of retirement plan assets, including an in-kind distribution of employer stock, and holds the stock in a nonretirement account—the investor will pay tax at the ordinary income rate on the cost basis in the stock. When the stock is sold, the investor will pay tax on the stock’s subsequent appreciation at the more favorable rate for long-term capital gains. In contrast, if the stock is rolled over in kind to an IRA, the stock’s subsequent appreciation (along with its cost basis) will be taxed as ordinary income when it is distributed from the IRA. [6] FINRA Rule 2111. [7] http://www.finra.org/industry/2015-exam-priorities-letter
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