The U.S. Department of Labor recently announced that it
will, once again, delay its proposal to redefine (and ultimately expand on) the
term fiduciary as it relates to employee benefit plans. Specifically, the DOL’s re-proposal of this
rule, which the agency is calling Conflict of Interest Rule-Investment Advice,
will now be issued in January of 2015. The DOL announced the updated timing on
May 27 in its Semiannual Regulatory Agenda of Spring 2014.
The abstract for the rule proposal, contained in the agenda,
provides that this rulemaking would reduce harmful conflicts of interest by
amending the regulatory definition of the term fiduciary, to more broadly
define as fiduciaries, employee benefits plans and individual retirement
accounts those persons who render investment advice to plans and IRAs for a fee
within the meaning of section 3(21) of [ERISA] and section 4975(e)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code. The amendment would take into account current practices
of investment advisers, the expectations of plan officials and participants,
IRA owners who receive investment advice, as well as changes that have occurred
in the investment marketplace and the ways advisers are compensated that
frequently subject advisers to harmful conflicts of interest.
The DOL’s first proposed expansion of the definition of
fiduciary in October of 2010 was in the form of a proposed regulation. Specifically,
the proposed regulation sought to expand the definition of fiduciary, set forth
in ERISA § 3(21)(A), to include any individual who provides advice regarding
the value, management or purchasing or selling of securities or other property
to an ERISA plan, even if that advice was not delivered on a regular basis or
was not the primary reason for the plan’s investment decision, as the rules
currently require.
In 2011, after the rule faced criticism from representatives
of the financial services industry, the DOL decided to re-propose the rule.
Critics of these re-definitions have argued that such proposals are overly
broad and likely to greatly interfere with the business practices of financial
institutions that deal with employee benefit plans by, among other things,
increasing their insurance costs and the potential for litigation.
Source: Employee
Benefit Adviser
No comments:
Post a Comment