Posted on 03/05/2016 4:33:44 PM PST by SeekAndFind
A new government regulation could end up causing serious damage to freedom of speech and freedom of the press. The Labor Department is finalizing a new fiduciary rule which the government claims will save the middle class billions of dollars by requiring the the firm and adviser to provide advice in the client’s best interest. Via the Labor Department’s website:
*Commits the firm and adviser to providing advice in the client’s best interest. Committing to a best interest standard requires the adviser and the company to act with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence that a prudent person would exercise based on the current circumstances. In addition, both the firm and the adviser must avoid misleading statements about fees and conflicts of interest. These are well-established standards in the law, simplifying compliance.
*Warrants that the firm has adopted policies and procedures designed to mitigate conflicts of interest. Specifically, the firm must warrant that it has identified material conflicts of interest and compensation structures that would encourage individual advisers to make recommendations that are not in clients’ best interests and has adopted measures to mitigate any harmful impact on savers from those conflicts of interest. Under the exemption, advisers will be able to continue receiving common types of compensation.
*Clearly and prominently discloses any conflicts of interest, like hidden fees often buried in the fine print or backdoor payments, that might prevent the adviser from providing advice in the client’s best interest. The contract must also direct the customer to a webpage disclosing the compensation arrangements entered into by the adviser and firm and make customers aware of their right to complete information on the fees charged.
The White House’s line is that this going to enact even more reforms on Wall Street, to make sure taxpayers aren’t going to bail out financial institutions that make risky bets. That line from Josh Earnest is highly amusing (and hypocritical) since President Barack Obama argued in favor of the bank bailout in 2008. But the rules also show the White House doesn’t care at all about the accidental effects of the new rules which have the chance to censor several well-known financial commentators from being on the air. Via John Berlau at Forbes:
Experts both for and against the rule I have talked to agree its broad reach could extend to financial media personalities who offer tips to individual audience members, a group that includes not just [Dave] Ramsey but TV hosts like Suze Orman and Jim Cramer, as well as many other broadcasters who opine on business and investment matters. They would be ensnared by the rules broad redefinition of a vast swath of financial professionals as fiduciaries and its mandate that these fiduciaries only serve the best interest of IRA and 401(k) holders.
This is censorship whether it’s accidental or on purpose. It’s silencing people who offer advice, regardless of whether people decide to accept said advice or not. What this shows is how the government doesn’t trust the people they serve, so it gives them an excuse to put their greedy little fingers into every pie. This is something which effects every stage of government from local to state to federal. Government has gone from being the nightwatchman to being the overprotective parents who lord over their kids with an iron fist. The unfortunate part is it’s not just Democrats who love bureaucratic regulations, but Republicans as well. Veronique de Rugy wrote in Reason in January 2009 how the Bush Administration deserves blame too because it decided to carve out a variety of regulations which cost the economy billions of dollars, including the Department of Homeland Security, Sarbanes-Oxley, and McCain-Feingold. Regulated burdens jumped 62% during the Bush Administration, after only (note sarcasm) going up 31% during the Clinton Administration.
It’s easy to sit here and play the blame game on how we’ve gotten here, but that doesn’t answer the question of what happens next. How do we stop the regulation lifestyle from continuing until it sucks every bit of life from the economy? The obvious answer is to say, elect politicians who won’t give into the DC lifestyle, but what happens when those politicians stray away from their promises? Do they get tossed out immediately or is it more important to keep hounding said politician until they remember what they were sent to DC for? The latter is probably better because of how isolated DC is from the rest of the nation. It means conservative and libertarian voters have to be willing to call into their representative’s office and remind them who they serve. It also means people need to be willing to say to a politician, Hey! When will you come visit us and hear from us? as a way to remind the politician who got them in to office. But it also requires voters to tell their friends and neighbors what’s going on too. Incumbent name value is a big thing, so it’s up to people to get the word out when a legitimate primary challenger rises up. It’s not an easy thing to do because primary challengers need to be vetted to make sure they’ll do what they say they’ll do, but it’s worth it if it keeps the regulation lifestyle from continuing.
There’s one other thing those who aren’t fans of regulation need to do: convince others of why less regulation is good. I remember a college professor once telling a class they couldn’t avoid bureaucracy. Well, why not? Why can’t more and more people believe they don’t need the government to watch what they doing, and can be their own master? Is it because there are plenty of people out there who believe mankind is a stupid, gullible lot who may or may not be able to tell the difference between truth and a lie (to steal a line from Terry Goodkind’s Wizard’s First Rule)? Or is it because freedom and liberty activists aren’t willing to take the time (and the risk) to challenge the beliefs of others and convince them their way is better, and keep going when it appears people aren’t listening.
Isn’t this a bit alarmist?
CNBC, where Cramer et al spout off, aren’t money managers. So why would they have fiduciary duties?
I miss the old HotAir comment section. The rebel site HotGas is very well done but not very welcoming to those outside the click, maybe after the election things will get better. Very sad, but time moves forward. JMHO
There have been state health departments that have tried to shut down bloggers who write about the paleo diet and things like that.
Eventually you won’t be able to talk about anything without a license.
if you are on TV talkign to random people who don’t give you money, how do they qualify as your clients?
Soon you will not be allowed to express an opinion of any kind. You may however parrot any line that you are fed by the State and the Party. Leave the thinking to the nomenklatura, komrade.
As far as Dave is concerned, I agree.
Getting out of debt - and staying out of debt - IS in the listener’s best interest!
A. They don’t. This piece is a waste of electrons.
Sounds to me like they are trying to set things up so that if you are a professional and you give advice, even over the air, that sets up a fiduciary duty.
If you have ever listened to a lawyers talk show on the radio they have disclaimers every few seconds about ‘this broadcast does not constitute legal advice... consult an attorney for your specific situation....”.
I was thinking the same thing. How would getting out of debt be harmful? I must be missing something.
Truth be told, I am following Ramsey’s advice and while I am still early in the process, it is already working for my finances. Assuming no major emergencies and already accounting for a couple of surgeries between the wife and I, we should be down to just the house payment in a few years.
I think that they may be acting outside their jurisdiction. If this is not outside their jurisdiction it should be.
I’ve never heard Dave Ramsey recommend anything specific. His recommendations are generic, “Invest in mutual funds,” as an example. He will recommend a specific sector of mutual funds, “Growth funds,” comes to mind, but not a specific fund.
Congratulations! You’ll love the feeling of liberation.
We’ve been 100% debt-free since paying off the house 4 years ago this spring. And that was the only payment we had starting in 1998.
FREEEEEEDOM!
Record each caller agreeing with a disclosure statement and call it good.
Dave Ramsey carefully couches his advice as “what I would do if I were in your shoes”.
Suze Orman, I think, had her last season on the air, but she did much more in depth financial reviews with some people on TV, telling them what to cut, what to renegotiate, where to pay down debt or save.
Labor department?
As far as Dave is concerned, I agree.
Getting out of debt - and staying out of debt - IS in the listeners best interest!
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Dave’s right about debt but dead wrong about investing in general... the boob still thinks it’s a great idea to throw money into our stock market through index funds... no doubt when it all crashes he’ll be saying things like “how great it is to be averaging down in cost!”.
What is your ideal portfolio?
Bingo. My financial advisor called last week to tell me about the regulation. He said ERISA just took over all IRA’s. He was previously of the belief that this would happen to IRA’s obtained through the employer, and not ones contractually obtained through insurance companies. Because of the proposed regulations, Met Life and AIG have sold their brokerage businesses.
ERISA regulates pension plans. It has been under the Labor Dept since 1974. From his description, looks like fundamental transformation to me.
Some other interesting operations are under the Labor Dept. Looks like a great place for govt. mischief making.
http://www.dol.gov/general/topic/health-plans/erisa
What is your ideal portfolio?
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I used to be a stockbroker and I can tell you that based on your age , risk profile and investment objectives I was forbidden to offer anything outside of a narrow range of products... Dave Ramsey gives the same advice for everyone... growth or growth and income mutual funds and states a BS rate of return which you’ll never see. I can honestly say that 95%+ of the brokers I worked with were lousy at picking stocks and just used whatever was in the company “recommended” list unless the guy in the next cube had a stock with a great story...
Today (and for at least the last 7-10 years) the system has been so rigged with HFT , a lack of individual investors and QE that failing companies have been pushed to valuations far above what the best companies used to be priced at.. and nothing is improving.
What do I suggest? It’s pretty clear we are going down the same path as Europe... the banks are bankrupt , business is contracting for something like the 5th year straight (when you add in the real inflation rate) , cash is taxed , stocks are ridiculous and the “central banks” are one trick ponies with nothing but free cash for their members and ZIRP/NIRP screwing anyone with savings or attempting to live on a fixed income... I’d suggest being short everything but I doubt you could cash out in time... since money is being destroyed by the FedRes’s actions I’d buy land , gold and trade goods. In the great depression people that kept from losing it all made fortunes buying “new and exciting” companies like IBM and Coke when they were beat down... having cash is great ,, my uncle made a small fortune in the late 40’s in real estate with money saved from his wartime factory job...
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