Family Office
No exceptions for fee-account brokers: Investors

Consumer and RIA groups back survey that supports "Merrill" rule
overthrow. Stockbrokers and financial planners who provide
investment advice should be governed by the same rules, according
to a national survey of investors polled by Opinion Research and
sponsored by the Zero Alpha Group (ZAG) and the Consumer
Federation of America.
In March 2007 a U.S. district appeals court overturned a
controversial Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rule that
allowed brokers to offer investment advice without registering as
fiduciaries under the 1940 Investment Advisers Act.
"Investors deserve a regulatory approach that they can
understand, where financial professionals who use the same titles
and offer the same services are subject to the same high
standards," says Barbara Roper, director of investor protection
at the Washington, D.C.-based Consumer Federation. "The recent
court decision overturning the fee-based brokerage-account rule
offers an opportunity for the [SEC] to adopt such an approach. As
the SEC confronts these issues, it must acknowledge that
disclosure alone is not an answer."
Not exactly disinterested
The Consumer Federation also says the SEC's two-year campaign to
heighten disclosure around fee-based accounts hasn't worked. The
Opinion Research survey suggests that 29% of U.S. investors view
stockbrokers primarily as purveyors of financial advice
and 25% see them as traders and advisors in roughly equal
measure. Those rates match results from a 2004 survey.
"The latest ZAG-CFA survey is a strong and direct challenge to
the wisdom of any appeal by the SEC of the federal court decision
overturning its widely criticized and ineffective 'broker-dealer'
rule," says Gregory Carlson, founding principal of Northfield,
Minn.-based Carlson Capital Management, a ZAG member firm.
The SEC's fee-based-account exception for brokers is usually
called the "Merrill" rule after Merrill Lynch, one of the leading
fee-based account distributors. "Broker dealer" rule is a more
recent coinage.
The ZAG-backed Opinion Research survey also indicates that 54% of
investors would be "much less" or "somewhat less likely" to rely
on stockbrokers for investment advice if they were subject to
weaker investor protection rules.
Princeton, N.J.-based Opinion Research polled U.S. 2,052 adults
and selected 1,073 who described themselves as investors.
ZAG is a network of nine independent registered investment
advisory (RIA) firms that collectively manage around $7 billion
in assets.
RIAs, fiduciaries governed by the 1940 Act, are seen as
beneficiaries of the Merrill rule's demise.
And its demise could be temporary. The SEC is expected to appeal
the court ruling. -FWR
Purchase reproduction rights to this article.