Review of 25 Major Brokerage Firms & Insurance Companies Find All Posing as Fiduciaries, Misleading Consumers
Twenty-five top
Entitled "Financial Advisor or Investment Salesperson: Brokers and Insurers Want to Have It Both Ways," the report written by
Brokerage firms repeatedly, and in a variety of ways, characterize themselves as trusted advisors, while financial industry lobbyists argue in court that they are "merely selling a product." The CFA/AFR review of prominent firms' websites did not find on these firms' websites any prominent reference that labeled their representatives and agents as salespeople. Instead, the firms have adopted titles for their financial professionals that identify those individuals as advisors:
* The title most commonly adopted by financial firms for their financial professionals appears to be "Financial Advisor." Firms that use this title (or a variation of it) include:
* While "financial advisor" appears to be the title most commonly used by sales-based professionals, other firms have adopted variations that create a similar impression. For example, Schwab, Stephens, and
Brokerage and insurance firms are so eager to attract clients and increase sales, they create the expectation that they are providing fiduciary investment advice rather than non-fiduciary investment sales. Here is how they do it:
* They routinely refer to their financial professionals not as sales representatives or agents but as "financial advisors" and indicate that they have a level of expertise that can and should be relied upon by their less sophisticated clients. In the in-depth review of company websites, researchers did not find one firm that referred to its financial professionals as salespeople.
* They typically describe their services as providing investment "advice" and retirement "planning," not simply product sales. The CFA/AFR review of company websites did not identify any prominent description of their services as arm's length investment sales recommendations.
* They market those services with messages whose clear intent is to convince retirement savers that they should trust that their advisor will be looking out for their best interests. In so doing, firms encourage reliance on their expertise and recommendations.
According to the new CFA/AFR report: "This (the positioning on industry websites of financial professionals) stands in sharp contrast to how financial trade associations have presented their business practices in legal filings challenging the DOL rule. In such filings, the
An earlier report from the
Americans for Financial Reform (AFR) is a nonpartisan and nonprofit coalition of more than 200 civil rights, consumer, labor, business, investor, faith-based, and civic and community groups. Formed in the wake of the 2008 crisis, we are working to lay the foundation for a strong, stable, and ethical financial system - one that serves the economy and the nation as a whole. AFR has been called "the leading voice for
[Category: Consumer Services]
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