Suitability grabs regulators attention |
Date: Thursday, January 22, 2009
Author: James Langton, Investment Executive
Retail investors want greater accountability from both dealers and regulators.
Knowing the clients you serve and the investments you sell should be a
no-brainer for any financial advisor. Yet suitability is a perennial
source of client complaints and compliance deficiencies. And regulators
may need to force closer attention to the issue.
In mid-December, the Joint Standing Committee on Retail Investor Issues — comprising the Ontario Securities Commission, the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada, the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada and the Ombudsman for Banking Services and Investments — released the results of its public consultations on the issue of product suitability.
Larry
Ritchie, vice chairman of the OSC and head of the joint standing
committee, reports that in those consultations, regulators heard that
investors are looking for greater accountability from both dealers and
regulators when it comes to ensuring suitability. “Retail investors
want the regulators to ensure that dealers have a more robust due
diligence and new product review process,” Ritchie says. “And [for both
to ensure] that advisors are properly trained and supervised so that
the people recommending products are in a sufficient position to meet
their [suitability] obligations.”
Ritchie says the
consultations also revealed that retail investors are feeling very
vulnerable in the current volatile markets, that they rely on their
advisors a great deal and that they need “sufficient and more
meaningful information and dialogue with [their advisors].”
This isn’t just a Canadian phenomenon. This past April, the Basel, Switzerland-based Bank for International Settlements
published a review of retail suitability requirements and practices
across 11 countries. The review concluded that the need for financial
advice is likely to grow, and the complexity of financial products is
likely to increase. “The coincidence of these trends should not be lost
on regulators or firms,” the BIS report says. “Consumers will need to
be able to rely on good advice about products that are suitable for
them, with conflicts of interest, if not avoided, clearly disclosed.”
For
regulators, that means looking at existing rules to determine whether
they clearly set out those obligations, or if those rules need to be
beefed up.
The OSC is assessing the adequacy of existing rules
and, although it hasn’t come to any conclusions, Ritchie believes the
suitability requirements are already well enunciated. Still, he says,
investor concerns about these issues will be factored into other
relevant rule-making initiatives, including the registration reform
project, the investment funds point-of-sale regime and initiatives to
improve firms’ complaint handling and investor redress mechanisms.
In
the meantime, despite the fact that know-your-client and suitability
rules are a well-entrenched part of the regulatory system, they seem to
be routinely violated.
For example, IIROC’s examination of the
failures in the non-bank asset-backed commercial paper market found
that many dealers didn’t understand these products, yet sold them to
retail clients. The result: about 2,500 clients were left holding $372
million in frozen paper when the $35-billion non-bank ABCP market
seized up.
To be fair, most firms didn’t sell or manufacture
this paper. But for those that did, it appears there was a complete
failure to ensure suitability. The reason, according to the IIROC
report, was that most firms didn’t regard ABCP as a new or particularly
complex product. Instead, they saw it as just another money-market
instrument — and not a particularly lucrative one at that. So, dealers
didn’t subject ABCP to their due-diligence processes and manufacturers
bypassed their new product review processes. Nor did either group
provide any special training or materials to advisors who sold ABCP,
their supervisors or compliance staff.
The ABCP debacle is the
most recent — and starkest — example of suitability failures, but it is
not the only one. According to the OSC’s compliance report for its
latest fiscal year, 64% of the limited market dealers it reviewed had
“significant deficiencies” in their ability to make suitability
assessments. This was, far and away, the most common deficiency; the
use of exemptions and disclosure failures came in a distant second, at
just 29% of firms.
Among the deficiencies the OSC found were
firms that didn’t properly collect the KYC documentation, KYC
information that was inadequate or incomplete, and that some firms
contracted out their duty to ensure suitability.
These
widespread failings represent the flip side to the suitability failings
revealed in the ABCP market. To ensure suitability, advisors and firms
must know the products they are selling and the clients to whom they
are being sold. In the ABCP market, it was the former responsibility
that was ignored; OSC compliance examinations have found widespread
failure of the latter duty.
So, if the rules already clearly
spell out the obligation to ensure suitability, yet suitability is
routinely being ignored, then ensuring that firms live up to these
obligations seems to be a job for compliance and enforcement.
Ritchie
declines to say whether more enforcement action is needed to drive home
the message, but he does point to an August 2008 OSC decision that
addresses suitability failures. “It is very clear,” he says, “that we,
as a commission, take the position that the suitability obligations of
a registered representative include the obligation to know the client,
to know the product and to explain properly the risks associated with
the products they’re recommending.”
In that decision, the OSC
found that an advisor had violated the KYC and suitability obligations
in making unsuitable recommendations to six investors. As a result, his
registration was terminated, he was banned from serving as a director
or officer of a registrant and he was reprimanded. No financial
sanctions were ordered as the commission panel accepted a joint
submission from both sides in the hearing recommending that he merely
be banned from the industry. The panel noted that it might have imposed
additional penalties had there not been an agreement on proposed
sanctions.
Certainly, Ritchie says, it is up to regulators to
get the message out to the industry: “Its important that existing
regulations are enforced, and the OSC is committed to that. It is also
essential that regulators work with market participants to ensure that
they understand and are fulfilling their obligations. That’s an
important role that our compliance team plays.”
The
self-regulatory organizations have also addressed these deficiencies
through added guidance. In April 2008, the MFDA published a notice on
how its members could establish a framework for complying with the
MFDA’s suitability obligations. In addition to its extensive notice,
the MFDA has also proposed amendments to two rules to bring them in
line with the expanded guidance.
Along with IIROC’s review of
the dealers’ involvement with ABCP, the SRO has made several
recommendations that deal with product due diligence and has published
draft guidance that sets out best practices for product reviews. That
guidance goes beyond ABCP issues, noting that concerns about
suitability and conflicts of interest have arisen with the emergence of
other complex products such as principal-protected notes.
It
remains to be seen if firms will finally get the message. Yet, some
dealers seem to be less worried about their own failures and more
concerned about other parts of the financial services sector that don’t
face similar requirements.
Karen McGuinness, vice president of
compliance with the MFDA, reports that the SRO is hearing more frequent
complaints from mutual fund dealers about competitive investment
products (primarily, segregated funds) being sold without the same
regulatory requirements, including suitability obligations. “This leads
to regulatory arbitrage,” she says, “which may not be in the best
interest of the investing public.”
This complaint was echoed
in the BIS report, which found that suitability rules are more specific
and enforcement more likely to occur in the securities sector.
Yet,
that doesn’t diminish the securities industry’s own suitability
shortcomings, which must be addressed. So, if rule changes, added
guidance and tougher enforcement aren’t enough, perhaps firms should
consider paying advisors for compliance.
The BIS report
suggests a number of ways that regulators and firms could improve
suitability performance: “Firms should consider the implementation of a
remuneration system that rewards those who make substantial efforts to
comply, and do comply with the highest suitability and disclosure
standards.”
By themselves, suitability rules clearly aren’t
enough. If pushier compliance and tougher enforcement don’t do the
trick, there is always the option of paying for quality due diligence.
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