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CFP Board removes compensation descriptions from consumer website

By Knut Rostad on March 3, 2020

Organization says the best way for clients to select an adviser is ‘to have a conversation’ with the adviser

This article by Mark Schoeff Jr. originally appeared on Investment News

The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. has removed descriptions of how advisers are compensated from the profiles of CFP certificants on a website designed to help consumers select an adviser, the organization said in an email sent Monday to CFPs.

The CFP Board scrubbed from the Find Your CFP Professional search function on its letsmakeaplan.org website references to how CFPs are paid.

“The three compensation method categories previously provided by the search tool – Commission-only, Commission and Fee and Fee-Only – were broad enough to capture the various compensation methods financial planners use today, but not very specific or helpful to consumers,” the CFP Board said in a letter to certificants Monday. “We believe the best way for consumers to select their financial advisor is to have a conversation with their prospective advisor.”

The letter goes on to say: “To help consumers make an educated decision about choosing and hiring a financial advisor, we have also updated the set of Questions to Ask Your Financial Advisor on the letsmakeaplan.org website.”

The website is featured in the organization’s approximately $11.7 million annual advertising campaign to raise consumer awareness of the CFP credential.

Last year, the CFP Board approved raising the advice standard connected to the credential. Under the strengthened rules, CFPs must act as fiduciaries at all times while giving advice to clients. Previously, the fiduciary requirement only applied to CFPs when helping their clients with financial planning. The new standard goes into force on June 30.

“CFP professionals are expected to adhere to CFP Board’s standards, including our Code of Ethics and Standards of Conduct, regardless of business model or compensation method,” the Monday letter states.

A CFP must disclose to clients prior to doing business with them how the client pays for products and services and additional costs they may incur, such as management fees, surrender charges and sales loads, the letter states.

For CFPs who already display their compensation method on the website, the information “will eventually move to another section of your CFP Board account,” according to the letter.

Compensation methods have been a source of controversy for the CFP Board for years. The organization won a court case brought by CFPs who were disciplined for describing their practice as fee-only when they received commissions in one part of their operation.

Many advisers and investor advocates assert that fee-only advice is the best protection against adviser conflicts of interest.

Knut Rostad, president of the Institute for the Fiduciary Standard, said investors should have a clear idea of which advisers are fee-only. The CFP Board’s move is also inconsistent with the SEC’s current focus on and the CFP Board’s past statements about the importance of compensation disclosure, he said.

“It’s a huge mistake,” Mr. Rostad said.

“In every aspect that we can see, it is anti-consumer and anti-fiduciary,” he added. “The CFP Board should reverse the decision, acknowledge it’s a mistake and move on.”

Michael Kitces, a partner and director of wealth management at Pinnacle Advisory Group, was surprised by CFP Board’s decision to remove compensation descriptions from the website.

Read the rest of the article on Investment News.

Dan Moisand

 

Dan Moisand is a nationally recognized fiduciary fee-only financial planner, an Institute Real Fiduciary™ Advisor and Chair-elect of the CFP Board.

The Institute has enshrined the ‘Moisand Rule’ on fiduciary practices. It is basic and is more important today than ever: “You have to avoid conflicts. If I avoid a conflict, I don’t worry about it.”

Watch the video of Moisand speaking here.

Bob Veres

 

Bob Veres is a long term observer of financial planning. His Newsletter, “Inside information” Is a staple of leading planners. In the May edition he writes about fiduciary and the Institute.

"But a much bigger point is that the fiduciary standard—as Knut Rostad of the Institute for the Fiduciary Standard has pointed out—has been determined by the Supreme Court (1963 ruling) to be at the very heart of the Investment Advisers Act of 1940. It is the foundation of what it means to be an RIA registered with the SEC instead of a tipster or a tout."

- Bob Veres, Parting Thoughts ... The SEC's Own Compliance Culture

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