Market Features
WASHINGTON -- Reacting to sharp criticism, the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission Tuesday said the agency is weighing changes in a plan to exempt a new breed of flat-fee investment accounts from investor protection safeguards. "We are sensitive to the concerns many of you have that these accounts have the potential to mislead investors," Chairman Arthur Levitt said at a meeting of investment professionals and regulators. "Based on your comments, we are now considering more specific disclosure requirements in the final rule." Rather than charge per-trade commissions, the new accounts levy annual fees pegged to the value of assets. At the urging of the brokerage industry, the SEC is considering a rule that would exempt these accounts from the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, a centerpiece of the nation's securities laws. If adopted, the exemption would remove vital protections, consumer advocates warn. At a meeting to discuss the role of investment advisers, Levitt acknowledged criticism of the proposed rule, but stopped short of providing specifics of any changes. The issue arises because the new accounts' fees could legally be considered "special compensation" -- essentially, payment for advice -- and that has traditionally kicked in coverage of the 1940 act. If the new accounts are subject to the act, broker-dealers must make detailed disclosures about such things as whether they have a financial interest in anything they recommend, or whether they've been the subject of disciplinary actions. They have a higher duty to clients, and to putting client interests ahead of their own. And they are restricted in trading directly with their clients, such as when their firm may have a particular security it wants to push. But if the new accounts aren't subject to the act, they're considered to be ordinary brokerage accounts, and a different standard prevails. Generally, brokers must only make "suitable" recommendations for each client. The industry says the new plans simply reprice existing services, and thus shouldn't be subject to the 1940 act any more than traditional commission accounts. The SEC, working closely with the industry, proposed the new rule, which would exempt the new accounts if three conditions are met:
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