82_FR_56773 82 FR 56545 - 18-Month Extension of Transition Period and Delay of Applicability Dates; Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016-01); Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (PTE 84-24)

82 FR 56545 - 18-Month Extension of Transition Period and Delay of Applicability Dates; Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016-01); Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (PTE 84-24)

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employee Benefits Security Administration

Federal Register Volume 82, Issue 228 (November 29, 2017)

Page Range56545-56560
FR Document2017-25760

This document extends the special transition period under sections II and IX of the Best Interest Contract Exemption and section VII of the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs for 18 months. This document also delays the applicability of certain amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for the same period. The primary purpose of the amendments is to give the Department of Labor the time necessary to consider public comments under the criteria set forth in the Presidential Memorandum of February 3, 2017, including whether possible changes and alternatives to these exemptions would be appropriate in light of the current comment record and potential input from, and action by, the Securities and Exchange Commission and state insurance commissioners. The Department is granting the delay because of its concern that, without a delay in the applicability dates, consumers may face significant confusion, and regulated parties may incur undue expense to comply with conditions or requirements that the Department ultimately determines to revise or repeal. The former transition period was from June 9, 2017, to January 1, 2018. The new transition period ends on July 1, 2019, rather than on January 1, 2018. The amendments to these exemptions affect participants and beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners and fiduciaries with respect to such plans and IRAs.

Federal Register, Volume 82 Issue 228 (Wednesday, November 29, 2017)
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 228 (Wednesday, November 29, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 56545-56560]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2017-25760]


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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Employee Benefits Security Administration

29 CFR Part 2550

[Application Number D-11712; D-11713; D-11850]
ZRIN 1210-ZA27


18-Month Extension of Transition Period and Delay of 
Applicability Dates; Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016-01); 
Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets Between 
Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 
2016-02); Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain 
Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension 
Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company Principal 
Underwriters (PTE 84-24)

AGENCY: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Labor.

ACTION: Extension of the transition period for PTE amendments.

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SUMMARY: This document extends the special transition period under 
sections II and IX of the Best Interest Contract Exemption and section 
VII of the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets 
between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and 
IRAs for 18 months. This document also delays the applicability of 
certain amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for the 
same period. The primary purpose of the amendments is to give the 
Department of Labor the time necessary to consider public comments 
under the criteria set forth in the Presidential Memorandum of February 
3, 2017, including whether possible changes and alternatives to these 
exemptions would be appropriate in light of the current comment record 
and potential input from, and action by, the Securities and Exchange 
Commission and state insurance commissioners. The Department is 
granting the delay because of its concern that, without a delay in the 
applicability dates, consumers may face significant confusion, and 
regulated parties may incur undue expense to comply with conditions or 
requirements that the Department ultimately determines to revise or 
repeal. The former transition period was from June 9, 2017, to January 
1, 2018. The new transition period ends on July 1, 2019, rather than on 
January 1, 2018. The amendments to these exemptions affect participants 
and beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners and fiduciaries with respect to 
such plans and IRAs.

DATES: This document extends the special transition period under 
sections II and IX of the Best Interest Contract Exemption and section 
VII of the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets 
between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and 
IRAs (82 FR 16902) to July 1, 2019, and delays the applicability of 
certain amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 from 
January 1, 2018 (82 FR 16902) until July 1, 2019. See Section G of the 
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for a list of dates for the 
amendments to the prohibited transaction exemptions.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Shiker or Susan Wilker, 
telephone (202) 693-8824, Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee 
Benefits Security Administration.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

A. Procedural Background

ERISA & the 1975 Regulation

    Section 3(21)(A)(ii) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act 
of 1974, as amended (ERISA), in relevant part provides that a person is 
a fiduciary with respect to a plan to the extent he or she renders 
investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect, 
with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan, or has any 
authority or responsibility to do so. Section 4975(e)(3)(B) of the 
Internal Revenue Code (``Code'') has a parallel

[[Page 56546]]

provision that defines a fiduciary of a plan (including an individual 
retirement account or individual retirement annuity (IRA)). The 
Department of Labor (``the Department'') in 1975 issued a regulation 
establishing a five-part test under this section of ERISA. See 29 CFR 
2510.3-21(c)(1) (2015).\1\ The Department's 1975 regulation also 
applied to the definition of fiduciary in the Code.
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    \1\ The 1975 Regulation was published as a final rule at 40 FR 
50842 (Oct. 31, 1975).
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The New Fiduciary Rule & Related Exemptions

    On April 8, 2016, the Department replaced the 1975 regulation with 
a new regulatory definition (the ``Fiduciary Rule''). The Fiduciary 
Rule defines who is a ``fiduciary'' of an employee benefit plan under 
section 3(21)(A)(ii) of ERISA as a result of giving investment advice 
to a plan or its participants or beneficiaries for a fee or other 
compensation. The Fiduciary Rule also applies to the definition of a 
``fiduciary'' of a plan in the Code pursuant to Reorganization Plan No. 
4 of 1978, 5 U.S.C. App. 1, 92 Stat. 3790. The Fiduciary Rule treats 
persons who provide investment advice or recommendations for a fee or 
other compensation with respect to assets of a plan or IRA as 
fiduciaries in a wider array of advice relationships than was true 
under the 1975 regulation. On the same date, the Department published 
two new administrative class exemptions from the prohibited transaction 
provisions of ERISA (29 U.S.C. 1106) and the Code (26 U.S.C. 
4975(c)(1)) (the Best Interest Contract Exemption (BIC Exemption) and 
the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets 
Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and 
IRAs (Principal Transactions Exemption)) as well as amendments to 
previously granted exemptions (collectively referred to as ``PTEs,'' 
unless otherwise indicated). The Fiduciary Rule and PTEs had an 
original applicability date of April 10, 2017.

Presidential Memorandum

    By Memorandum dated February 3, 2017, the President directed the 
Department to prepare an updated analysis of the likely impact of the 
Fiduciary Rule on access to retirement information and financial 
advice. The President's Memorandum was published in the Federal 
Register on February 7, 2017, at 82 FR 9675. On March 2, 2017, the 
Department published a notice of proposed rulemaking that proposed a 
60-day delay of the applicability date of the Rule and PTEs. The 
proposal also sought public comments on the questions raised in the 
Presidential Memorandum and generally on questions of law and policy 
concerning the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.\2\ As of the close of the first 
comment period on March 17, 2017, the Department had received nearly 
200,000 comment and petition letters expressing a wide range of views 
on the proposed 60-day delay. Approximately 650 commenters supported a 
delay of 60 days or longer, with some requesting at least 180 days and 
some up to 240 days or a year or longer (including an indefinite delay 
or repeal); approximately 450 commenters opposed any delay. Similarly, 
approximately 15,000 petitioners supported a delay and approximately 
178,000 petitioners opposed a delay.
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    \2\ 82 FR 12319.
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First Delay of Applicability Dates

    On April 7, 2017, the Department promulgated a final rule extending 
the applicability date of the Fiduciary Rule by 60 days from April 10, 
2017, to June 9, 2017 (``April Delay Rule'').\3\ It also extended from 
April 10 to June 9, the applicability dates of the BIC Exemption and 
Principal Transactions Exemption and required investment advice 
fiduciaries relying on these exemptions to adhere only to the Impartial 
Conduct Standards as conditions of those exemptions during a transition 
period from June 9, 2017, through January 1, 2018. The April Delay Rule 
also delayed the applicability of amendments to an existing exemption, 
Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 (PTE 84-24), until January 1, 
2018, other than the Impartial Conduct Standards, which became 
applicable on June 9, 2017. Lastly, the April Delay Rule extended for 
60 days, until June 9, 2017, the applicability dates of amendments to 
other previously granted exemptions. The 60-day delay, including the 
delay of the Impartial Conduct Standards in the BIC Exemption and 
Principal Transactions Exemption, was considered appropriate by the 
Department at that time. Compliance with other conditions for 
transactions covered by these exemptions, such as requirements to make 
specific disclosures and representations of fiduciary compliance in 
written communications with investors, was postponed until January 1, 
2018, by which time the Department intended to complete the examination 
and analysis directed by the Presidential Memorandum.
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    \3\ 82 FR 16902.
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Request for Information

    On July 6, 2017, the Department published in the Federal Register a 
Request for Information (RFI).\4\ The purpose of the RFI was to augment 
some of the public commentary and input received in response to the 
April Delay, and to request comments on issues raised in the 
Presidential Memorandum. In particular, the RFI sought public input 
that could form the basis of new exemptions or changes to the Rule and 
PTEs. The RFI also specifically sought input regarding the advisability 
of extending the January 1, 2018, applicability date of certain 
provisions in the BIC Exemption, the Principal Transactions Exemption, 
and PTE 84-24. Question 1 of the RFI specifically asked whether a delay 
in the January 1, 2018, applicability date of the provisions in the BIC 
Exemption, Principal Transactions Exemption and amendments to PTE 84-24 
would benefit retirement investors by allowing for more efficient 
implementation responsive to recent market developments and reduce 
burdens on financial services providers. Comments relating to an 
extension of the January 1, 2018, applicability date of certain 
provisions were requested by July 21, 2017. All other comments were 
requested by August 7, 2017. The Department received approximately 
60,000 comment and petition letters expressing a wide range of views on 
whether the Department should grant an additional delay and what should 
be the duration of any such delay. Many commenters supported delaying 
the January 1, 2018, applicability dates of these PTEs. Other 
commenters disagreed, however, asserting that full application of the 
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs is necessary to protect retirement investors 
from conflicts of interests, that the original applicability dates 
should not have been delayed from April, 2017, and that the January 1, 
2018, date should not be further delayed. Still others stated their 
view that the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs should be repealed and replaced, 
either with the original 1975 regulation or with a substantially 
revised rule. Among the commenters supporting a delay, some suggested a 
fixed length of time and others suggested a more open-ended delay. 
Supporters of a fixed-length delay did not express a consensus view on 
the appropriate length, but the range generally was 1 to 2 years from 
the current applicability date of January 1,

[[Page 56547]]

2018. Those commenters suggesting a more open-ended framework for 
measuring the length of the delay generally recommended that the 
applicability date be delayed for at least as long as it takes the 
Department to finish the reexamination directed by the President. These 
commenters suggested that the length of the delay should be measured 
from the date the Department, after finishing the reexamination, either 
announces that there will be no new amendments or exemptions or 
publishes a new exemption or major revisions to the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs.
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    \4\ 82 FR 31278.
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B. Proposed Amendments--18-Month Delay

    On August 31, 2017, the Department published a proposal (the August 
31 Notice) to extend the current special transition period under 
sections II and IX of the BIC Exemption and section VII of the 
Principal Transactions Exemption from January 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019. 
The Department also proposed in the August 31 Notice to delay the 
applicability of certain amendments to PTE 84-24 for the same 
period.\5\ Although proposing a date-certain delay (18 months), the 
Department specifically asked for input on various alternative 
approaches. The Department received approximately 145 comment letters. 
Approximately 110 commenters support a delay of 18 months or longer; 
and, by contrast, approximately 35 commenters oppose any delay.\6\ The 
Department also received two petitions containing approximately 2,860 
signatures or letters supporting the delay. These comment letters are 
available for public inspection on EBSA's Web site. Specific views and 
positions of commenters are discussed below in section C of this 
document.
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    \5\ 82 FR 41365 (entitled ``Extension of Transition Period and 
Delay of Applicability Dates; Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 
2016-01); Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain 
Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit 
Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 
for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, 
Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company 
Principal Underwriters (PTE 84-24)'').
    \6\ The Department includes these counts only to provide a rough 
sense of the scope and diversity of public comments. For this 
purpose, the Department counted letters that do not expressly 
support or oppose the proposed delay, but that express concerns or 
general opposition to the Fiduciary Rule or PTEs, as supporting 
delay. Similarly, letters that do not expressly support or oppose 
the proposed delay, but that express general support for the Rule or 
PTEs, were counted as opposing a delay.
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BIC Exemption (PTE 2016-01) and Principal Transactions Exemption (PTE 
2016-02)

    Although the Fiduciary Rule, BIC Exemption, and Principal 
Transactions Exemption first became applicable on June 9, 2017, with 
transition relief through January 1, 2018, the August 31 Notice 
proposed to extend the Transition Period until July 1, 2019. During 
this extended Transition Period, ``Financial Institutions'' and 
``Advisers,'' as defined in the exemptions, would only have to comply 
with the ``Impartial Conduct Standards'' to satisfy the exemptions' 
requirements. In general, this means that Financial Institutions and 
Advisers must give prudent advice that is in retirement investors' best 
interest, charge no more than reasonable compensation, and avoid 
misleading statements.\7\
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    \7\ In the Principal Transactions Exemption, the Impartial 
Conduct Standards specifically refer to the fiduciary's obligation 
to seek to obtain the best execution reasonably available under the 
circumstances with respect to the transaction, rather than to 
receive no more than ``reasonable compensation.''
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    The August 31 Notice proposed that the remaining conditions of the 
BIC Exemption would not become applicable until July 1, 2019. Remaining 
conditions include the requirement, for transactions involving IRA 
owners, that the Financial Institution enter into an enforceable 
written contract with the retirement investor. The contract would 
include an enforceable promise to adhere to the Impartial Conduct 
Standards, an express acknowledgement of fiduciary status, and a 
variety of disclosures related to fees, services, and conflicts of 
interest. IRA owners, who do not have statutory enforcement rights 
under ERISA, would be able to enforce their contractual rights under 
state law. Also, as of July 1, 2019, the exemption would require 
Financial Institutions to adopt a substantial number of new policies 
and procedures that meet specified conflict-mitigation criteria. In 
particular, the policies and procedures must be reasonably and 
prudently designed to ensure that Advisers adhere to the Impartial 
Conduct Standards and must provide that neither the Financial 
Institution nor (to the best of its knowledge) its affiliates or 
related entities will use or rely on quotas, appraisals, performance or 
personnel actions, bonuses, contests, special awards, differential 
compensation, or other actions or incentives that are intended or would 
reasonably be expected to cause advisers to make recommendations that 
are not in the best interest of the retirement investor. Also as of 
July 1, 2019, Financial Institutions entering into contracts with IRA 
owners pursuant to the exemption would have to include a warranty that 
they have adopted and will comply with the required policies and 
procedures. Financial Institutions would also be required at that time 
to provide disclosures, both to the individual retirement investor on a 
transaction basis, and on a Web site.
    Similarly, while the Principal Transactions Exemption is 
conditioned solely on adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards 
during the Transition Period, the August 31 Notice also proposed that 
its remaining conditions would become applicable on July 1, 2019. The 
Principal Transactions Exemption permits investment advice fiduciaries 
to sell to or purchase from plans or IRAs ``principal traded assets'' 
through ``principal transactions'' and ``riskless principal 
transactions''--transactions involving the sale from or purchase for 
the Financial Institution's own inventory. As of July 1, 2019, the 
exemption would require a contract and a policies and procedures 
warranty that mirror the requirements in the BIC Exemption. The 
Principal Transactions Exemption also includes some conditions that are 
different from the BIC Exemption, including credit and liquidity 
standards for debt securities sold to plans and IRAs pursuant to the 
exemption and additional disclosure requirements.

PTE 84-24

    PTE 84-24, which applies to advisory transactions involving 
insurance and annuity contracts and mutual fund shares, was most 
recently amended in 2016 in conjunction with the development of the 
Fiduciary Rule, BIC Exemption, and Principal Transactions Exemption.\8\ 
Among other changes, the amendments included new definitional terms, 
added the Impartial Conduct Standards as requirements for relief, and 
revoked relief for transactions involving fixed indexed annuity 
contracts and variable annuity contracts, effectively requiring those 
Advisers who receive conflicted compensation for recommending these 
products to rely upon the BIC Exemption. However, except for the 
Impartial Conduct Standards, which were applicable beginning June 9, 
2017, the August 31 Notice proposed that the remaining amendments would 
not be applicable until July 1, 2019. Thus, because the amendment 
revoking the availability of PTE 84-24 for fixed indexed annuities 
would not be not be applicable until July 1, 2019, affected parties 
(including

[[Page 56548]]

insurance intermediaries) would be able to rely on PTE 84-24, subject 
to the existing conditions of the exemption and the Impartial Conduct 
Standards, for recommendations involving all annuity contracts during 
the Transition Period.
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    \8\ 81 FR 21147 (April 8, 2016).
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C. Comments and Decisions

Extension of the Transition Period

    Based on its review and evaluation of the public comments, the 
Department is adopting the proposed amendments without change. Thus, 
the Transition Period in the BIC Exemption and Principal Transaction 
Exemption is extended for 18 months until July 1, 2019, and the 
applicability date of the amendments to PTE 84-24, other than the 
Impartial Conduct Standards, is delayed for the same period. 
Accordingly, the same rules and standards in effect between June 9, 
2017, and December 31, 2017, will remain in effect throughout the 
duration of the extended Transition Period. Consequently, Financial 
Institutions and Advisers must continue to give prudent advice that is 
in retirement investors' best interest, charge no more than reasonable 
compensation, and avoid misleading statements. As the Department has 
stated previously:

    The Impartial Conduct Standards represent fundamental 
obligations of fair dealing and fiduciary conduct. The concepts of 
prudence, undivided loyalty and reasonable compensation are all 
deeply rooted in ERISA and the common law of agency and trusts. 
These longstanding concepts of law and equity were developed in 
significant part to deal with the issues that arise when agents and 
persons in a position of trust have conflicting loyalties, and 
accordingly, are well-suited to the problems posed by conflicted 
investment advice.\9\
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    \9\ Best Interest Contract Exemption, 81 FR 21002, 21026 (April 
8, 2016) (footnote omitted).

    It is based on the continued adherence to these fundamental 
protections that the Department, pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 1108 and 26 
U.S.C. 4975, is making the necessary findings and granting the 
extension until July 1, 2019.
    A delay of the remaining conditions of the BIC Exemption and 
Principal Transactions Exemption, and of the remaining amendments to 
PTE 84-24, is necessary and appropriate for multiple reasons. To begin 
with, the Department has not yet completed the reexamination of the 
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, as directed by the President on February 3, 
2017. More time is needed to carefully and thoughtfully review the 
substantial commentary received in response to the multiple 
solicitations for comments in 2017 and to honor the President's 
directive to take a hard look at any potential undue burden. Whether, 
and to what extent, there will be changes to the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs as a result of this reexamination is unknown until its completion. 
The examination will help identify any potential alternative exemptions 
or conditions that could reduce costs and increase benefits to all 
affected parties, without unduly compromising protections for 
retirement investors. The Department anticipates that it will have a 
much clearer sense of the range of such alternatives only after it 
completes a careful review of the responses to the RFI. The Department 
also anticipates that it will propose in the near future a new 
streamlined class exemption. However, neither such a proposal nor any 
other changes or modifications to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, if any, 
realistically could be finalized by the current January 1, 2018, 
applicability date. Nor would that timeframe accommodate the 
Department's desire to coordinate with the Securities and Exchange 
Commission (SEC) and other regulators, such as the Financial Industry 
Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the National Association of Insurance 
Commissioners (NAIC) in the development of any such proposal or 
changes. The Chairman of the SEC has recently published a statement 
seeking public comments on the standards of conduct for investment 
advisers and broker-dealers, and has welcomed the Department's 
invitation to engage constructively as the SEC moves forward with its 
examination of the standards of conduct applicable to investment 
advisers and broker-dealers, and related matters. Absent a delay, 
however, Financial Institutions and Advisers would feel compelled to 
ready themselves for the provisions that would become applicable on 
January 1, 2018, despite the possibility of changes and alternatives on 
the horizon. The 18-month delay avoids obligating financial services 
providers to incur costs to comply with conditions, which may be 
revised, repealed, or replaced. The delay also avoids attendant 
investor confusion, ensuring that investors do not receive conflicting 
and confusing statements from their financial advisors as the result of 
any later revisions.
    Not all commenters support this approach. As mentioned above, the 
Department received approximately 145 comment letters on the proposed 
18-month delay. As with earlier comments on the April Delay Rule, as 
well as those received in response to Question 1 of the RFI, there is 
no uniform consensus on whether a delay is appropriate, or on the 
appropriate length of any delay. Some commenters supported the proposed 
18-month delay, some commenters sought longer delays, and still other 
commenters opposed any delay at all. However, a clear majority of 
commenters support a delay of at least 18 months, with many supporting 
a much longer delay.
    The primary reason commenters cited in support of the delay was to 
avoid unnecessary costs of compliance with provisions of the Fiduciary 
Rule and PTEs that the commenters believed could be changed or 
rescinded upon completion of the review under the Presidential 
Memorandum.\10\ Other reasons cited by commenters were to provide time 
for the Department to coordinate with the SEC and other regulators such 
as FINRA and the NAIC; allow more time for industry to come into 
compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, including additional time 
to develop disclosures and train employees; and to reduce the 
possibility of client confusion resulting from attempts to comply with 
provisions of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs that may change following the 
review pursuant to the President's Memorandum.\11\
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    \10\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #42 (Western & Southern Financial 
Group) (``only after the Fiduciary Regulation has been reviewed and 
revisions to it have been proposed and finalized (all in accordance 
with President Trump's February 3, 2017 memorandum) will WSF&G and 
other similarly situated companies know with certainty what 
conditions will be placed on providing investment advice to 
retirement investors. Only then, can we appropriately design and 
implement compliance structures, make investments in information 
technology, and produce products and services that meet both the 
revised Fiduciary Regulation requirements and the needs of 
retirement investors.''); Comment Letter #76 (Groom Law Group, on 
Behalf of Annuity and Insurance Company Clients) (``[i]n the absence 
of the eighteen-month extension, financial service providers, 
retirement plans, and individual savers would be subjected to 
extreme market dislocations. The pricing of investment products and 
services, the distribution models under which those services are 
delivered and the job responsibilities of thousands of financial 
services firm employees would be subject to severe dislocation as 
new requirements take effect. In addition, retirement savers' access 
to investment advice and the terms and conditions under which that 
investment advice would be provided could change repeatedly and 
dramatically as changes to the Fiduciary Rule are made and new FAQs 
are issued.''); Comment Letter #79 (Investment Company Institute) 
(``[a]bsent a delay, service providers will continue to spend 
significant amounts preparing for January 1, 2018, the vast majority 
of which will be spent implementing the more cumbersome and 
technically complicated aspects of the BIC Exemption conditions.'').
    \11\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #52 (Transamerica) (``to avoid 
wasteful and duplicative compliance costs and business model 
changes'' and ``to permit further time for coordination with the 
SEC.''); Comment Letter #55 (Prudential Financial) (supporting the 
proposed extension/delay as ``sufficient for the Department to 
assess and develop needed Rule changes, engage in meaningful 
coordination with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as 
the states and other prudential regulators, and adopt those 
changes'' and also to minimize ``confusion on the part of consumers 
and brings certainty to the financial services industry.''); Comment 
Letter #63 (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company) (will 
``benefit retirement investors by ensuring that their access to 
products or advice is not needlessly restricted or reduced as a 
result of . . . changes to business models . . . that may prove 
unnecessary,'' and ``will provide time for the Department to 
complete its review of the Fiduciary Rule pursuant to the 
Presidential Memorandum,'' and ``to work with the Securities and 
Exchange Commission and the National Association of Insurance 
Commissioners.''); Comment Letter #88 (AXA US) (``will provide the 
Department with sufficient time to work with other regulators to 
develop a harmonized regulatory framework'' and also ``will allow 
industry participants adequate time to comply with the Rule's final 
requirements''); Comment Letter #375 (Stifel Financial Corp.) (July 
25, 2017, response to RFI) (``Thus, with the Impartial Conduct 
Standards already in place for retirement accounts, the DOL and SEC 
should move together and conduct a proper and fulsome study of 
whether additional requirements are needed to achieve appropriate 
consumer protections while maintaining investor choice. As the DOL 
and SEC study these issues, and to prevent further disruption to 
Brokerage and Advisory business models, it is critical that the DOL 
delay the January 1, 2018 implementation date for the additional 
conditions of the Best Interest Contract Exemption, including the 
contractual warranties, until a solution is determined.'').

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[[Page 56549]]

    The primary reason commenters gave against the delay is that 
investors will be economically harmed during the 18-month delay period 
because, according to these commenters, there would not be any 
meaningful enforcement mechanism in the PTEs without the contract, 
warranty, disclosure and other enforcement and accountability 
conditions.\12\ According to these commenters, there is no credible 
basis to believe that significant numbers of Financial Institutions and 
Advisers will actually comply with the Impartial Conduct Standards when 
advising investors during the Transition Period without these 
enforcement and accountability conditions. In the view of these 
commenters, the Department's 2016 RIA supports their position that 
compliance numbers will be low with the enforcement and accountability 
conditions being delayed until July 1, 2019. If Financial Institutions 
and Advisers do not adhere to the Impartial Conduct Standards, the 
investor gains predicted in the Department's 2016 RIA for the 
Transition Period will not remain intact, according to these 
commenters, in which case the cost of the 18-month delay would exceed 
its benefits. Assuming twenty-five, fifty, and seventy-five percent 
compliance rates, one commenter estimates that delaying the enforcement 
conditions an additional 18 months would cost retirement savers an 
additional $5.5 billion (75 percent compliance) to $16.3 billion (25 
percent compliance) over 30 years, with a middle estimate of $10.9 
billion (50 percent compliance).\13\ To support adherence to the 
Impartial Conduct Standards during the Transition Period, and thereby 
preserve some predicted investor gains, several of these commenters 
suggested that the Department, at a bare minimum, should add the 
specific disclosure and representation of fiduciary compliance 
conditions originally required for transition relief (but which were 
delayed by the April Delay Rule).\14\ A subset of enforcement 
conditions, less than the full set of conditions scheduled now for July 
1, 2019, would increase the likelihood of greater levels of adherence 
to the Impartial Conduct Standards during the Transition Period over 
those levels of adherence likely if no enforcement conditions are 
included, according to these commenters.
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    \12\  See, e.g., Comment Letter #20 (Consumer Action) (``no real 
evidence to believe that there will be compliance with the best-
interest rule without enforcement.''); Comment Letter #44 (Economic 
Policy Institute) (``Delaying DOL enforcement an additional 18 
months (from January 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019) would cost retirement 
savers an additional $5.5 billion to $16.3 billion over 30 years, 
with a middle estimate of $10.9 billion.''); Comment Letter #68 
(AARP) (``every day the protections of the prohibited transactions 
class exemptions are delayed the retirement security of hard working 
Americans is put at risk, along with potential negative impacts on 
the economy as a whole.''); Comment Letter #78 (Financial Planning 
Coalition) (``Without the PTEs, consumers do not have access to 
legally binding contracts on which they can rely to uphold their 
right to conflict-free advice in their best interest.''); Comment 
Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of America) (``Extending this 
transition period will mean that the full protections and benefits 
of the fiduciary rule won't be realized and retirement savers, 
particularly IRA investors, will continue to suffer the harmful 
consequences of conflicted advice.''); Comment Letter #81 (National 
Employment Law Project) (``Without any meaningful enforcement 
mechanism, which does not exist in the IRA market without the 
Contract Condition, there is no basis to conclude--as the Department 
erroneously does--that a significant number of investment-advice 
fiduciaries will adhere to the ICSs when advising IRA owners during 
the period of the proposed delay.''); Comment Letter #84 (Better 
Markets) (``The long-term suspension of these accountability 
conditions will remove an important deterrent against violations of 
the Rule, resulting in conflicts of interest taking a greater toll 
on IRA investors in particular and causing greater overall losses in 
retirement savings, especially as they are compounded over time.''); 
Comment Letter #91 (Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association) 
(``If the PTEs are not permitted to be fully implemented on January 
1, 2018, retirement investors will continue to be harmed by the same 
conflicts of interests that made the Rule and PTEs necessary in the 
first place.''); Comment Letter #120 (AFL-CIO) (``The Economic 
Policy Institute estimates that this proposal will cost retirement 
savers between $5.5 billion and $16.3 billion over thirty years--on 
top of the estimated $2.0 billion to $5.9 billion losses resulting 
from the Department's previous delay.''); Comment Letter #126 
(Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of 
Law) (``In sum, the Department's proposal that the benefits would 
remain intact even with the postponement of the enforcement 
provisions is at odds with its earlier analysis of the necessity of 
these provisions.'').
    \13\ Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy Institute).
    \14\ Comment Letter #20 (Consumer Action) (``we recommend that--
at a minimum--the Department require that by January 2018 firms and 
advisers agree to abide by the impartial conduct standard to 
acknowledge their fiduciary status.''); Comment Letter #80 (Consumer 
Federation of America) (``at a bare minimum, the Department must 
require firms and advisers to comply with the original transitional 
requirements of the exemptions, as set forth in Section IX of the 
BIC Exemption and Section VII of the Principal Transactions 
Exemption, not just the Impartial Conduct Standards. These include: 
(1) The minimal transition written disclosure requirements in which 
firms acknowledge their fiduciary status and that of their advisers 
with respect to their advice, state the Impartial Conduct Standards 
and provide a commitment to adhere to them, and describe the firm's 
material conflicts of interest and any limitations on product 
offering; (2) the requirement that firms designate a person 
responsible for addressing material conflicts of interest and 
monitoring advisers' adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards; 
and (3) the requirement that firms maintain records necessary to 
prove that the conditions of the exemption have been met.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Because the contract, warranty, disclosure and other enforcement 
and accountability conditions in the PTEs are intended to support 
adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards, the Department 
acknowledges that the 18-month delay may result in a deferral of some 
of the estimated investor gains. As discussed below in the regulatory 
impact analysis, the precise amount of such deferral is unknown because 
the precise degree of adherence during the 18-month period also is 
unknown. Many commenters strongly dispute the likelihood of any harm to 
investors as result of the delay of the enforcement and accountability 
conditions. These commenters emphatically believe that investors are 
sufficiently protected by the imposition of the Impartial Conduct 
Standards along with many applicable non-ERISA consumer 
protections.\15\

[[Page 56550]]

Many of these industry commenters note that fiduciary advisers who do 
not provide impartial advice as required by the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs 
in the IRA market would violate the prohibited transaction rules of the 
Code and become subject to the prohibited transaction excise tax. In 
addition, comments received by the Department assert that many 
financial institutions already have completed or largely completed work 
to establish policies and procedures necessary to make many of the 
business structure and practice shifts necessary to support compliance 
with the Fiduciary Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards (e.g., drafting 
and implementing training for staff, drafting client correspondence and 
explanations of revised product and service offerings, negotiating 
changes to agreements with product manufacturers as part of their 
approach to compliance with the PTEs, changing employee and agent 
compensation structures, and designing product offerings that mitigate 
conflicts of interest).\16\ After review of these comments, and meeting 
with stakeholders, the Department believes that many financial 
institutions are using their compliance infrastructure to ensure that 
they currently are meeting the requirements of the Impartial Conduct 
Standards, which the Department believes will substantially protect the 
investor gains estimated in the 2016 RIA. Additionally, the Department 
believes that there are two enforcement mechanisms in place: The 
imposition of excise taxes, and a statutorily-provided cause of action 
for advice to ERISA plan assets, including advice concerning rollovers 
of these assets.\17\ Given these conclusions, the Department declines 
to add additional conditions to the PTEs during the Transition Period, 
but will reevaluate this issue as part of the reexamination of the 
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs and in the context of considering the 
development of additional and more streamlined exemption approaches. 
Accordingly, as the Department continues its reexamination, the 
Department welcomes input and data from stakeholders demonstrating the 
regulated community's implementation of the Impartial Conduct 
Standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and Direct 
Investment Securities Association) (The Impartial Conduct Standards 
requirement ``can and does go a long way toward ensuring that 
retirement savers are provided with investment advice designed to 
allow them to meet their goals for retirement and otherwise.''); 
Comment Letter # 23 (Wells Fargo) (Because retirement investors will 
continue to receive the protections of the Impartial Conduct 
Standards, ``imposing additional compliance conditions in connection 
with any extension is unnecessary.''); Comment letter #38 (Federal 
Investors, Inc.) (``investor losses (if any) from extending the 
transition period would be expected to be relatively small, and as 
such, outweighed by the cost savings to firms by postponing changes 
that may prove unnecessary, or may have to be revisited''); Comment 
Letter #45 (Madison Securities) (``Because the Impartial Conduct 
Standards remain in place . . . to protect consumers, it is 
important for the Department to take the time necessary to address 
applicable issues and for the financial services industry to build 
adequate and appropriate systems to comply with any final rule.''); 
Comment Letter #50 (Paul Hastings LLP on behalf of Advisors Excel) 
(``with the Impartial Conduct Standards in place during the 
evaluation period, the interests of Retirement Investors are 
protected during the Department's review of the Rule.''); Comment 
Letter #56 (Benjamin F. Edwards & Co.) (``Given that the Impartial 
Conduct Standards are already in place and that there is an 
additional existing and overlapping robust infrastructure of 
regulations that are enforced by the SEC, FINRA, Treasury, and the 
IRS, not to mention the Department, investors are well protected and 
will continue to be well protected during any extension.''); Comment 
Letter #57 (Pacific Life Insurance Company) (``Since advisers are 
now required to adhere to the requirements set forth in the 
Impartial Conduct Standards . . . the Rule's stated goal to 
eliminate conflicted advice has been largely addressed and 
procedures to avoid said conflicted advice will be thoroughly 
engrained in advisers' practices during the delay.''); Comment 
Letter #65 (Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association) 
(``We would also use this opportunity to address the question of the 
potential harm to investors if the Department was to move forward 
with this delay. We would refer the Department back to our comment 
letter of August 9, 2017. . . . In that letter we refute the 
supposed harm to investors if the rule is delayed, while also 
showing the harm if the Department actually moves forward with the 
current rule unchanged. We were concerned then, and are even more 
concerned now, that some of the changes that have taken effect in 
order to comply with this rule, will make it even more difficult for 
investors to save.''); Comment Letter #116 (Financial Services 
Roundtable) (``Any concern that Retirement Investors will be harmed 
by an extended transition period should be allayed because the 
Impartial Conduct Standards will continue to protect them during the 
extended transition period.'').
    \16\ See, e.g., Comment Letter # 39 (Financial Services 
Institute) (incorporating March 17, 2017, response to RFI) (``During 
the transition period . . . financial institutions and financial 
advisors relying on the Best Interest Contract Exemption (BICE) must 
adhere to the Fiduciary Rule's Impartial Conduct Standards. These 
Impartial Conduct Standards require financial institutions and 
advisors to provide advice in the retirement investors' best 
interest, charge no more than reasonable compensation for their 
services and to avoid misleading statements. As a result, firms that 
are relying on the BICE have already implemented procedures to 
ensure that they are meeting these new obligations. These new 
procedures may include changes to the firms' compensation 
structures, restrictions on the availability of certain investment 
products, reductions in the overall number of product and service 
providers, improvements to their due diligence review of products 
and service providers, additional surveillance efforts to monitor 
the sales practices of their affiliated financial advisors for 
compliance and the creation and maintenance of books and records 
sufficient to demonstrate compliance with the Impartial Conduct 
Standards. Thus, investors are already benefitting from stronger 
protections since the Fiduciary Rule became partly applicable on 
June 9, 2017. . . . As a result, we believe any harm to investors 
caused by further delay of the additional requirements, to the 
extent it exists, is greatly reduced by the application of the 
Fiduciary Rule's Impartial Conduct Standards.''). But see Comment 
Letter #141 (Consumer Federation of America) (October 10, 2017 
Supplement) (noting a recent survey of broker-dealers in which 64% 
of survey participants answered that they have not made any changes 
in their product mix or internal compensation structures, and 
concluding therefore that ``it is unreasonable for the Department to 
believe that a significant percentage of firms have made efforts to 
adhere to the rule and Impartial Conduct Standards. If the 
Department does not factor this into its decisionmaking, it will 
have failed to consider an important aspect of the problem.''). See 
also the Department's Conflict of Interest FAQs, Transition Period 
(Set 1), Q6 (``During the transition period, the Department expects 
financial institutions to adopt such policies and procedures as they 
reasonably conclude are necessary to ensure that advisers comply 
with the impartial conduct standards'') available at https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/faqs/coi-transition-period-1.pdf.
    \17\ 82 FR 16902, 16909 (April 7, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In this regard, the Department notes that, despite the view of 
several commenters, the duties of prudence and loyalty embedded in the 
Impartial Conduct Standards provide protection to retirement investors 
during the Transition Period, apart from the additional delayed 
enforcement and accountability provisions. The Department previously 
articulated the view that, during the Transition Period, it expects 
that advisers and financial institutions will adopt prudent supervisory 
mechanisms to prevent violations of the Impartial Conduct 
Standards.\18\ Likewise, the Department also previously articulated its 
view that the Impartial Conduct Standards require that fiduciaries, 
during the Transition Period, exercise care in their communications 
with investors, including a duty to fairly and accurately describe 
recommended transactions and compensation practices.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ 81 FR 21002, 21070 (April 8, 2016).
    \19\ 82 FR 16902, 16909 (April 7, 2017) (recognizing fiduciary 
duty to fairly and accurately describe recommended transactions and 
compensation practices).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Authority To Delay PTE Conditions/Amendments

    Some commenters questioned the Department's authority to delay the 
PTE conditions and amendments as proposed. They focused their arguments 
on section 705 of the APA (5 U.S.C. 705), which permits an agency to 
postpone the effective date of an action, pending judicial review, if 
the agency finds that justice so requires. These commenters say that 
this provision is the only method by which a federal agency may delay 
or stay the applicability or effective date of a rule, even if another 
statute confers general rulemaking authority on that agency. Since the 
PTEs were applicable to transactions occurring on or after June 9, 
2017, the commenters argue that section 705 of the APA, by its terms, 
is not available in this circumstance. In the absence of the 
availability of section 705 of the APA, they assert, the Department 
lacks authority to delay the applicability date of the PTE conditions 
and amendments, as proposed. However, the Department disagrees that it 
lacks authority to adopt the 18-month delay of the conditions and 
amendments in this circumstance, where the Department is acting through 
and in accordance with its ordinary notice and comment rulemaking 
procedures for PTEs, pursuant to both the APA and 29 U.S.C. 1108. As 
noted elsewhere in the document, the Department is granting

[[Page 56551]]

this delay pursuant to section 408 of ERISA.\20\ Under this provision, 
the Secretary of Labor has discretionary authority to grant 
administrative exemptions, with or without conditions, under ERISA and 
the Code on an individual or class basis, if the Secretary finds that 
the exemptions are (1) administratively feasible, (2) in the interests 
of plans and their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and 
(3) protective of the rights of the participants and beneficiaries of 
such plans and IRA owners. Having made these findings in this case 
after reviewing the substantial public comments received in response to 
the RFI and August 31 Notice, the Department is confident of its 
authority to grant the 18-month delay. In the Department's view, it can 
delay, modify or revoke, temporarily or otherwise, some or all of a 
PTE, using notice and comment rulemaking, as long as--pursuant to the 
appropriate procedures--the Department makes the required findings and 
is not arbitrary or capricious in doing so. The Department has fully 
satisfied those requirements in this case, just as it did when it 
delayed applicability dates from June 9, 2017, through January 1, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ 29 U.S.C. 1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Length of Delay

    Although the August 31 Notice proposed a fixed 18-month delay, the 
proposal also specifically solicited comments on the benefit or harms 
of two alternative delay approaches: (1) A contingent delay that ends a 
specified period after the occurrence of a specific event, such as the 
Department's completion of the reexamination ordered by the President 
or the publication of changes to the Fiduciary Rule or PTEs; and (2) a 
tiered approach postponing full applicability until the earlier of or 
the later of (a) a time certain and (b) the end of a specified period 
after the occurrence of a specific event. There was no consensus among 
the commenters as to either the proper amount of time for a delay or 
the best approach (time certain delay versus contingent or tiered 
delays). Pros and cons were reported on all three approaches.
    Many commenters supported the fixed 18-month delay in the proposal. 
The proposed 18-month period would commence on January 1, 2018, and end 
on July 1, 2019, regardless of exactly when the Department might 
complete its reexamination or take any other action or actions. The 
premise behind this approach is that, whatever action or actions may or 
may not be taken by the Department, such actions would be completed 
within the 18-month period. These commenters believe this approach 
provides more certainty, to both industry stakeholders and investors, 
as compared to the other approaches.\21\ This is these commenters' 
view, even though many of them recognized that an additional delay 
could be needed in the future, depending on the extent of future 
changes to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, if any.\22\ These commenters 
believe that certainty is needed for planning and implementation 
purposes and that a flat delay of 18 to 24 months provides that 
certainty.\23\ Even among the

[[Page 56552]]

commenters generally opposed to any delay, one commenter stated that, 
as between a fixed 18-month delay and the more open-ended contingent or 
tiered approaches, the fixed 18-month delay provides more certainty and 
protection to consumers.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ Comment Letter #38 (Federated Investors, Inc.) (``the time-
certain delay is the most appropriate and workable choice under the 
circumstances, because it provides financial services firms, plan 
sponsors, plan participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners with the 
certainty of a clear target date. If the circumstances approaching 
July 1, 2019, indicate the need for a further delay, we would expect 
that the Department will, at that time, evaluate and provide what 
would be a reasonable time period to come into compliance based on 
the nature and extent of any changes to the existing regulation and 
exemptions.''); Comment Letter #39 (Financial Services Institute) 
(tiered delay or conditional delay ``would harm consumers by adding 
uncertainty and confusion to the market, while providing 
insufficient certainty to industry stakeholders.''); Comment Letter 
#46 (American Bankers' Assoc.) (``fixed 18-month period would 
minimize the costs that would be incurred by financial services 
providers to comply with Fiduciary Rule and exemptions as currently 
written. It would also allow the Department to measure the progress 
of its regulatory review against a firm deadline. If, as the 
deadline date approaches, it appears additional time might be needed 
to complete its regulatory review, then the Department can consider 
at that time whether to propose such additional time as may be 
needed for completion.''); Comment Letter #51 (Morgan Stanley) (``A 
delay solely based on a specific contingent future event (e.g., the 
issuance of new exemptive relief) poses a host of problems for 
financial institutions. . . . By enacting a time-certain delay of at 
least eighteen months, financial institutions will be better able to 
plan for and implement any changes that are necessary to comply with 
new guidance and create or modify product and platform offerings. . 
. . A `floating timeline' as suggested by the Department also poses 
the risk of further confusing the retirement investors that the Rule 
is intended to protect.''); Comment Letter #73 (Raymond James) 
(``While there are benefits and drawbacks to any method chosen, we 
feel that the 18-month period certain delay provides a level of 
certainty which is beneficial to the Department's ongoing analysis 
of the Rule and the retirement marketplace. Along with the 
Department's continued analysis and potential rulemaking, please 
consider that an 18-month delay may be insufficient to not only 
complete the Department's work, but also the subsequent 
implementation efforts firms will need to undertake. As a means to 
maintain assurance in the marketplace and provide adequate time to 
accomplish all relevant objectives, please consider during your 
analysis whether it may be prudent to issue an additional delay 
further in advance of the July 1, 2019 date.''); Comment Letter #82 
(Standard Insurance Company, Standard Retirement Services) (``The 
Department should not adopt a tiered delay approach. The other 
methods proposed in the request for comments would only add further 
confusion. A fixed time period will be in the best interests of 
retirement investors because it will allow financial service 
companies to be able to continue to provide advice, education and 
services to retirement plan investors without uncertainty. Once any 
changes to the Regulations and Exemptions are proposed and 
finalized, the Department will be in a better position to evaluate 
what, if any, additional time is needed to implement the changes. A 
fixed time period for the Extensions will provide the industry and 
retirement investors alike a more definite environment in which to 
conduct business.''); Comment Letter #110 (Association for Advanced 
Life Underwriting) (``Given the `lead' time required for compliance, 
only the date certain approach provides necessary stability for 
retirement investors and their financial professionals by removing 
unnecessary and harmful regulatory uncertainty. The contingent event 
approach and the tiered approach both introduce too much 
uncertainty. Not only would the compliance deadline be vague and 
undefined, based on when some future event may happen (and 
accurately predicting when a Federal Agency may complete an action 
is a notoriously difficult thing to achieve), but uncertainty would 
also result from which contingent act is selected as the basis for 
the end of the Transition Period.''); Comment Letter #116 (Financial 
Services Roundtable) (``the Department should not adopt a tiered 
transition period . . .'').
    \22\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #75 (Groom Law Group--
Recordkeeping Clients) (``The Groom Group supports a fixed delay as 
opposed to a tiered delay structure because the Department has 
already evaluated the cost-benefit analysis of the Proposed 
Extension and because the Department could always propose an 
additional delay closer to July 1, 2019 if it determines that 
additional time is needed. Right now, it is most important that the 
Department finalize the Proposed Extension promptly. Evaluating 
extensions of different lengths or with variable end points will 
only prolong the amount of time it takes for the Department to 
finalize the Proposed Extension.''); Comment Letter #7 (Tucker 
Advisors) (``Should the Department determine that additional time is 
necessary to complete its review or should the Department ultimately 
propose changes, the Department can, at that time, propose an 
additional extension to provide plan service providers sufficient 
time to build out the systems necessary to comply with such 
changes.''); Comment Letter #27 (State Farm Mutual Automobile 
Insurance Company) (``State Farm suggests that the Department 
maintain a position of flexibility to the extent additional time is 
needed to ensure the implementation of an effective, workable and 
efficient rule.''); Comment Letter #57 (Pacific Life Insurance 
Company) (``if the Department retains flexibility in this delay, 
potentially revisiting when the revised final rule is released and 
changes are actually known, then Pacific Life does not feel the 
tiered-approach is a necessary method of delay.''); Comment Letter # 
#69 (Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America-TIAA) 
(``While an extension tied to completion of the Department's review 
may offer some additional benefit, we believe it is more urgent that 
Proposed Extension be finalized.''); Comment Letter #79 (Investment 
Company Institute) (``The Department should clarify that it will 
provide a period of at least one year following the finalization of 
any modifications, and more time, depending on the nature of 
modifications made and the resultant lead time required to meet any 
attendant compliance requirements.'').
    \23\ Comment Letter #115 (Bank of New York Mellon & Pershing, 
LLC) (``we are supportive of an 18-month extension and delay to 
allow the Department to complete its review and consider 
modifications to the Rule and PTEs because it provides certainty 
that the marketplace needs to minimize disruptions for retirement 
investors. Whether the Department ultimately pursues a tiered 
approach or a fixed duration approach with respect to the proposed 
extension and delay period, once any modifications to the Rule and 
PTEs are finalized, the Department will need to allow adequate time 
for firms to comply with such modified Rule and PTEs. We expect any 
changes proposed to the Rule and PTEs, or any newly proposed PTEs, 
will be made available to the public for notice and comment with the 
opportunity to review. Because we don't yet know the scope of these 
proposed changes or when such changes would become applicable, 
however, the need for additional potential transition period 
extensions and applicability date delays with respect to the PTEs is 
unavoidable.''); Comment Letter #112 (Northwestern Mutual Life 
Insurance Company) (``Northwestern Mutual supports a minimum delay 
of eighteen months as proposed by the Department and a further delay 
if the Department concludes that changes should be made to the 
Fiduciary Duty Rule or the Exemptions. . . . If, for example, the 
Department determines that significant changes should be made to the 
BIC, and those changes are made final in early 2019, then at least 
an additional transition year should be provided from that date to 
allow firms enough time to make the necessary changes to processes 
and systems and to be able to communicate in an orderly manner with 
their clients.''); Comment Letter #114 (BBVA Compass) (``In our 
view, however, the proposed 18-month extension provides the minimum 
period needed to allow the Department and other interested parties 
to review the Rule and the accompanying Exemptions, make appropriate 
determinations regarding what changes to the Rule are warranted and 
afford financial institutions reasonable time to develop and 
implement processes and systems changes necessary to conduct 
activity in a compliant manner.'').
    \24\ See, e.g., Comment Letter # 68 (AARP) (although generally 
opposed to any delay, as between a fixed 18-month delay and a 
contingent or tiered delay, the commenter stated it ``is concerned 
that tiered compliance dates will exacerbate investor confusion and 
will make it more difficult for Americans saving for retirement to 
understand. A single compliance date would be preferred.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    By contrast, many commenters believe a contingent or tiered 
approach is the better way forward.\25\ Of paramount importance to most 
of these commenters is that they have sufficient time to ready 
themselves for compliance with any changes to the requirements of the 
Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, which they believe should be substantially 
different than the current Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. These commenters 
assert that it is improbable that the Department will complete the 
directed reexamination within the proposed 18-month period, let alone 
propose and finalize amendments to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs and 
provide adequate time to come into compliance with any such revisions--
all within that same 18-month period.\26\ They, therefore, identify the 
contingent and tiered varieties as the better approaches because, in 
their estimation, these approaches would ensure adequate time for 
compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, as revised, and thereby 
more effectively avoid a scenario of consecutive or serial piecemeal 
delays in the future.\27\ These commenters generally favored a range of 
12 to 24 months following the Department's finalization of changes to 
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs or following the publication of a decision 
that no changes are on the horizon.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #29 (American Retirement 
Association) (Recommends a tiered approach in which the 
applicability date is delayed until ``the later of January 1, 2019, 
or a date that is at least 18-months from the date a revised 
exemption or rule is promulgated.'').
    \26\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #127 (Cetera Financial Group) (a 
delay to July 1, 2019, or any other fixed date does not take into 
account the possibility that the review itself takes more than 18 
months, the additional time that it will take financial advisers to 
digest any amendments to the rule and incorporate changes to their 
own systems and processes after a final rule is published, and the 
likelihood of confusion on the part of investors as to what 
standards apply to advice they receive in connection with retirement 
investments prior to publication of any amendments to the Fiduciary 
Rule.).
    \27\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #65 (Securities Industry and 
Financial Markets Association) (``We believe that a tiered approach 
extending the delay to the later of the 18-month period the 
Department proposed and a period ending 24 months after the 
completion of the review and publication of final rules will best 
avoid the confusion, uncertainty and cost associated with continued 
piecemeal delays.''); Comment Letter #97 (Insured Retirement 
Institute) (``the tiered approach . . . would provide the greatest 
level of certainty for our members and the customers they serve. 
This structure would avoid the need for the Department to propose 
additional delays in the future. . .'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As between the proposed 18-month fixed delay and the contingent and 
tiered alternatives, the Department continues to believe that using a 
date-certain approach, rather than one of the other alternatives, is 
the best way to respond to and minimize concerns about uncertainty with 
respect to the eventual application and scope of the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs. Although the contingent and tiered approaches have the built-in 
advantage of an automatic extension, if needed, it is difficult to 
choose the appropriate triggering event before the Department completes 
its reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. Interjecting 
unnecessary uncertainty regarding the future applicability and scope of 
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs is harmful to all stakeholders. In 
addition, the Department believes that the additional 18 months is 
sufficient to complete review of the new information in the record and 
to implement changes to the Fiduciary Rule and/or PTEs, if any, 
including opportunity for notice and comment and coordination with 
other regulatory agencies.
    The proposal also solicited comments on whether to condition any 
extension of the Transition Period on the behavior of the entity 
seeking relief under the Transition Period. For example, the Department 
specifically asked for comment on whether to condition the delay on a 
Financial Institution's showing that it has, or a promise that it will, 
take steps to harness recent innovations in investment products and 
services, such as ``clean shares.'' All of the comments in response to 
this question opposed this idea. Some commenters expressed their 
concern that this approach would add confusion for Financial 
Institutions, who would be forced to change their products and 
services, and for retirement consumers, who would be forced to react to 
such changes.\28\ Other commenters believed that this approach would 
create an unlevel playing field by providing relief to select business 
models and investments rather than providing more neutral relief to 
many different business models and investments.\29\ Other

[[Page 56553]]

commenters are concerned that this approach would create uncertainty 
and confusion as to whether a particular firm is being held to a 
different legal standard than its peers, which would be detrimental to 
clients, investors, and other stakeholders.\30\ One commenter indicated 
that it is strongly opposed to this approach because essentially it 
would be a new or different exemption, and not really an extension of 
the current Transition Period.\31\ The Department is persuaded that 
conditions of this type generally seem more relevant in the context of 
considering the development of additional and more streamlined 
exemption approaches that take into account recent marketplace 
innovations, and less appropriate and germane in the context of a 
decision whether to extend the Transition Period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #76 (Groom Law Group on Behalf of 
Annuity and Insurance Company Clients) (``Not only would imposing 
additional conditions reduce the benefit of the Proposed Extension, 
but additional conditions would add confusion for Financial 
Institutions, who would be forced to change their products and 
services, and for retirement consumers, who would be forced to react 
to such changes.''); Comment Letter #82 (Standard Life Insurance 
Company, Standard Retirement Services) (``To condition a further 
delay on certain steps toward `innovations' would only serve to 
confuse investors and the retirement industry.'').
    \29\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #62 (Lincoln Financial Group) 
(``We continue to urge the Department to . . . hold fee-based 
compensation and commissions to the same standard and process, so 
that guaranteed lifetime income products can be made available to 
consumers on a level playing field with other products.''); Comment 
Letter #65 (Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association) 
(``Further, we do not believe the Department should condition delays 
upon adoption of any specific `innovations' by entities that rely on 
the Transition Period. [E]xemptions should be generally applicable 
to many different business models, and not simply the model that the 
Department prefers.''); Comment Letter #48 (American Council of Life 
Insurers) (``we strongly oppose a delay approach based on subjective 
criteria. . . . A subjective delay approach, based on undefined and 
ambiguous factors, such as whether firm has taken `concrete steps' 
to `harness' market developments, would require the Department to 
subjectively and inappropriately pick and choose among providers and 
products based on vague factors. We question the constitutionality 
and legality of such an approach.''); Comment Letter #53 (PSF 
Investments/Primerica) (``Tying a delay to firms' adoption of 
certain `innovations' or business models would only add further to 
the perception or actuality that the government is favoring a 
product, an industry, a business model or a compensation 
structure.''); Comment Letter #109 (Fidelity Investments) 
(``Finally, we agree with the Department that applicability of the 
delay should not be conditioned on an advice provider engaging in 
certain behavior, such as making a promise to harness recent 
innovations in investment products and services. Such conditions 
would unduly pressure advice providers to engage in whatever 
behavior might be designated. Slanting advice in this manner, 
however favorably the Department or any other person might view a 
particular product or service or behavior, will necessarily 
constrain choice and options to the detriment of retirement savers. 
Making an advice provider's use of a specific product or service the 
price of avoiding the needless costs and investor confusion 
associated with the January 1 applicability date is not appropriate 
or warranted.'').
    \30\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #64 (BlackRock) (``The 
uncertainty and confusion as to whether a particular firm is being 
held to a different legal standard than its peers would be 
detrimental to clients, investors and other stakeholders.''). See 
also Comment Letter #103 (Committee of Annuity Insurers) (stated 
that ``it could stifle innovation in product and advice models,'' 
that ``the Department should not substitute its own investment 
preferences for the preferences and insights of advisers,'' and that 
``the conditional relief contemplated in the Department's proposal 
would be `too imprecise' for any firm seeking to avail themselves of 
the potential relief.'').
    \31\ Comment Letter #86 (Spark Institute) (``The circumstances 
necessitating the existing Transition Period have not changed in any 
way since its announcement in the spring. The Department has not 
completed its examination and it has not announced whether, and how, 
the Investment Advice Regulation will be amended. Until the 
Department has completed both of those tasks, it should not alter 
its existing Transition Period rules in any way, other than to 
extend its expiration. Any contrary decision would result in 
significant market disruptions, substantial confusion, and would be 
difficult to monitor and administer.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Miscellaneous

    The Department rejects certain comments beyond the scope of this 
rulemaking, whether such comments were received pursuant to the August 
31 Notice or the RFI. For instance, one commenter urged the Department 
to amend the Principal Transactions Exemption for the Transition Period 
to remove the limits on products that can be traded on a principal 
basis, and allow those products that have historically been traded in 
the principal market to continue to be bought and sold by IRAs and 
plans, including, but not limited to, foreign currency, municipal 
bonds, and equity and debt IPOs. A different commenter requested that 
the Department revise the ``grandfather'' exemption, in section VII of 
the BIC Exemption, so that grandfathering treatment would apply to 
recommendations made prior to the expiration of the extended Transition 
Period (July 1, 2019).\32\ Inasmuch as amendments such as these were 
not suggested in the August 31 Notice, the public did not have notice 
or a full opportunity to comment on these issues and they are beyond 
the scope of this final rule. The Department, however, is open to 
further consideration of the merits of these requests, and the 
submission of additional relevant information, as part of its ongoing 
reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and related exemptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ Due to the delay of certain exemption conditions as part of 
the April Delay Rule, the standards applicable to grandfathered 
assets and non-grandfathered assets during the Transition Period are 
similar. For this reason, the Department sees no compelling reason 
to extend grandfathering treatment through the Transition Period. 
The primary purpose of the grandfathering exemption was to preserve 
compensation for services rendered prior to the Fiduciary Rule and 
to permit orderly transition from past arrangements, not to exempt 
future advice and investments from important protections scheduled 
to become applicable after the Transition Period. Nevertheless, 
commenters are encouraged to supplement their comments on this point 
during the reexamination period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. Findings by Secretary of Labor

    ERISA section 408(a) specifically authorizes the Secretary of Labor 
to grant administrative exemptions from ERISA's prohibited transaction 
provisions.\33\ Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978 generally transferred 
the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to grant administrative 
exemptions under Code section 4975(c)(2) to the Secretary of Labor.\34\ 
Regulations at 29 CFR 2570.30 to 2570.52 describe the procedures for 
applying for an administrative exemption. Under these authorities, the 
Secretary of Labor has discretionary authority to grant new or modify 
existing administrative exemptions under ERISA and the Code on an 
individual or class basis, if the Secretary finds that the exemptions 
are (1) administratively feasible, (2) in the interests of plans and 
their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and (3) protective 
of the rights of the participants and beneficiaries of such plans and 
IRA owners. The Department has made such findings with respect to the 
18-month extension of the Transition Period under the BIC and Principal 
Transactions Exemptions and the 18-month delay in the applicability of 
certain amendments to PTE 84-24. It is largely the continued imposition 
of the Impartial Conduct Standards that enables the Department to grant 
the delay under these standards, but other factors are also important 
to these findings. For instance, it is in the interests of plans and 
their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners to avoid the cost 
and confusion of a potentially disorderly transition to PTE conditions 
that are under reexamination pursuant to a Presidential Executive Order 
and that may change in the near future. In addition, to be protective 
of the rights of participants, beneficiaries, and IRA owners, the 
Department chose a time certain delay of 18 months, rather than a more 
open-ended contingent or tiered alternative. These factors are 
discussed further in the RIA section of this document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \33\ 29 U.S.C. 1108(a).
    \34\ 5 U.S.C. app at 214 (2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Extension of Temporary Enforcement Relief--FAB 2017-02

    On May 22, 2017, the Department issued a temporary enforcement 
policy covering the transition period between June 9, 2017, and January 
1, 2018, during which the Department will not pursue claims against 
investment advice fiduciaries who are working diligently and in good 
faith to comply with their fiduciary duties and to meet the conditions 
of the PTEs, or otherwise treat those investment advice fiduciaries as 
being in violation of their fiduciary duties and not compliant with the 
PTEs. See Field Assistance Bulletin 2017-02 (May 22, 2017) (FAB 2017-
02). Comments were solicited on whether to extend this policy for the 
same period covered by the proposed extension of the Transition Period.
    Commenters supporting an extension of the Transition Period 
overwhelmingly indicated their support for also extending the temporary 
enforcement policy in FAB 2017-02, to align the two periods.\35\ These

[[Page 56554]]

commenters believe such an alignment will significantly help to avoid 
market disruptions during the Transition Period. These commenters 
strongly oppose adding any new conditions to the enforcement policy 
during this period. They also request clarification that the relief 
under FAB 2017-02 is conditioned on diligent and good faith efforts to 
comply with the Fiduciary Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards, and 
does not also require diligent and good faith efforts towards 
implementing the delayed provisions of the PTEs.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #29 (American Retirement 
Association) (``ARA would strongly recommend continuing the 
temporary enforcement policy announced in Field Assistance Bulletin 
2017-02. This would be consistent with the Department's announced 
intention to assist (rather than citing violations and imposing 
penalties on) plans, plan fiduciaries, financial institutions and 
others who are working diligently and in good faith to understand 
and come into compliance with the fiduciary duty rule and 
exemptions. Further, if a Financial Institution acts in bad faith, 
the Department could pursue an enforcement action.''); Comment 
Letter #30 (Neuberger Berman Group) (``We unconditionally support 
the common sense answer that the Temporary Enforcement Policy be 
extended to line up with the final applicability dates in respect of 
those originally scheduled for January 1, 2018.''); Comment Letter 
#48 (American Council of Life Insurers) (``An extension of FAB 2017-
02's temporary enforcement policy is consistent with the 
Department's stated `good faith' compliance approach to 
implementation. . . .''); Comment Letter # 86 (Spark Institute) 
(``SPARK strongly supports an extension of the Department's 
temporary enforcement policy because of all of the uncertainty 
surrounding the future of the Investment Advice Regulation. The 
Department's proposal to extend the Transition Period notes that the 
Department is considering an extension of the Transition Period 
because it is still not known whether, and to what extent, there 
will be changes to the Department's interpretation of ``investment 
advice'' and the new and revised PTEs. Given this rationale, it 
simply would not make any sense for the Department to start 
enforcing portions of a regulation that is actively being 
reconsidered.''); Comment Letter #92 (E*TRADE) (``any delay should 
include a corresponding extension of Field Assistance Bulletin 2017-
02. As firms are already subject to the Impartial Conduct Standards 
. . . we believe a corresponding extension of FAB 2017-02 will 
benefit financial service providers without harming retirement 
investors, while retaining enforcement powers for firms not 
implementing requirements in good faith.''); Comment Letter #128 
(U.S. Chamber of Commerce) (``The Chamber believes the Department 
should extend the applicability of Field Assistance Bulletin 2017-02 
from January 1, 2018, until the end of the Transition Period.'').
    \36\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #28 (Empower Retirement) (``The 
relief offered under FAB 2017-02 was conditioned on fiduciaries 
working diligently and in good faith to comply with the fiduciary 
rule and exemptions. The DOL should make clear that this does not 
require continuing implementation efforts that would have been 
required for the January 1, 2018 applicability date, but is based on 
continued adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards.''); Comment 
Letter #41 (Great-West Financial) (``To avoid disruption in the 
market, the DOL should refrain from adding new conditions but should 
simultaneously announce that the non-enforcement policy announced in 
FAB 2017-02 will be extended during the eighteen-month extension. 
The relief offered under FAB 2017-02 was conditioned on fiduciaries 
working diligently and in good faith to comply with the fiduciary 
duty rule and exemptions. The DOL should make clear that this does 
not require continuing implementation efforts that would have been 
required for the January 1, 2018 applicability date, but is based on 
continued adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards.''). See also 
Comment Letter #82 (Standard Insurance Company and Standard 
Retirement Services, Inc.) (``we ask that The Department also extend 
the temporary enforcement policy providing relief to investment 
advice fiduciaries who are working in good faith to comply with the 
Regulations. Adding subjective requirements like `taking steps 
toward innovations' would only add further uncertainty and confusion 
to the current situation.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Although the Department has a statutory responsibility and broad 
authority to investigate or audit employee benefit plans and plan 
fiduciaries to ensure compliance with the law, compliance assistance 
for plan fiduciaries and other service providers is also a high 
priority for the Department. The Department has repeatedly said that 
its general approach to implementation will be marked by an emphasis on 
assisting (rather than citing violations and imposing penalties on) 
plans, plan fiduciaries, financial institutions, and others who are 
working diligently and in good faith to understand and come into 
compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. Consistent with that 
approach, the Department has determined that extended temporary 
enforcement relief is appropriate and in the interest of plans, plan 
fiduciaries, plan participants and beneficiaries, IRAs, and IRA owners. 
Accordingly, during the phased implementation period from June 7, 2016, 
to July 1, 2019, the Department will not pursue claims against 
fiduciaries who are working diligently and in good faith to comply with 
the Fiduciary Rule and applicable provisions of the PTEs, or treat 
those fiduciaries as being in violation of the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs.\37\ At the same time, however, the Department emphasizes, as it 
has in the past, that firms and advisers should work ``diligently and 
in good faith to comply'' \38\ with their fiduciary obligations during 
the Transition Period. The ``basic fiduciary norms and standards of 
fair dealing'' \39\ are still required of fiduciaries during the 
Transition Period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \37\ On March 28, 2017, the Treasury Department and the IRS 
issued IRS Announcement 2017-4 stating that the IRS will not apply 
Sec.  4975 (which provides excise taxes relating to prohibited 
transactions) and related reporting obligations with respect to any 
transaction or agreement to which the Labor Department's temporary 
enforcement policy described in FAB 2017-01, or other subsequent 
related enforcement guidance, would apply. The Treasury Department 
and the IRS have confirmed that, for purposes of applying IRS 
Announcement 2017-4, the discussion in this document constitutes 
``other subsequent related enforcement guidance.''
    \38\ See Conflict of Interest FAQs (Transition Period), May 
2017, p.11. (https://www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/resource-center/faqs/coi-transition-period-1.pdf); see also FAB 2017-02 (``The Department has repeatedly said 
that its general approach to implementation will be marked by an 
emphasis on assisting (rather than citing violations and imposing 
penalties on) plans, plan fiduciaries, financial institutions, and 
others who are working diligently and in good faith to understand 
and come into compliance with the fiduciary duty rule and 
exemptions.'').
    \39\ Conflict of Interest FAQs (Transition Period), May 2017, 
p.3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Accordingly, as the Department reviews the compliance efforts of 
firms and advisers during the Transition Period, it will focus on the 
affirmative steps that firms have taken to comply with the Impartial 
Conduct Standards and to reduce the scope and severity of conflicts of 
interest that could lead to violations of those standards. The 
Department recognizes that the development of effective, long-term 
compliance solutions may take time, but it remains critically important 
that firms take action to ensure that investment recommendations are 
governed by the best interests of retirement investors, rather than the 
potentially competing financial incentives of the firm or adviser.
    As the Department explained in previous guidance, although firms 
``retain flexibility to choose precisely how to safeguard compliance 
with the Impartial Conduct Standards'' \40\ during the Transition 
Period, they certainly may look to the specific provisions of the Best 
Interest Contract Exemption and Principal Transactions Exemption for 
guidance on ways to comply with the Impartial Conduct Standards. Thus, 
for example, the Department noted: ``Section IV of the BIC Exemption 
provides a detailed statement of how firms that limit adviser's 
investment recommendations to proprietary products or to investments 
that generate third party payments can comply with the best interest 
standard.'' ``If the firm and the adviser meet the terms of Section IV. 
. . they are `deemed' to satisfy the best interest standard.'' \41\ 
Thus, while firms are not required to rely on Section IV during the 
Transition Period, such reliance would certainly constitute good faith 
compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ Id. at p.6.
    \41\ Id. at p.6 n.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department also remains ``broadly available to discuss 
compliance approaches and related issues with interested parties, and 
would invite interested parties to contact the Department'' \42\ about 
the compliance approaches they have adopted or plan to adopt. This 
document accordingly supplements FAB 2017-02.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \42\ Id. at p.6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

F. Regulatory Impact Analysis

    The Department expects that the extension of the Transition Period 
under the BIC and Principal Transactions Exemptions and the delay of 
the amendments to PTE 84-24 (other than the Impartial Conduct 
Standards) will

[[Page 56555]]

produce benefits that justify associated costs. These actions will 
avert the possibility of a costly and disorderly transition from the 
Impartial Conduct Standards to full compliance with the exemptions' 
conditions that ultimately could be modified or repealed, and thereby 
reduce some compliance costs. Similarly, it could avert the possibility 
of unnecessary costs to consumers as a result of an unnecessarily 
confusing or disruptive transition. As stated above, the Department 
currently is engaged in the process of reviewing the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs as directed in the Presidential Memorandum and reviewing comments 
received in response to the RFI. The delay will allow the Department to 
reexamine the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs and to update its economic 
analysis. The Department's objective is to complete its review pursuant 
to the President's Memorandum, analyze comments received in response to 
the RFI, determine whether future changes to the Fiduciary Rule and 
PTEs are necessary, and propose and finalize any changes to the 
Fiduciary Rule or PTEs sufficiently before July 1, 2019, to provide 
firms with sufficient time to design and implement an orderly 
transition to any new requirements.
    If the Department revises or repeals some aspects of the Fiduciary 
Rule and PTEs in the future, the delay will allow affected firms to 
avoid incurring significant implementation costs now which later might 
turn out to be unnecessary. Furthermore, the delay will provide firms 
with more time to develop new products and practices that can provide 
long-term solutions for mitigating conflicts of interests. For example, 
a commenter cited numerous logistical obstacles that must be surmounted 
before using clean share classes in the market.\43\ The delay provides 
firms with additional time to address these issues and successfully 
launch products that benefit investors. The delay also will provide the 
Department with time to consult further with other regulators including 
the NAIC and the SEC. Such consultations may advance the development of 
a regulatory framework that could promote market efficiency and 
transparency, while reducing the burden to the financial sector and 
associated consumer costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ Comment Letters #229 (Investment Company Institute) (dated 
July 21, 2017), #442 (Morningstar, Inc.) (dated August 3, 2017), and 
#594 (Fi360, Inc.) (dated August 7, 2017) (responding to RFI).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. Executive Order 12866 Statement
    This final rule is an economically significant action within the 
meaning of section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866, because it would 
likely have an effect on the economy of $100 million in at least one 
year. Accordingly, the Department has considered the costs and benefits 
of the final rule, which has been reviewed by the Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB).
a. Investor Gains
    Beginning on June 9, 2017, Financial Institutions and Advisers 
generally were required to (1) make recommendations that are in their 
client's best interest (i.e., recommendations that are prudent and 
loyal), (2) avoid misleading statements, and (3) charge no more than 
reasonable compensation for their services. If they fully adhere to 
these requirements, the Department expects that affected investors will 
generally receive impartial advice and accordingly a significant 
portion of the gains it estimated in the 2016 RIA.\44\ However, because 
the PTE conditions are intended to support and provide accountability 
mechanisms for such adherence and remedies for lapses thereof (e.g., 
conditions requiring advisers to provide a written acknowledgement of 
their fiduciary status and adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards 
and enter into enforceable contracts with IRA investors), the 
Department acknowledges that the delay may result in the loss or 
deferral of some of the estimated investor gains. On the other hand, 
potential revisions to PTE conditions may reduce costs and thereby 
yield additional investor gains.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ The Department's baseline for this RIA includes all current 
rules and regulations governing investment advice including those 
that would become applicable on January 1, 2018, absent this delay. 
The RIA did not quantify incremental gains by each particular aspect 
of the rule and PTEs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department received many comments on the question of whether 
the delay would reduce investor gains. One group of commenters argued 
that the delay would not cause any harms to investors, \45\ because the 
Impartial Conduct Standards already are in place and provide sufficient 
protection for investors.\46\ They asserted that investor gains would 
be largely preserved during the extended transition period, because the 
investor gains primarily are derived from the expanded fiduciary status 
and the Impartial Conduct Standards, which already have taken effect, 
and this rule simply delays the implementation of some other exemption 
conditions.\47\ Furthermore, these commenters urged the Department to 
weigh the harms to investors from not delaying the January 1, 2018, 
applicability date. According to them, there is no evidence that 
investors would be harmed by this delay, and because the Fiduciary Rule 
already has negatively affected many investors, they would suffer more 
harm if the remaining conditions of the PTEs were not delayed.\48\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and Direct 
Securities Investment Association); Comment Letter #38 (Federated 
Investors, Inc.); Comment Letter #65 (Securities Industry and 
Financial Markets Association); Comment Letter #79 (Investment 
Company Institute).
    \46\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and Direct 
Securities Investment Association).
    \47\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #229 (Investment Company 
Institute) to the RFI; Comment Letter #79 (Investment Company 
Institute).
    \48\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #65 (Securities Industry and 
Financial Markets Association).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Another group of commenters argued that the delay would cause 
significant losses to investors,\49\ because they found that many 
financial services firms have preserved business models that the 
commenters view as conflict-laden and not made meaningful changes to 
root out conflicts of interest.\50\ They also asserted that many 
financial services firms could flout the requirements of the Impartial 
Conduct Standards due to the lack of a strong enforcement mechanism in 
the retail IRA market and the Department's non-enforcement policy 
during the extended transition period.\51\ To support their claims, 
these commenters cited media reports that financial services firms are 
not implementing further changes because they anticipate that the 
Department will issue a lengthy delay of the transition period \52\ and 
some pockets of industry suspended their implementation.\53\ One 
commenter referenced a market survey of broker-dealers in which many 
respondents reported that they have not yet made efforts to adhere to 
the Fiduciary Rule and the Impartial Conduct Standards.\54\ For 
example, about 64 percent of surveyed broker-dealers responded that 
they have not

[[Page 56556]]

made any changes to the product mix; another 64 percent of broker-
dealers responded that they have not made changes to their internal 
compensation arrangements to accommodate the Fiduciary Rule.\55\ (It is 
unclear, however, whether the survey respondents accurately represent 
the overall industry.) Another commenter urged the Department to 
consider that the delay would unfairly harm firms that expended 
resources for timely compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and create an 
unlevel playing field with non-compliant firms.\56\ One commenter 
estimated that an 18-month delay would cost investors about $10.9 
billion over 30 years assuming a 50 percent compliance rate.\57\ Based 
on this commenter's estimated investor losses, several commenters 
claimed that the Department cannot justify the delay because investor 
losses outweigh the estimated compliance cost savings.\58\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \49\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy Institute); 
Comment Letter #68 (AARP); Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation 
of America); Comment Letter #84 (Better Markets); Comment Letter #91 
(Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association); Comment Letter #108 
(American Association for Justice); Comment Letter #126 (Institute 
for Policy Integrity at New York University School of Law).
    \50\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of 
America).
    \51\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of 
America).
    \52\ Greg Iacurici, Investment News, August 16, 2017, 
``Anticipating delay to DOL fiduciary rule, broker-dealers and RIAs 
change course.''
    \53\ Diana Britton, Wealth Management.com, June 19, 2017, ``DOL 
in the Real World.''
    \54\ Comment Letter #141 (Consumer Federation of America).
    \55\ John Crabb, International Financial Law Review, October 
2017, ``The Fiduciary Rule Poll.''
    \56\ Comment Letter #84 (Better Markets).
    \57\ See Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy Institute). 
According to this comment, the investor losses over 30 years would 
range from $5.5 billion (75 percent compliance rate) to $16.3 
billion (25 percent compliance rate).
    \58\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of 
America); Comment Letter #91 (Public Investors Arbitration Bar 
Association); Comment Letter #120 (AFL-CIO); Comment Letter #126 
(Institute for Policy Integrity at New York University School of 
Law).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department carefully reviewed and weighed these comments and 
the referenced reports on potential investor losses caused by this 
delay. Steps some firms already have taken toward compliance, if not 
reversed, may limit investor losses. By some accounts, \59\ compliance 
efforts may be most advanced among the larger firms that account for 
the majority of the market, so the number of retirement investors 
potentially benefiting from compliance efforts might be large. Firms 
may be especially motivated to comply in connection with advice on 
rollovers from ERISA-covered plans to IRAs, where they may face 
liability for any fiduciary breaches under ERISA itself. Nonetheless, 
gaps in compliance may subject investors to some potentially avoidable 
losses, of uncertain incidence and magnitude.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ John Crabb, International Financial Law Review, October 
2017, ``The Fiduciary Rule Poll.'' According to this report, some 
firms already adopted fiduciary standards for business reasons; 
therefore, they would continue to comply with the rule using the 
adopted changes during this transition period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These potential losses, however, must be weighed against the costs 
that firms and investors would incur if the January 1, 2018 
applicability date were not delayed. Absent delay, firms would be 
forced to rush to comply with provisions that the Department may soon 
revise or rescind. Notwithstanding whatever steps firms already have 
taken toward compliance, it is likely that for many, such a rush to 
comply would be costly, disruptive, and/or infeasible. Smaller firms, 
which may be least prepared to comply fully, might be affected most. 
The disruption also could adversely affect many investors. Some of the 
costs incurred could turn out to be wasted if costly provisions are 
later revised or rescinded--and subsequent implementation of revised 
provisions might sow confusion and yield additional disruption. This 
delay will avert such disruption along with the potentially wasted cost 
of complying with provisions that the Department later revises or 
rescinds. In addition, the Department notes that some commenters' 
observations that investor losses from this delay may exceed associated 
compliance cost savings do not reflect the totality of economic 
considerations properly at hand. While some investor losses will 
reflect decreases in overall social welfare, others will reflect 
transfers from investors to the financial industry, which, while 
undesirable, are not social costs per se. Compliance costs in turn 
represent only some of the societal costs that may be averted by this 
delay. Others include those attributable to the potential disruption 
and confusion that could adversely affect both firms and investors.
    The Department acknowledges uncertainty surrounding potential 
investor losses from this delay. On balance, however, the Department 
concludes that the delay is justified, insofar as avoiding the market 
disruption that would occur if regulated parties incur costs to comply 
quickly with conditions or requirements the Department subsequently 
revises or repeals and the resultant significant consumer confusion 
justifies any attendant investor losses.
b. Cost Savings
    Some firms that are fiduciaries under the Fiduciary Rule may have 
committed resources to implementing procedures to support compliance 
with their fiduciary obligations. This may include changing their 
compensation structures and monitoring the practices and procedures of 
their advisers to ensure that conflicts of interest do not cause 
violations of the Fiduciary Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards of the 
PTEs, and maintaining sufficient records to corroborate that they are 
complying with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. These firms have 
considerable flexibility to choose precisely how they will achieve 
compliance with the PTEs during the extended transition period. 
According to some commenters, the majority of broker-dealers have not 
yet made any changes to their internal compensation arrangements and 
have not fully developed monitoring systems.\60\ The Department does 
not have sufficient data to estimate such costs; therefore, they are 
not quantified here.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of 
America); Greg Iacurici, Investment News, August 16, 2017, 
``Anticipating delay to DOL fiduciary rule, broker-dealers and RIAs 
change course.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Some commenters have asserted that the delay could result in cost 
savings for firms compared to the costs that were estimated in the 
Department's 2016 RIA to the extent that the requirements of the 
Fiduciary Rule and PTE conditions are modified in a way that would 
result in less expensive compliance costs. However, the Department 
generally believes that start-up costs not yet incurred for 
requirements previously scheduled to become applicable on January 1, 
2018, should not be included, at this time, as a cost savings 
associated with this rule because the rule would merely delay the full 
implementation of certain conditions in the PTEs until July 1, 2019, 
while the Department considers whether to propose changes and 
alternatives to the exemptions. The Department would be required to 
assume for purposes of this regulatory impact analysis that those 
start-up costs that have not been incurred generally would be delayed 
rather than avoided unless or until the Department acts to modify the 
compliance obligations of firms and advisers to make them more 
efficient. Nonetheless, even based on that assumption, there may be 
some cost savings that could be quantified as arising from the delay 
because some ongoing costs would not be incurred until July 1, 2019. 
The Department has taken two approaches to quantifying the savings 
resulting from the delay in incurring such ongoing costs: (1) 
Quantifying the costs based on a shift in the time horizon of the costs 
(i.e., comparing the present value of the costs of complying over a ten 
year period beginning on January 1, 2018, with the costs of complying, 
instead, over a ten year period beginning on July 1, 2019); and (2) 
quantifying the reduced costs during the 18-month period of delay from 
January 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019, during which time regulated parties 
would otherwise have had to comply with the full conditions of the BIC

[[Page 56557]]

Exemption and Principal Transaction Exemption but for the delay.
    The first of the two approaches reflects the time value of money 
(i.e., the idea that money available at the present time is worth more 
than the same amount of money in the future, because that money can 
earn interest). The deferral of ongoing costs by 18 months will allow 
the regulated community to use money they would have spent on ongoing 
compliance costs for other purposes during that time period. The 
Department estimates that the ten-year present value of the cost 
savings arising from this 18 month deferral of ongoing compliance 
costs, and the regulated community's resulting ability to use the money 
for other purposes, is $551.6 million using a three percent discount 
rate \61\ and $1.0 billion using a seven percent discount rate.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \61\ Annualized over ten years to $64.7 million per year or over 
a perpetual time horizon, discounted back to 2016, to $15.6 million 
per year.
    \62\ Annualized over ten years to $143.9 million per year or 
over a perpetual time horizon, discounted back to 2016, to $61.8 
million per year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The second of the two approaches simply estimates the expenses 
foregone during the period from January 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019, as a 
result of the delay. When the Department published the Fiduciary Rule 
and accompanying PTEs, it calculated that the total ongoing compliance 
costs of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs were $1.5 billion annually. 
Therefore, the Department estimates the ten-year present value of the 
cost savings of firms not being required to incur ongoing compliance 
costs during an 18 month delay would be approximately $2.2 billion 
using a three percent discount rate \63\ and $2.0 billion using a seven 
percent discount rate.\64\ \65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ Annualized over ten years to $252.1 million per year or 
over a perpetual time horizon, discounted back to 2016, to $57.3 
million per year.
    \64\ Annualized over ten years to $291.1 million per year or 
over a perpetual time horizon, discounted back to 2016, to $109.2 
million per year.
    \65\ The Department notes that firms may be incurring some costs 
to comply with the impartial conduct standards; however, it does not 
have sufficient data to estimate these costs. The Department, as it 
continues to update its analysis of the rule, solicits comments on 
the costs of complying with the impartial conduct standards, and how 
these costs interact with the costs of all other facets of 
compliance with the conditions of the PTEs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Based on its progress thus far with the review and reexamination 
directed by the President, however, the Department believes there may 
be evidence supporting alternatives that reduce costs and increase 
benefits to all affected parties, while maintaining protections for 
retirement investors. The Department anticipates that it will have a 
clearer sense of the range of such alternatives once it completes a 
careful review of the data and evidence submitted in response to the 
RFI.
    The Department also cannot determine at this time the degree to 
which the infrastructure that affected firms have already established 
to ensure compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs exemptions would 
be sufficient to facilitate compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs 
conditions if they are modified in the future.
c. Alternatives Considered
    While the Department considered several alternatives that were 
informed by public comments, the Department's chosen alternative in 
this final rule is likely to yield the most desirable outcome, 
including avoidance of investor losses otherwise associated with costly 
market disruptions. In weighing different options, the Department took 
numerous factors into account. The Department's objective was to 
facilitate orderly marketplace innovation and avoid unnecessary 
confusion and uncertainty in the investment advice market and 
associated expenses for America's workers and retirees.
    The Department solicited comments at the proposed rule stage 
regarding whether it should adopt an extension that would end (1) a 
specified period after the occurrence of a specific event (a contingent 
approach) or (2) on the earlier or the later of (a) a time certain and 
(b) the end of a specified period after the occurrence of a specific 
event (a tiered approach). Several commenters supported a contingent or 
tiered approach,\66\ while others expressed concern that a potentially 
indefinite delay might erode compliance with the Impartial Conduct 
Standards. The Department decided not to adopt these approaches, 
because they could inject too much uncertainty into the market and 
cause investor confusion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \66\ See, e.g., Comment Letter #48 (American Council of Life 
Insurers); Comment Letter #51 (Morgan Stanley); Comment Letter #57 
(Pacific Life Insurance Company); Comment Letter #73 (Raymond James 
Financial); Comment Letter #82 (Standard Insurance Company and 
Standard Retirement Services, Inc.); Comment Letter #112 
(Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company); Comment Letter #121 
(HSBC North America Holdings Inc.); Comment Letter #124 (Morgan, 
Lewis & Bockius LLP).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As discussed above in this preamble, some commenters urged the 
Department to require firms to comply with the original transitional 
requirements of the exemptions, not just the Impartial Conduct 
Standards.\67\ The Department declines this suggestion for now but 
agrees to give the matter further consideration during the course of 
the reexamination. The efficacy and effect of these transitional 
requirements need to be considered very carefully as the Department 
considers possible changes to the exemptions and their disclosure 
requirements. The Department is concerned that after completing its 
reexamination, it might change the disclosure requirements, the 
implementation of which would have imposed approximately $50.4 million 
of operational costs \68\ plus additional start-up costs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \67\ See, e.g. Comment Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of 
America) (``at a bare minimum, the Department must require firms and 
advisers to comply with the original transitional requirements of 
the exemptions, as set forth in Section IX of the BIC Exemption and 
Section VII of the Principal Transactions Exemption, not just the 
Impartial Conduct Standards. These include: (1) The minimal 
transition written disclosure requirements in which firms 
acknowledge their fiduciary status and that of their advisers with 
respect to their advice, state the Impartial Conduct Standards and 
provide a commitment to adhere to them, and describe the firm's 
material conflicts of interest and any limitations on product 
offering; (2) the requirement that firms designate a person 
responsible for addressing material conflicts of interest and 
monitoring advisers' adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards; 
and (3) the requirement that firms maintain records necessary to 
prove that the conditions of the exemption have been met.'').
    \68\ Using the same methodology that was used to calculate the 
burden of the transition disclosure that was originally envisioned 
in the April 2016 final rule and exemptions, the Department 
estimates that during the transition period, 34.2 million transition 
disclosures would be produced to comply with the requirements of the 
Best Interest Contract Exemption at a cost of $47.2 million, and 2.7 
million transition disclosures would be produced to comply with the 
requirements of the Principal Transactions Exemption at a cost of 
$3.2 million. These estimates assume that all investment advice 
clients receiving advice covered by the applicable exemptions 
between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2018 would receive the 
transition disclosures and all new investment advice clients 
receiving advice covered by the applicable exemptions between 
January 1, 2019 and June 30, 2019 would receive the transition 
disclosures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Department also considered not extending the transition period, 
which would mean that the remaining conditions in the PTEs would become 
applicable on January 1, 2018. The Department rejected this alternative 
because it would not provide sufficient time for the Department to 
complete its ongoing review of, or propose and finalize any changes to 
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. Moreover, absent the extended transition 
period, Financial Institutions and Advisers would feel compelled to 
prepare for full compliance with PTE conditions that become applicable 
on January 1, 2018, despite the possibility that the Department might 
identify and adopt more efficient alternatives or other significant 
changes to the rule. This could lead to unnecessary compliance costs 
and market disruptions. As compared to a shorter delay with the

[[Page 56558]]

possibility of consecutive additional delays, if needed, the 18-month 
delay provides more certainty for affected stakeholders because it sets 
a firm date for full compliance, which allows for proper planning and 
reliance.
2. Paperwork Reduction Act
    The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.) 
prohibits federal agencies from conducting or sponsoring a collection 
of information from the public without first obtaining approval from 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). See 44 U.S.C. 3507. 
Additionally, members of the public are not required to respond to a 
collection of information, nor be subject to a penalty for failing to 
respond, unless such collection displays a valid OMB control number. 
See 44 U.S.C. 3512.
    OMB has previously approved information collections contained in 
the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. The Department now is extending the 
transition period for the full conditions of the PTEs associated with 
its Fiduciary Rule until July 1, 2019. The Department is not modifying 
the substance of the information collections at this time; however, the 
current OMB approval periods of the information collection requests 
(ICRs) expire before the new applicability date for the full conditions 
of the PTEs as they currently exist. Therefore, many of the information 
collections will remain inactive for the remainder of the current ICR 
approval periods. The ICRs contained in the exemptions are discussed 
below.
    PTE 2016-01, the Best Interest Contract Exemption: The information 
collections in PTE 2016-01, the BIC Exemption, are approved under OMB 
Control Number 1210-0156 through June 30, 2019. The exemption requires 
disclosure of material conflicts of interest and basic information 
relating to those conflicts and the advisory relationship (Sections II 
and III), contract disclosures, contracts and written policies and 
procedures (Section II), pre-transaction (or point of sale) disclosures 
(Section III(a)), web-based disclosures (Section III(b)), documentation 
regarding recommendations restricted to proprietary products or 
products that generate third-party payments (Section IV), notice to the 
Department of a Financial Institution's intent to rely on the PTE, and 
maintenance of records necessary to prove that the conditions of the 
PTE have been met (Section V). Although the start-up costs of the 
information collections as they are set forth in the current PTE may 
not be incurred prior to June 30, 2019 due to uncertainty surrounding 
the Department's ongoing consideration of whether to propose changes 
and alternatives to the exemptions, they are reflected in the revised 
burden estimate summary below. The ongoing costs of the information 
collections will remain inactive through the remainder of the current 
approval period.
    For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and 
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81 
FR 21002, 21071.
    PTE 2016-02, the Prohibited Transaction Exemption for Principal 
Transactions in Certain Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries 
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (Principal Transactions Exemption): 
The information collections in PTE 2016-02, the Principal Transactions 
Exemption, are approved under OMB Control Number 1210-0157 through June 
30, 2019. The exemption requires Financial Institutions to provide 
contract disclosures and contracts to Retirement Investors (Section 
II), adopt written policies and procedures (Section IV), make 
disclosures to Retirement Investors and on a publicly available Web 
site (Section IV), maintain records necessary to prove they have met 
the PTE conditions (Section V). Although the start-up costs of the 
information collections as they are set forth in the current PTE may 
not be incurred prior to June 30, 2019, due to uncertainty surrounding 
the Department's ongoing consideration of whether to propose changes 
and alternatives to the exemptions, they are reflected in the revised 
burden estimate summary below. The ongoing costs of the information 
collections will remain inactive through the remainder of the current 
approval period.
    For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and 
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81 
FR 21089, 21129.
    Amended PTE 84-24: The information collections in Amended PTE 84-24 
are approved under OMB Control Number 1210-0158 through June 30, 2019. 
As amended, Section IV(b) of PTE 84-24 requires Financial Institutions 
to obtain advance written authorization from an independent plan 
fiduciary or IRA holder and furnish the independent fiduciary or IRA 
holder with a written disclosure in order to receive commissions in 
conjunction with the purchase of insurance and annuity contracts. 
Section IV(c) of PTE 84-24 requires investment company Principal 
Underwriters to obtain approval from an independent fiduciary and 
furnish the independent fiduciary with a written disclosure in order to 
receive commissions in conjunction with the purchase by a plan of 
securities issued by an investment company Principal Underwriter. 
Section V of PTE 84-24, as amended, requires Financial Institutions to 
maintain records necessary to demonstrate that the conditions of the 
PTE have been met.
    The rule delays the applicability date of amendments to PTE 84-24 
until July 1, 2019, except that the Impartial Conduct Standards became 
applicable on June 9, 2017. The Department does not have sufficient 
data to estimate that number of respondents that will use PTE 84-24 
with the inclusion of Impartial Conduct Standards but delayed 
applicability date of amendments. Therefore, the Department has not 
revised its burden estimate.
    For a more detailed discussion of the information collections and 
associated burden of this PTE, see the Department's PRA analysis at 81 
FR 21147, 21171.
    These paperwork burden estimates, which comprise start-up costs 
that will be incurred prior to the July 1, 2019, effective date (and 
the June 30, 2019, expiration date of the current approval periods), 
are summarized as follows:
    Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of 
Labor.
    Titles: (1) Best Interest Contract Exemption and (2) Final 
Investment Advice Regulation.

    OMB Control Number: 1210-0156.
    Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit 
institutions.
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 19,890 over the three-year period; 
annualized to 6,630 per year.
    Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 34,046,054 over the three-
year period; annualized to 11,348,685 per year.
    Frequency of Response: When engaging in exempted transaction.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 2,125,573 over the three-year 
period; annualized to 708,524 per year.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $2,468,487,766 during the 
three-year period; annualized to $822,829,255 per year.
    Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of 
Labor.
    Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction Exemption for Principal 
Transactions in Certain Assets between Investment Advice Fiduciaries 
and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs and (2) Final Investment Advice 
Regulation.

    OMB Control Number: 1210-0157.
    Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit 
institutions.

[[Page 56559]]

    Estimated Number of Respondents: 6,075 over the three-year period; 
annualized to 2,025 per year.
    Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 2,463,802 over the three-year 
period; annualized to 821,267 per year.
    Frequency of Response: When engaging in exempted transaction; 
Annually.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 45,872 over the three-year 
period; annualized to 15,291 per year.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $1,955,369,661 over the three-
year period; annualized to $651,789,887 per year.
    Agency: Employee Benefits Security Administration, Department of 
Labor.
    Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 84-24 for 
Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension 
Consultants, Insurance Companies and Investment Company Principal 
Underwriters and (2) Final Investment Advice Regulation.

    OMB Control Number: 1210-0158.
    Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profits; not for profit 
institutions.
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 21,940.
    Estimated Number of Annual Responses: 3,306,610.
    Frequency of Response: Initially, Annually, When engaging in 
exempted transaction.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Hours: 172,301 hours.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost: $1,319,353.
3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes 
certain requirements with respect to Federal Rules that are subject to 
the notice and comment requirements of section 553(b) of the 
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) or any other laws. 
Unless the head of an agency certifies that a final rule is not likely 
to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities, section 604 of the RFA requires that the agency present a 
final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) describing the rule's 
impact on small entities and explaining how the agency made its 
decisions with respect to the application of the rule to small 
entities. Small entities include small businesses, organizations and 
governmental jurisdictions.
    The final rule merely extends the transition period for the PTEs 
associated with the Fiduciary Rule. The impact on small entities will 
be determined when the Department issues future guidance after 
concluding its review of the rule and exemption. Any future guidance 
will be subject to notice and comment and contain a Regulatory 
Flexibility Act analysis. Accordingly, pursuant to section 605(b) of 
the RFA, the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Employee Benefits 
Security Administration hereby certifies that the final rule will not 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.
4. Congressional Review Act
    This final rule is subject to the Congressional Review Act (CRA) 
provisions of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and will be transmitted to Congress and the 
Comptroller General for review. The final rule is a ``major rule'' as 
that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 804, because it is likely to result in 
an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more.
5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-
4) requires each Federal agency to prepare a written statement 
assessing the effects of any Federal mandate in a proposed or final 
agency rule that may result in an expenditure of $100 million or more 
(adjusted annually for inflation with the base year 1995) in any one 
year by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by 
the private sector. For purposes of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 
as well as Executive Order 12875, this final rule does not include any 
federal mandate that the Department expects would result in such 
expenditures by State, local, or tribal governments, or the private 
sector. The Department also does not expect that the delay will have 
any material economic impacts on State, local or tribal governments, or 
on health, safety, or the natural environment.
6. Executive Order 13771: Reducing Regulation and Controlling 
Regulatory Costs
    The impacts of this final rule are categorized consistently with 
the analysis of the original Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, and the 
Department has also concluded that the impacts identified in the RIA 
accompanying the Fiduciary Rule may still be used as a basis for 
estimating the potential impacts of this final rule. It has been 
determined that, for purposes of E.O. 13771, the impacts of the 
Fiduciary Rule that were identified in the 2016 analysis as costs, and 
that are presently categorized as cost savings (or negative costs) in 
this final rule, and impacts of the Fiduciary Rule that were identified 
in the 2016 analysis as a combination of transfers and positive 
benefits are categorized as a combination of (opposite-direction) 
transfers and negative benefits in this final rule. Accordingly, OMB 
has determined that this final rule is an E.O. 13771 deregulatory 
action.

G. List of Amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemptions

    The Secretary of Labor has discretionary authority to grant 
administrative exemptions under ERISA and the Code on an individual or 
class basis, but only if the Secretary first finds that the exemptions 
are (1) administratively feasible, (2) in the interests of plans and 
their participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and (3) protective 
of the rights of the participants and beneficiaries of such plans and 
IRA owners. 29 U.S.C. 1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2). The 
Secretary of Labor has found that the delay finalized below is: (1) 
Administratively feasible, (2) in the interests of plans and their 
participants and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and (3) protective of 
the rights of participants and beneficiaries of such plans and IRA 
owners.
    Under this authority, and based on the reasons set forth above, the 
Department is amending the: (1) Best Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 
2016-01); (2) Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain 
Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans 
and IRAs (PTE 2016-02); and (3) Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 
(PTE 84-24) for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and 
Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment 
Company Principal Underwriters, as set forth below. These amendments 
are effective on January 1, 2018.
    1. The BIC Exemption (PTE 2016-01) is amended as follows:
    A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' is deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' 
inserted in its place in the introductory DATES section.
    B. Section II(h)(4)--Level Fee Fiduciaries provides streamlined 
conditions for ``Level Fee Fiduciaries.'' The date ``January 1, 2018'' 
is deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place. Thus, for Level 
Fee Fiduciaries that are robo-advice providers, and therefore not 
eligible for Section IX (pursuant to Section IX(c)(3)), the Impartial 
Conduct Standards in Section II(h)(2) are applicable June 9, 2017, but 
the remaining conditions of Section II(h) are applicable July 1, 2019, 
rather than January 1, 2018.
    C. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the amendment of existing 
contracts by

[[Page 56560]]

negative consent. The date ``January 1, 2018'' is deleted where it 
appears in this section, including in the definition of ``Existing 
Contract,'' and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
    D. Section IX--Transition Period for Exemption. The date ``January 
1, 2018'' is deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place. Thus, 
the Transition Period identified in Section IX(a) is extended from June 
9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June 9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.
    2. The Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets 
Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and 
IRAs (PTE 2016-02), is amended as follows:
    A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' is deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' 
inserted in its place in the introductory DATES section.
    B. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the amendment of existing 
contracts by negative consent. The date ``January 1, 2018'' is deleted 
where it appears in this section, including in the definition of 
``Existing Contract,'' and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.
    C. Section VII--Transition Period for Exemption. The date ``January 
1, 2018'' is deleted and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place. Thus, 
the Transition Period identified in Section VII(a) is extended from 
June 9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather than June 9, 2017, to January 1, 
2018.
    3. Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 for Certain Transactions 
Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance 
Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters, is amended as 
follows:
    A. The date ``January 1, 2018'' is deleted where it appears in the 
introductory DATES section and ``July 1, 2019'' inserted in its place.

    Signed at Washington, DC, this 24th day of November 2017.
Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,
Acting Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits Security Administration, 
Department of Labor.
[FR Doc. 2017-25760 Filed 11-27-17; 11:15 am]
 BILLING CODE 4510-29-P



                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                        56545

                                             remove ‘‘MPO(s)’’ with and add in its                   § 450.336    [Amended]                                Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84–
                                             place ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it occurs.                       ■ 18. Amend § 450.336 in paragraphs                   24 for the same period. The primary
                                             ■ 13. Amend § 450.326 as follows:                       (b)(1)(i) and (ii) and (b)(2) by removing             purpose of the amendments is to give
                                             ■ a. Revise paragraph (a); and                          ‘‘MPO(s)’’ and adding in its place                    the Department of Labor the time
                                             ■ b. In paragraphs (b), (j), and (p),                   ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it occurs.                           necessary to consider public comments
                                             remove ‘‘MPO(s)’’ and add in its place                                                                        under the criteria set forth in the
                                             ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it occurs.                             § 450.340    [Amended]                                Presidential Memorandum of February
                                               The revision reads as follows:                        ■ 19. Amend § 450.340 as follows:                     3, 2017, including whether possible
                                                                                                     ■ a. In paragraph (a), remove ‘‘or MPOs’’             changes and alternatives to these
                                             § 450.326 Development and content of the                wherever it occurs; and                               exemptions would be appropriate in
                                             transportation improvement program (TIP).               ■ b. Remove paragraph (h).                            light of the current comment record and
                                                (a) The MPO, in cooperation with the                                                                       potential input from, and action by, the
                                             State(s) and any affected public                        Title 49—Transportation                               Securities and Exchange Commission
                                             transportation operator(s), shall develop                                                                     and state insurance commissioners. The
                                                                                                     PART 613—METROPOLITAN AND
                                             a TIP for the metropolitan planning                                                                           Department is granting the delay
                                                                                                     STATEWIDE AND
                                             area. The TIP shall reflect the                                                                               because of its concern that, without a
                                                                                                     NONMETROPOLITAN PLANNING
                                             investment priorities established in the                                                                      delay in the applicability dates,
                                             current metropolitan transportation plan                ■  20. The authority citation for part 613            consumers may face significant
                                             and shall cover a period of no less than                is revised to read as follows:                        confusion, and regulated parties may
                                             4 years, be updated at least every 4                                                                          incur undue expense to comply with
                                                                                                       Authority: 23 U.S.C. 134, 135, and 217(g);
                                             years, and be approved by the MPO and                                                                         conditions or requirements that the
                                                                                                     42 U.S.C. 3334, 4233, 4332, 7410 et seq.; 49
                                             the Governor. However, if the TIP                       U.S.C. 5303–5306, 5323(k); and 49 CFR                 Department ultimately determines to
                                             covers more than 4 years, the FHWA                      1.91(a) and 21.7(a).                                  revise or repeal. The former transition
                                             and the FTA will consider the projects                                                                        period was from June 9, 2017, to January
                                                                                                     [FR Doc. 2017–25762 Filed 11–28–17; 8:45 am]
                                             in the additional years as informational.                                                                     1, 2018. The new transition period ends
                                                                                                     BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
                                             The MPO may update the TIP more                                                                               on July 1, 2019, rather than on January
                                             frequently, but the cycle for updating                                                                        1, 2018. The amendments to these
                                             the TIP must be compatible with the                                                                           exemptions affect participants and
                                                                                                     DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                   beneficiaries of plans, IRA owners and
                                             STIP development and approval
                                             process. The TIP expires when the                                                                             fiduciaries with respect to such plans
                                                                                                     Employee Benefits Security                            and IRAs.
                                             FHWA/FTA approval of the STIP                           Administration
                                             expires. Copies of any updated or                                                                             DATES: This document extends the
                                             revised TIPs must be provided to the                                                                          special transition period under sections
                                                                                                     29 CFR Part 2550
                                             FHWA and the FTA. In nonattainment                                                                            II and IX of the Best Interest Contract
                                             and maintenance areas subject to                        [Application Number D–11712; D–11713;                 Exemption and section VII of the Class
                                             transportation conformity requirements,                 D–11850]                                              Exemption for Principal Transactions in
                                             the FHWA and the FTA, as well as the                    ZRIN 1210–ZA27                                        Certain Assets between Investment
                                             MPO, must make a conformity                                                                                   Advice Fiduciaries and Employee
                                             determination on any updated or                         18-Month Extension of Transition                      Benefit Plans and IRAs (82 FR 16902) to
                                             amended TIP, in accordance with the                     Period and Delay of Applicability                     July 1, 2019, and delays the
                                             Clean Air Act requirements and the                      Dates; Best Interest Contract                         applicability of certain amendments to
                                             EPA’s transportation conformity                         Exemption (PTE 2016–01); Class                        Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84–
                                             regulations (40 CFR part 93, subpart A).                Exemption for Principal Transactions                  24 from January 1, 2018 (82 FR 16902)
                                             *      *    *    *     *                                in Certain Assets Between Investment                  until July 1, 2019. See Section G of the
                                                                                                     Advice Fiduciaries and Employee                       SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
                                             § 450.328   [Amended]                                   Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016–02);                 a list of dates for the amendments to the
                                                                                                     Prohibited Transaction Exemption                      prohibited transaction exemptions.
                                             ■ 14. Amend § 450.328 by removing
                                             ‘‘MPO(s)’’ and adding in its place                      84–24 for Certain Transactions                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                             ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it occurs.                             Involving Insurance Agents and                        Brian Shiker or Susan Wilker, telephone
                                                                                                     Brokers, Pension Consultants,                         (202) 693–8824, Office of Exemption
                                             § 450.330   [Amended]                                   Insurance Companies, and Investment                   Determinations, Employee Benefits
                                             ■ 15. Amend § 450.330 in paragraphs (a)                 Company Principal Underwriters (PTE                   Security Administration.
                                             and (c) by removing ‘‘MPO(s)’’ and                      84–24)                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                             adding in its place ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it                 AGENCY:  Employee Benefits Security                   A. Procedural Background
                                             occurs.                                                 Administration, Labor.
                                                                                                                                                           ERISA & the 1975 Regulation
                                             § 450.332   [Amended]                                   ACTION: Extension of the transition
                                                                                                     period for PTE amendments.                              Section 3(21)(A)(ii) of the Employee
                                             ■ 16. Amend § 450.332 in paragraphs (b)                                                                       Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,
                                             and (c) by removing ‘‘MPO(s)’’ and                      SUMMARY:   This document extends the                  as amended (ERISA), in relevant part
                                             adding in its place ‘‘MPO’’ wherever it                 special transition period under sections              provides that a person is a fiduciary
                                             occurs.                                                 II and IX of the Best Interest Contract               with respect to a plan to the extent he
pmangrum on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES




                                                                                                     Exemption and section VII of the Class                or she renders investment advice for a
                                             § 450.334   [Amended]
                                                                                                     Exemption for Principal Transactions in               fee or other compensation, direct or
                                             ■ 17. Amend § 450.334 as follows:                       Certain Assets between Investment                     indirect, with respect to any moneys or
                                             ■ a. In paragraph (a), remove ‘‘MPO(s)’’                Advice Fiduciaries and Employee                       other property of such plan, or has any
                                             and add in its place ‘‘MPO’’; and                       Benefit Plans and IRAs for 18 months.                 authority or responsibility to do so.
                                             ■ b. In paragraph (c), remove ‘‘MPO(s)’’                This document also delays the                         Section 4975(e)(3)(B) of the Internal
                                             and add in its place ‘‘MPO’s’’.                         applicability of certain amendments to                Revenue Code (‘‘Code’’) has a parallel


                                        VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:16 Nov 28, 2017   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00015   Fmt 4700   Sfmt 4700   E:\FR\FM\29NOR1.SGM   29NOR1


                                             56546        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             provision that defines a fiduciary of a                 rulemaking that proposed a 60-day                        directed by the Presidential
                                             plan (including an individual retirement                delay of the applicability date of the                   Memorandum.
                                             account or individual retirement                        Rule and PTEs. The proposal also
                                                                                                                                                              Request for Information
                                             annuity (IRA)). The Department of Labor                 sought public comments on the
                                             (‘‘the Department’’) in 1975 issued a                   questions raised in the Presidential                        On July 6, 2017, the Department
                                             regulation establishing a five-part test                Memorandum and generally on                              published in the Federal Register a
                                             under this section of ERISA. See 29 CFR                 questions of law and policy concerning                   Request for Information (RFI).4 The
                                             2510.3–21(c)(1) (2015).1 The                            the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.2 As of the                  purpose of the RFI was to augment some
                                             Department’s 1975 regulation also                       close of the first comment period on                     of the public commentary and input
                                             applied to the definition of fiduciary in               March 17, 2017, the Department had                       received in response to the April Delay,
                                             the Code.                                               received nearly 200,000 comment and                      and to request comments on issues
                                                                                                     petition letters expressing a wide range                 raised in the Presidential Memorandum.
                                             The New Fiduciary Rule & Related                                                                                 In particular, the RFI sought public
                                             Exemptions                                              of views on the proposed 60-day delay.
                                                                                                     Approximately 650 commenters                             input that could form the basis of new
                                                On April 8, 2016, the Department                     supported a delay of 60 days or longer,                  exemptions or changes to the Rule and
                                             replaced the 1975 regulation with a new                 with some requesting at least 180 days                   PTEs. The RFI also specifically sought
                                             regulatory definition (the ‘‘Fiduciary                  and some up to 240 days or a year or                     input regarding the advisability of
                                             Rule’’). The Fiduciary Rule defines who                 longer (including an indefinite delay or                 extending the January 1, 2018,
                                             is a ‘‘fiduciary’’ of an employee benefit               repeal); approximately 450 commenters                    applicability date of certain provisions
                                             plan under section 3(21)(A)(ii) of ERISA                opposed any delay. Similarly,                            in the BIC Exemption, the Principal
                                             as a result of giving investment advice                 approximately 15,000 petitioners                         Transactions Exemption, and PTE 84–
                                             to a plan or its participants or                        supported a delay and approximately                      24. Question 1 of the RFI specifically
                                             beneficiaries for a fee or other                        178,000 petitioners opposed a delay.                     asked whether a delay in the January 1,
                                             compensation. The Fiduciary Rule also                                                                            2018, applicability date of the
                                             applies to the definition of a ‘‘fiduciary’’            First Delay of Applicability Dates                       provisions in the BIC Exemption,
                                             of a plan in the Code pursuant to                                                                                Principal Transactions Exemption and
                                                                                                        On April 7, 2017, the Department                      amendments to PTE 84–24 would
                                             Reorganization Plan No. 4 of 1978, 5
                                                                                                     promulgated a final rule extending the                   benefit retirement investors by allowing
                                             U.S.C. App. 1, 92 Stat. 3790. The
                                                                                                     applicability date of the Fiduciary Rule                 for more efficient implementation
                                             Fiduciary Rule treats persons who
                                                                                                     by 60 days from April 10, 2017, to June                  responsive to recent market
                                             provide investment advice or
                                                                                                     9, 2017 (‘‘April Delay Rule’’).3 It also                 developments and reduce burdens on
                                             recommendations for a fee or other
                                             compensation with respect to assets of                  extended from April 10 to June 9, the                    financial services providers. Comments
                                             a plan or IRA as fiduciaries in a wider                 applicability dates of the BIC Exemption                 relating to an extension of the January
                                             array of advice relationships than was                  and Principal Transactions Exemption                     1, 2018, applicability date of certain
                                             true under the 1975 regulation. On the                  and required investment advice                           provisions were requested by July 21,
                                             same date, the Department published                     fiduciaries relying on these exemptions                  2017. All other comments were
                                             two new administrative class                            to adhere only to the Impartial Conduct                  requested by August 7, 2017. The
                                             exemptions from the prohibited                          Standards as conditions of those                         Department received approximately
                                             transaction provisions of ERISA (29                     exemptions during a transition period                    60,000 comment and petition letters
                                             U.S.C. 1106) and the Code (26 U.S.C.                    from June 9, 2017, through January 1,                    expressing a wide range of views on
                                             4975(c)(1)) (the Best Interest Contract                 2018. The April Delay Rule also delayed                  whether the Department should grant an
                                             Exemption (BIC Exemption) and the                       the applicability of amendments to an                    additional delay and what should be the
                                             Class Exemption for Principal                           existing exemption, Prohibited                           duration of any such delay. Many
                                             Transactions in Certain Assets Between                  Transaction Exemption 84–24 (PTE 84–                     commenters supported delaying the
                                             Investment Advice Fiduciaries and                       24), until January 1, 2018, other than the               January 1, 2018, applicability dates of
                                             Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs                         Impartial Conduct Standards, which                       these PTEs. Other commenters
                                             (Principal Transactions Exemption)) as                  became applicable on June 9, 2017.                       disagreed, however, asserting that full
                                             well as amendments to previously                        Lastly, the April Delay Rule extended                    application of the Fiduciary Rule and
                                             granted exemptions (collectively                        for 60 days, until June 9, 2017, the                     PTEs is necessary to protect retirement
                                             referred to as ‘‘PTEs,’’ unless otherwise               applicability dates of amendments to                     investors from conflicts of interests, that
                                             indicated). The Fiduciary Rule and                      other previously granted exemptions.                     the original applicability dates should
                                             PTEs had an original applicability date                 The 60-day delay, including the delay of                 not have been delayed from April, 2017,
                                             of April 10, 2017.                                      the Impartial Conduct Standards in the                   and that the January 1, 2018, date
                                                                                                     BIC Exemption and Principal                              should not be further delayed. Still
                                             Presidential Memorandum                                 Transactions Exemption, was                              others stated their view that the
                                               By Memorandum dated February 3,                       considered appropriate by the                            Fiduciary Rule and PTEs should be
                                             2017, the President directed the                        Department at that time. Compliance                      repealed and replaced, either with the
                                             Department to prepare an updated                        with other conditions for transactions                   original 1975 regulation or with a
                                             analysis of the likely impact of the                    covered by these exemptions, such as                     substantially revised rule. Among the
                                             Fiduciary Rule on access to retirement                  requirements to make specific                            commenters supporting a delay, some
                                             information and financial advice. The                   disclosures and representations of                       suggested a fixed length of time and
                                             President’s Memorandum was                              fiduciary compliance in written                          others suggested a more open-ended
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                                             published in the Federal Register on                    communications with investors, was                       delay. Supporters of a fixed-length delay
                                             February 7, 2017, at 82 FR 9675. On                     postponed until January 1, 2018, by                      did not express a consensus view on the
                                             March 2, 2017, the Department                           which time the Department intended to                    appropriate length, but the range
                                             published a notice of proposed                          complete the examination and analysis                    generally was 1 to 2 years from the
                                                                                                                                                              current applicability date of January 1,
                                               1 The 1975 Regulation was published as a final          2 82   FR 12319.
                                             rule at 40 FR 50842 (Oct. 31, 1975).                      3 82   FR 16902.                                         4 82   FR 31278.



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                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                             56547

                                             2018. Those commenters suggesting a                     BIC Exemption (PTE 2016–01) and                         Institutions entering into contracts with
                                             more open-ended framework for                           Principal Transactions Exemption (PTE                   IRA owners pursuant to the exemption
                                             measuring the length of the delay                       2016–02)                                                would have to include a warranty that
                                             generally recommended that the                             Although the Fiduciary Rule, BIC                     they have adopted and will comply with
                                             applicability date be delayed for at least              Exemption, and Principal Transactions                   the required policies and procedures.
                                             as long as it takes the Department to                   Exemption first became applicable on                    Financial Institutions would also be
                                             finish the reexamination directed by the                June 9, 2017, with transition relief                    required at that time to provide
                                             President. These commenters suggested                   through January 1, 2018, the August 31                  disclosures, both to the individual
                                             that the length of the delay should be                  Notice proposed to extend the                           retirement investor on a transaction
                                                                                                     Transition Period until July 1, 2019.                   basis, and on a Web site.
                                             measured from the date the Department,
                                                                                                     During this extended Transition Period,                    Similarly, while the Principal
                                             after finishing the reexamination, either                                                                       Transactions Exemption is conditioned
                                             announces that there will be no new                     ‘‘Financial Institutions’’ and
                                                                                                     ‘‘Advisers,’’ as defined in the                         solely on adherence to the Impartial
                                             amendments or exemptions or publishes                                                                           Conduct Standards during the
                                             a new exemption or major revisions to                   exemptions, would only have to comply
                                                                                                     with the ‘‘Impartial Conduct Standards’’                Transition Period, the August 31 Notice
                                             the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.                                                                                    also proposed that its remaining
                                                                                                     to satisfy the exemptions’ requirements.
                                             B. Proposed Amendments—18-Month                         In general, this means that Financial                   conditions would become applicable on
                                             Delay                                                   Institutions and Advisers must give                     July 1, 2019. The Principal Transactions
                                                                                                     prudent advice that is in retirement                    Exemption permits investment advice
                                                On August 31, 2017, the Department                   investors’ best interest, charge no more                fiduciaries to sell to or purchase from
                                             published a proposal (the August 31                     than reasonable compensation, and                       plans or IRAs ‘‘principal traded assets’’
                                             Notice) to extend the current special                   avoid misleading statements.7                           through ‘‘principal transactions’’ and
                                             transition period under sections II and                    The August 31 Notice proposed that                   ‘‘riskless principal transactions’’—
                                             IX of the BIC Exemption and section VII                 the remaining conditions of the BIC                     transactions involving the sale from or
                                             of the Principal Transactions Exemption                 Exemption would not become                              purchase for the Financial Institution’s
                                                                                                     applicable until July 1, 2019. Remaining                own inventory. As of July 1, 2019, the
                                             from January 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019.
                                                                                                     conditions include the requirement, for                 exemption would require a contract and
                                             The Department also proposed in the
                                                                                                     transactions involving IRA owners, that                 a policies and procedures warranty that
                                             August 31 Notice to delay the                                                                                   mirror the requirements in the BIC
                                             applicability of certain amendments to                  the Financial Institution enter into an
                                                                                                     enforceable written contract with the                   Exemption. The Principal Transactions
                                             PTE 84–24 for the same period.5                                                                                 Exemption also includes some
                                             Although proposing a date-certain delay                 retirement investor. The contract would
                                                                                                     include an enforceable promise to                       conditions that are different from the
                                             (18 months), the Department                                                                                     BIC Exemption, including credit and
                                                                                                     adhere to the Impartial Conduct
                                             specifically asked for input on various                                                                         liquidity standards for debt securities
                                                                                                     Standards, an express acknowledgement
                                             alternative approaches. The Department                                                                          sold to plans and IRAs pursuant to the
                                                                                                     of fiduciary status, and a variety of
                                             received approximately 145 comment                      disclosures related to fees, services, and              exemption and additional disclosure
                                             letters. Approximately 110 commenters                   conflicts of interest. IRA owners, who                  requirements.
                                             support a delay of 18 months or longer;                 do not have statutory enforcement rights                PTE 84–24
                                             and, by contrast, approximately 35                      under ERISA, would be able to enforce
                                             commenters oppose any delay.6 The                                                                                  PTE 84–24, which applies to advisory
                                                                                                     their contractual rights under state law.
                                             Department also received two petitions                                                                          transactions involving insurance and
                                                                                                     Also, as of July 1, 2019, the exemption
                                             containing approximately 2,860                                                                                  annuity contracts and mutual fund
                                                                                                     would require Financial Institutions to
                                             signatures or letters supporting the                                                                            shares, was most recently amended in
                                                                                                     adopt a substantial number of new
                                                                                                                                                             2016 in conjunction with the
                                             delay. These comment letters are                        policies and procedures that meet
                                                                                                                                                             development of the Fiduciary Rule, BIC
                                             available for public inspection on                      specified conflict-mitigation criteria. In
                                                                                                                                                             Exemption, and Principal Transactions
                                             EBSA’s Web site. Specific views and                     particular, the policies and procedures
                                                                                                                                                             Exemption.8 Among other changes, the
                                             positions of commenters are discussed                   must be reasonably and prudently
                                                                                                                                                             amendments included new definitional
                                             below in section C of this document.                    designed to ensure that Advisers adhere
                                                                                                                                                             terms, added the Impartial Conduct
                                                                                                     to the Impartial Conduct Standards and
                                                                                                                                                             Standards as requirements for relief, and
                                                                                                     must provide that neither the Financial
                                               5 82 FR 41365 (entitled ‘‘Extension of Transition                                                             revoked relief for transactions involving
                                                                                                     Institution nor (to the best of its
                                             Period and Delay of Applicability Dates; Best                                                                   fixed indexed annuity contracts and
                                                                                                     knowledge) its affiliates or related
                                             Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016–01); Class                                                                variable annuity contracts, effectively
                                                                                                     entities will use or rely on quotas,
                                             Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain                                                                 requiring those Advisers who receive
                                             Assets Between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and        appraisals, performance or personnel
                                                                                                                                                             conflicted compensation for
                                             Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE 2016–02);          actions, bonuses, contests, special
                                                                                                                                                             recommending these products to rely
                                             Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84–24 for              awards, differential compensation, or
                                                                                                                                                             upon the BIC Exemption. However,
                                             Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents         other actions or incentives that are
                                             and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance             intended or would reasonably be                         except for the Impartial Conduct
                                             Companies, and Investment Company Principal             expected to cause advisers to make                      Standards, which were applicable
                                             Underwriters (PTE 84–24)’’).
                                                                                                     recommendations that are not in the                     beginning June 9, 2017, the August 31
                                               6 The Department includes these counts only to
                                                                                                     best interest of the retirement investor.               Notice proposed that the remaining
                                             provide a rough sense of the scope and diversity of                                                             amendments would not be applicable
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                                             public comments. For this purpose, the Department
                                                                                                     Also as of July 1, 2019, Financial
                                                                                                                                                             until July 1, 2019. Thus, because the
                                             counted letters that do not expressly support or                                                                amendment revoking the availability of
                                                                                                       7 In the Principal Transactions Exemption, the
                                             oppose the proposed delay, but that express
                                             concerns or general opposition to the Fiduciary
                                                                                                     Impartial Conduct Standards specifically refer to       PTE 84–24 for fixed indexed annuities
                                                                                                     the fiduciary’s obligation to seek to obtain the best   would not be not be applicable until
                                             Rule or PTEs, as supporting delay. Similarly, letters   execution reasonably available under the
                                             that do not expressly support or oppose the             circumstances with respect to the transaction,
                                                                                                                                                             July 1, 2019, affected parties (including
                                             proposed delay, but that express general support for    rather than to receive no more than ‘‘reasonable
                                             the Rule or PTEs, were counted as opposing a delay.     compensation.’’                                          8 81   FR 21147 (April 8, 2016).



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                                             56548        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             insurance intermediaries) would be able                 comments in 2017 and to honor the                     on whether a delay is appropriate, or on
                                             to rely on PTE 84–24, subject to the                    President’s directive to take a hard look             the appropriate length of any delay.
                                             existing conditions of the exemption                    at any potential undue burden.                        Some commenters supported the
                                             and the Impartial Conduct Standards,                    Whether, and to what extent, there will               proposed 18-month delay, some
                                             for recommendations involving all                       be changes to the Fiduciary Rule and                  commenters sought longer delays, and
                                             annuity contracts during the Transition                 PTEs as a result of this reexamination is             still other commenters opposed any
                                             Period.                                                 unknown until its completion. The                     delay at all. However, a clear majority
                                                                                                     examination will help identify any                    of commenters support a delay of at
                                             C. Comments and Decisions                                                                                     least 18 months, with many supporting
                                                                                                     potential alternative exemptions or
                                             Extension of the Transition Period                      conditions that could reduce costs and                a much longer delay.
                                                                                                     increase benefits to all affected parties,               The primary reason commenters cited
                                               Based on its review and evaluation of
                                                                                                     without unduly compromising                           in support of the delay was to avoid
                                             the public comments, the Department is
                                                                                                     protections for retirement investors. The             unnecessary costs of compliance with
                                             adopting the proposed amendments
                                                                                                     Department anticipates that it will have              provisions of the Fiduciary Rule and
                                             without change. Thus, the Transition
                                                                                                     a much clearer sense of the range of                  PTEs that the commenters believed
                                             Period in the BIC Exemption and
                                                                                                     such alternatives only after it completes             could be changed or rescinded upon
                                             Principal Transaction Exemption is
                                                                                                     a careful review of the responses to the              completion of the review under the
                                             extended for 18 months until July 1,
                                                                                                     RFI. The Department also anticipates                  Presidential Memorandum.10 Other
                                             2019, and the applicability date of the
                                                                                                     that it will propose in the near future a             reasons cited by commenters were to
                                             amendments to PTE 84–24, other than
                                                                                                     new streamlined class exemption.                      provide time for the Department to
                                             the Impartial Conduct Standards, is
                                                                                                     However, neither such a proposal nor                  coordinate with the SEC and other
                                             delayed for the same period.
                                                                                                     any other changes or modifications to                 regulators such as FINRA and the NAIC;
                                             Accordingly, the same rules and
                                                                                                     the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, if any,                  allow more time for industry to come
                                             standards in effect between June 9,
                                                                                                     realistically could be finalized by the               into compliance with the Fiduciary Rule
                                             2017, and December 31, 2017, will
                                                                                                     current January 1, 2018, applicability                and PTEs, including additional time to
                                             remain in effect throughout the duration
                                                                                                     date. Nor would that timeframe                        develop disclosures and train
                                             of the extended Transition Period.
                                                                                                     accommodate the Department’s desire to                employees; and to reduce the possibility
                                             Consequently, Financial Institutions
                                                                                                     coordinate with the Securities and                    of client confusion resulting from
                                             and Advisers must continue to give
                                                                                                     Exchange Commission (SEC) and other                   attempts to comply with provisions of
                                             prudent advice that is in retirement
                                                                                                     regulators, such as the Financial                     the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs that may
                                             investors’ best interest, charge no more
                                                                                                     Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA)                 change following the review pursuant to
                                             than reasonable compensation, and
                                                                                                     and the National Association of                       the President’s Memorandum.11
                                             avoid misleading statements. As the
                                             Department has stated previously:                       Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) in the
                                                                                                                                                              10 See, e.g., Comment Letter #42 (Western &
                                                                                                     development of any such proposal or
                                                The Impartial Conduct Standards represent                                                                  Southern Financial Group) (‘‘only after the
                                             fundamental obligations of fair dealing and
                                                                                                     changes. The Chairman of the SEC has                  Fiduciary Regulation has been reviewed and
                                             fiduciary conduct. The concepts of prudence,            recently published a statement seeking                revisions to it have been proposed and finalized (all
                                             undivided loyalty and reasonable                        public comments on the standards of                   in accordance with President Trump’s February 3,
                                                                                                     conduct for investment advisers and                   2017 memorandum) will WSF&G and other
                                             compensation are all deeply rooted in ERISA
                                                                                                                                                           similarly situated companies know with certainty
                                             and the common law of agency and trusts.                broker-dealers, and has welcomed the                  what conditions will be placed on providing
                                             These longstanding concepts of law and                  Department’s invitation to engage                     investment advice to retirement investors. Only
                                             equity were developed in significant part to            constructively as the SEC moves                       then, can we appropriately design and implement
                                             deal with the issues that arise when agents             forward with its examination of the                   compliance structures, make investments in
                                             and persons in a position of trust have                                                                       information technology, and produce products and
                                             conflicting loyalties, and accordingly, are
                                                                                                     standards of conduct applicable to                    services that meet both the revised Fiduciary
                                             well-suited to the problems posed by                    investment advisers and broker-dealers,               Regulation requirements and the needs of
                                             conflicted investment advice.9                          and related matters. Absent a delay,                  retirement investors.’’); Comment Letter #76 (Groom
                                                                                                     however, Financial Institutions and                   Law Group, on Behalf of Annuity and Insurance
                                                It is based on the continued                                                                               Company Clients) (‘‘[i]n the absence of the eighteen-
                                                                                                     Advisers would feel compelled to ready                month extension, financial service providers,
                                             adherence to these fundamental
                                                                                                     themselves for the provisions that                    retirement plans, and individual savers would be
                                             protections that the Department,
                                                                                                     would become applicable on January 1,                 subjected to extreme market dislocations. The
                                             pursuant to 29 U.S.C. 1108 and 26                                                                             pricing of investment products and services, the
                                                                                                     2018, despite the possibility of changes
                                             U.S.C. 4975, is making the necessary                                                                          distribution models under which those services are
                                                                                                     and alternatives on the horizon. The 18-              delivered and the job responsibilities of thousands
                                             findings and granting the extension
                                                                                                     month delay avoids obligating financial               of financial services firm employees would be
                                             until July 1, 2019.
                                                                                                     services providers to incur costs to                  subject to severe dislocation as new requirements
                                                A delay of the remaining conditions                                                                        take effect. In addition, retirement savers’ access to
                                                                                                     comply with conditions, which may be
                                             of the BIC Exemption and Principal                                                                            investment advice and the terms and conditions
                                                                                                     revised, repealed, or replaced. The delay             under which that investment advice would be
                                             Transactions Exemption, and of the
                                                                                                     also avoids attendant investor                        provided could change repeatedly and dramatically
                                             remaining amendments to PTE 84–24, is
                                                                                                     confusion, ensuring that investors do                 as changes to the Fiduciary Rule are made and new
                                             necessary and appropriate for multiple                                                                        FAQs are issued.’’); Comment Letter #79
                                                                                                     not receive conflicting and confusing
                                             reasons. To begin with, the Department                                                                        (Investment Company Institute) (‘‘[a]bsent a delay,
                                                                                                     statements from their financial advisors              service providers will continue to spend significant
                                             has not yet completed the
                                                                                                     as the result of any later revisions.                 amounts preparing for January 1, 2018, the vast
                                             reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and                                                                       majority of which will be spent implementing the
                                             PTEs, as directed by the President on                      Not all commenters support this
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                                                                                                                                                           more cumbersome and technically complicated
                                             February 3, 2017. More time is needed                   approach. As mentioned above, the                     aspects of the BIC Exemption conditions.’’).
                                             to carefully and thoughtfully review the                Department received approximately 145                    11 See, e.g., Comment Letter #52 (Transamerica)

                                             substantial commentary received in                      comment letters on the proposed 18-                   (‘‘to avoid wasteful and duplicative compliance
                                                                                                     month delay. As with earlier comments                 costs and business model changes’’ and ‘‘to permit
                                             response to the multiple solicitations for                                                                    further time for coordination with the SEC.’’);
                                                                                                     on the April Delay Rule, as well as those             Comment Letter #55 (Prudential Financial)
                                               9 Best Interest Contract Exemption, 81 FR 21002,      received in response to Question 1 of                 (supporting the proposed extension/delay as
                                             21026 (April 8, 2016) (footnote omitted).               the RFI, there is no uniform consensus                ‘‘sufficient for the Department to assess and develop



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                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                    56549

                                               The primary reason commenters gave                     commenters, there is no credible basis                 subset of enforcement conditions, less
                                             against the delay is that investors will                 to believe that significant numbers of                 than the full set of conditions scheduled
                                             be economically harmed during the 18-                    Financial Institutions and Advisers will               now for July 1, 2019, would increase the
                                             month delay period because, according                    actually comply with the Impartial                     likelihood of greater levels of adherence
                                             to these commenters, there would not be                  Conduct Standards when advising                        to the Impartial Conduct Standards
                                             any meaningful enforcement                               investors during the Transition Period                 during the Transition Period over those
                                             mechanism in the PTEs without the                        without these enforcement and                          levels of adherence likely if no
                                             contract, warranty, disclosure and other                 accountability conditions. In the view of              enforcement conditions are included,
                                             enforcement and accountability                           these commenters, the Department’s                     according to these commenters.
                                             conditions.12 According to these                         2016 RIA supports their position that                     Because the contract, warranty,
                                                                                                      compliance numbers will be low with                    disclosure and other enforcement and
                                             needed Rule changes, engage in meaningful                the enforcement and accountability                     accountability conditions in the PTEs
                                             coordination with the Securities and Exchange            conditions being delayed until July 1,
                                             Commission, as well as the states and other
                                                                                                                                                             are intended to support adherence to the
                                             prudential regulators, and adopt those changes’’
                                                                                                      2019. If Financial Institutions and                    Impartial Conduct Standards, the
                                             and also to minimize ‘‘confusion on the part of          Advisers do not adhere to the Impartial                Department acknowledges that the 18-
                                             consumers and brings certainty to the financial          Conduct Standards, the investor gains                  month delay may result in a deferral of
                                             services industry.’’); Comment Letter #63                predicted in the Department’s 2016 RIA
                                             (Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Company)
                                                                                                                                                             some of the estimated investor gains. As
                                             (will ‘‘benefit retirement investors by ensuring that    for the Transition Period will not                     discussed below in the regulatory
                                             their access to products or advice is not needlessly     remain intact, according to these                      impact analysis, the precise amount of
                                             restricted or reduced as a result of . . . changes to    commenters, in which case the cost of                  such deferral is unknown because the
                                             business models . . . that may prove unnecessary,’’      the 18-month delay would exceed its
                                             and ‘‘will provide time for the Department to                                                                   precise degree of adherence during the
                                             complete its review of the Fiduciary Rule pursuant       benefits. Assuming twenty-five, fifty,                 18-month period also is unknown.
                                             to the Presidential Memorandum,’’ and ‘‘to work          and seventy-five percent compliance                    Many commenters strongly dispute the
                                             with the Securities and Exchange Commission and          rates, one commenter estimates that                    likelihood of any harm to investors as
                                             the National Association of Insurance                    delaying the enforcement conditions an
                                             Commissioners.’’); Comment Letter #88 (AXA US)                                                                  result of the delay of the enforcement
                                             (‘‘will provide the Department with sufficient time      additional 18 months would cost                        and accountability conditions. These
                                             to work with other regulators to develop a               retirement savers an additional $5.5                   commenters emphatically believe that
                                             harmonized regulatory framework’’ and also ‘‘will        billion (75 percent compliance) to $16.3               investors are sufficiently protected by
                                             allow industry participants adequate time to             billion (25 percent compliance) over 30
                                             comply with the Rule’s final requirements’’);                                                                   the imposition of the Impartial Conduct
                                             Comment Letter #375 (Stifel Financial Corp.) (July       years, with a middle estimate of $10.9                 Standards along with many applicable
                                             25, 2017, response to RFI) (‘‘Thus, with the             billion (50 percent compliance).13 To                  non-ERISA consumer protections.15
                                             Impartial Conduct Standards already in place for         support adherence to the Impartial
                                             retirement accounts, the DOL and SEC should move         Conduct Standards during the
                                             together and conduct a proper and fulsome study                                                                 a bare minimum, the Department must require firms
                                             of whether additional requirements are needed to         Transition Period, and thereby preserve                and advisers to comply with the original
                                             achieve appropriate consumer protections while           some predicted investor gains, several of              transitional requirements of the exemptions, as set
                                                                                                                                                             forth in Section IX of the BIC Exemption and
                                             maintaining investor choice. As the DOL and SEC          these commenters suggested that the                    Section VII of the Principal Transactions
                                             study these issues, and to prevent further               Department, at a bare minimum, should
                                             disruption to Brokerage and Advisory business                                                                   Exemption, not just the Impartial Conduct
                                             models, it is critical that the DOL delay the January    add the specific disclosure and                        Standards. These include: (1) The minimal
                                             1, 2018 implementation date for the additional           representation of fiduciary compliance                 transition written disclosure requirements in which
                                             conditions of the Best Interest Contract Exemption,      conditions originally required for                     firms acknowledge their fiduciary status and that of
                                             including the contractual warranties, until a                                                                   their advisers with respect to their advice, state the
                                                                                                      transition relief (but which were                      Impartial Conduct Standards and provide a
                                             solution is determined.’’).
                                                12 See, e.g., Comment Letter #20 (Consumer            delayed by the April Delay Rule).14 A                  commitment to adhere to them, and describe the
                                             Action) (‘‘no real evidence to believe that there will                                                          firm’s material conflicts of interest and any
                                             be compliance with the best-interest rule without        term suspension of these accountability conditions     limitations on product offering; (2) the requirement
                                             enforcement.’’); Comment Letter #44 (Economic            will remove an important deterrent against             that firms designate a person responsible for
                                             Policy Institute) (‘‘Delaying DOL enforcement an         violations of the Rule, resulting in conflicts of      addressing material conflicts of interest and
                                             additional 18 months (from January 1, 2018 to July       interest taking a greater toll on IRA investors in     monitoring advisers’ adherence to the Impartial
                                             1, 2019) would cost retirement savers an additional      particular and causing greater overall losses in       Conduct Standards; and (3) the requirement that
                                             $5.5 billion to $16.3 billion over 30 years, with a      retirement savings, especially as they are             firms maintain records necessary to prove that the
                                             middle estimate of $10.9 billion.’’); Comment Letter     compounded over time.’’); Comment Letter #91           conditions of the exemption have been met.’’).
                                                                                                      (Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association) (‘‘If      15 See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and
                                             #68 (AARP) (‘‘every day the protections of the
                                             prohibited transactions class exemptions are             the PTEs are not permitted to be fully implemented     Direct Investment Securities Association) (The
                                             delayed the retirement security of hard working          on January 1, 2018, retirement investors will          Impartial Conduct Standards requirement ‘‘can and
                                             Americans is put at risk, along with potential           continue to be harmed by the same conflicts of         does go a long way toward ensuring that retirement
                                             negative impacts on the economy as a whole.’’);          interests that made the Rule and PTEs necessary in     savers are provided with investment advice
                                             Comment Letter #78 (Financial Planning Coalition)        the first place.’’); Comment Letter #120 (AFL–CIO)     designed to allow them to meet their goals for
                                             (‘‘Without the PTEs, consumers do not have access        (‘‘The Economic Policy Institute estimates that this   retirement and otherwise.’’); Comment Letter # 23
                                             to legally binding contracts on which they can rely      proposal will cost retirement savers between $5.5      (Wells Fargo) (Because retirement investors will
                                             to uphold their right to conflict-free advice in their   billion and $16.3 billion over thirty years—on top     continue to receive the protections of the Impartial
                                             best interest.’’); Comment Letter #80 (Consumer          of the estimated $2.0 billion to $5.9 billion losses   Conduct Standards, ‘‘imposing additional
                                             Federation of America) (‘‘Extending this transition      resulting from the Department’s previous delay.’’);    compliance conditions in connection with any
                                             period will mean that the full protections and           Comment Letter #126 (Institute for Policy Integrity    extension is unnecessary.’’); Comment letter #38
                                             benefits of the fiduciary rule won’t be realized and     at New York University School of Law) (‘‘In sum,       (Federal Investors, Inc.) (‘‘investor losses (if any)
                                             retirement savers, particularly IRA investors, will      the Department’s proposal that the benefits would      from extending the transition period would be
                                             continue to suffer the harmful consequences of           remain intact even with the postponement of the        expected to be relatively small, and as such,
                                             conflicted advice.’’); Comment Letter #81 (National      enforcement provisions is at odds with its earlier     outweighed by the cost savings to firms by
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                                             Employment Law Project) (‘‘Without any                   analysis of the necessity of these provisions.’’).     postponing changes that may prove unnecessary, or
                                             meaningful enforcement mechanism, which does                13 Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy              may have to be revisited’’); Comment Letter #45
                                             not exist in the IRA market without the Contract         Institute).                                            (Madison Securities) (‘‘Because the Impartial
                                             Condition, there is no basis to conclude—as the             14 Comment Letter #20 (Consumer Action) (‘‘we       Conduct Standards remain in place . . . to protect
                                             Department erroneously does—that a significant           recommend that—at a minimum—the Department             consumers, it is important for the Department to
                                             number of investment-advice fiduciaries will             require that by January 2018 firms and advisers        take the time necessary to address applicable issues
                                             adhere to the ICSs when advising IRA owners              agree to abide by the impartial conduct standard to    and for the financial services industry to build
                                             during the period of the proposed delay.’’);             acknowledge their fiduciary status.’’); Comment        adequate and appropriate systems to comply with
                                             Comment Letter #84 (Better Markets) (‘‘The long-         Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of America) (‘‘at                                                  Continued




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                                             56550         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             Many of these industry commenters                        comments, and meeting with                                regulated community’s implementation
                                             note that fiduciary advisers who do not                  stakeholders, the Department believes                     of the Impartial Conduct Standards.
                                             provide impartial advice as required by                  that many financial institutions are                         In this regard, the Department notes
                                             the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs in the IRA                   using their compliance infrastructure to                  that, despite the view of several
                                             market would violate the prohibited                      ensure that they currently are meeting                    commenters, the duties of prudence and
                                             transaction rules of the Code and                        the requirements of the Impartial                         loyalty embedded in the Impartial
                                             become subject to the prohibited                         Conduct Standards, which the                              Conduct Standards provide protection
                                             transaction excise tax. In addition,                     Department believes will substantially                    to retirement investors during the
                                             comments received by the Department                      protect the investor gains estimated in                   Transition Period, apart from the
                                             assert that many financial institutions                  the 2016 RIA. Additionally, the                           additional delayed enforcement and
                                             already have completed or largely                        Department believes that there are two                    accountability provisions. The
                                             completed work to establish policies                     enforcement mechanisms in place: The                      Department previously articulated the
                                             and procedures necessary to make many                    imposition of excise taxes, and a                         view that, during the Transition Period,
                                             of the business structure and practice                   statutorily-provided cause of action for                  it expects that advisers and financial
                                             shifts necessary to support compliance                   advice to ERISA plan assets, including                    institutions will adopt prudent
                                             with the Fiduciary Rule and Impartial                    advice concerning rollovers of these                      supervisory mechanisms to prevent
                                             Conduct Standards (e.g., drafting and                    assets.17 Given these conclusions, the                    violations of the Impartial Conduct
                                             implementing training for staff, drafting                Department declines to add additional                     Standards.18 Likewise, the Department
                                             client correspondence and explanations                   conditions to the PTEs during the                         also previously articulated its view that
                                             of revised product and service offerings,                Transition Period, but will reevaluate                    the Impartial Conduct Standards require
                                             negotiating changes to agreements with                   this issue as part of the reexamination                   that fiduciaries, during the Transition
                                             product manufacturers as part of their                   of the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs and in                     Period, exercise care in their
                                             approach to compliance with the PTEs,                    the context of considering the                            communications with investors,
                                             changing employee and agent                              development of additional and more                        including a duty to fairly and accurately
                                             compensation structures, and designing                   streamlined exemption approaches.                         describe recommended transactions and
                                             product offerings that mitigate conflicts                Accordingly, as the Department                            compensation practices.19
                                             of interest).16 After review of these                    continues its reexamination, the                          Authority To Delay PTE Conditions/
                                                                                                      Department welcomes input and data                        Amendments
                                             any final rule.’’); Comment Letter #50 (Paul             from stakeholders demonstrating the
                                             Hastings LLP on behalf of Advisors Excel) (‘‘with                                                                     Some commenters questioned the
                                             the Impartial Conduct Standards in place during the      advisors to provide advice in the retirement              Department’s authority to delay the PTE
                                             evaluation period, the interests of Retirement           investors’ best interest, charge no more than             conditions and amendments as
                                             Investors are protected during the Department’s          reasonable compensation for their services and to         proposed. They focused their arguments
                                             review of the Rule.’’); Comment Letter #56               avoid misleading statements. As a result, firms that
                                             (Benjamin F. Edwards & Co.) (‘‘Given that the            are relying on the BICE have already implemented
                                                                                                                                                                on section 705 of the APA (5 U.S.C.
                                             Impartial Conduct Standards are already in place         procedures to ensure that they are meeting these          705), which permits an agency to
                                             and that there is an additional existing and             new obligations. These new procedures may                 postpone the effective date of an action,
                                             overlapping robust infrastructure of regulations that    include changes to the firms’ compensation                pending judicial review, if the agency
                                             are enforced by the SEC, FINRA, Treasury, and the        structures, restrictions on the availability of certain
                                             IRS, not to mention the Department, investors are        investment products, reductions in the overall
                                                                                                                                                                finds that justice so requires. These
                                             well protected and will continue to be well              number of product and service providers,                  commenters say that this provision is
                                             protected during any extension.’’); Comment Letter       improvements to their due diligence review of             the only method by which a federal
                                             #57 (Pacific Life Insurance Company) (‘‘Since            products and service providers, additional                agency may delay or stay the
                                             advisers are now required to adhere to the               surveillance efforts to monitor the sales practices of
                                             requirements set forth in the Impartial Conduct          their affiliated financial advisors for compliance
                                                                                                                                                                applicability or effective date of a rule,
                                             Standards . . . the Rule’s stated goal to eliminate      and the creation and maintenance of books and             even if another statute confers general
                                             conflicted advice has been largely addressed and         records sufficient to demonstrate compliance with         rulemaking authority on that agency.
                                             procedures to avoid said conflicted advice will be       the Impartial Conduct Standards. Thus, investors          Since the PTEs were applicable to
                                             thoroughly engrained in advisers’ practices during       are already benefitting from stronger protections
                                             the delay.’’); Comment Letter #65 (Securities            since the Fiduciary Rule became partly applicable
                                                                                                                                                                transactions occurring on or after June 9,
                                             Industry and Financial Markets Association) (‘‘We        on June 9, 2017. . . . As a result, we believe any        2017, the commenters argue that section
                                             would also use this opportunity to address the           harm to investors caused by further delay of the          705 of the APA, by its terms, is not
                                             question of the potential harm to investors if the       additional requirements, to the extent it exists, is      available in this circumstance. In the
                                             Department was to move forward with this delay.          greatly reduced by the application of the Fiduciary
                                             We would refer the Department back to our                Rule’s Impartial Conduct Standards.’’). But see
                                                                                                                                                                absence of the availability of section 705
                                             comment letter of August 9, 2017. . . . In that letter   Comment Letter #141 (Consumer Federation of               of the APA, they assert, the Department
                                             we refute the supposed harm to investors if the rule     America) (October 10, 2017 Supplement) (noting a          lacks authority to delay the applicability
                                             is delayed, while also showing the harm if the           recent survey of broker-dealers in which 64% of           date of the PTE conditions and
                                             Department actually moves forward with the               survey participants answered that they have not           amendments, as proposed. However, the
                                             current rule unchanged. We were concerned then,          made any changes in their product mix or internal
                                             and are even more concerned now, that some of the        compensation structures, and concluding therefore         Department disagrees that it lacks
                                             changes that have taken effect in order to comply        that ‘‘it is unreasonable for the Department to           authority to adopt the 18-month delay of
                                             with this rule, will make it even more difficult for     believe that a significant percentage of firms have       the conditions and amendments in this
                                             investors to save.’’); Comment Letter #116               made efforts to adhere to the rule and Impartial          circumstance, where the Department is
                                             (Financial Services Roundtable) (‘‘Any concern that      Conduct Standards. If the Department does not
                                             Retirement Investors will be harmed by an extended       factor this into its decisionmaking, it will have         acting through and in accordance with
                                             transition period should be allayed because the          failed to consider an important aspect of the             its ordinary notice and comment
                                             Impartial Conduct Standards will continue to             problem.’’). See also the Department’s Conflict of        rulemaking procedures for PTEs,
                                             protect them during the extended transition              Interest FAQs, Transition Period (Set 1), Q6              pursuant to both the APA and 29 U.S.C.
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                                             period.’’).                                              (‘‘During the transition period, the Department
                                                16 See, e.g., Comment Letter # 39 (Financial          expects financial institutions to adopt such policies
                                                                                                                                                                1108. As noted elsewhere in the
                                             Services Institute) (incorporating March 17, 2017,       and procedures as they reasonably conclude are            document, the Department is granting
                                             response to RFI) (‘‘During the transition period . . .   necessary to ensure that advisers comply with the
                                             financial institutions and financial advisors relying    impartial conduct standards’’) available at https://        18 81FR 21002, 21070 (April 8, 2016).
                                             on the Best Interest Contract Exemption (BICE)           www.dol.gov/sites/default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/            19 82FR 16902, 16909 (April 7, 2017)
                                             must adhere to the Fiduciary Rule’s Impartial            our-activities/resource-center/faqs/coi-transition-       (recognizing fiduciary duty to fairly and accurately
                                             Conduct Standards. These Impartial Conduct               period-1.pdf.                                             describe recommended transactions and
                                             Standards require financial institutions and                17 82 FR 16902, 16909 (April 7, 2017).                 compensation practices).



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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                      56551

                                             this delay pursuant to section 408 of                      Department, such actions would be                        view, even though many of them
                                             ERISA.20 Under this provision, the                         completed within the 18-month period.                    recognized that an additional delay
                                             Secretary of Labor has discretionary                       These commenters believe this                            could be needed in the future,
                                             authority to grant administrative                          approach provides more certainty, to                     depending on the extent of future
                                             exemptions, with or without conditions,                    both industry stakeholders and                           changes to the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs,
                                             under ERISA and the Code on an                             investors, as compared to the other                      if any.22 These commenters believe that
                                             individual or class basis, if the Secretary                approaches.21 This is these commenters’                  certainty is needed for planning and
                                             finds that the exemptions are (1)                                                                                   implementation purposes and that a flat
                                             administratively feasible, (2) in the                         21 Comment Letter #38 (Federated Investors, Inc.)     delay of 18 to 24 months provides that
                                             interests of plans and their participants                  (‘‘the time-certain delay is the most appropriate and    certainty.23 Even among the
                                                                                                        workable choice under the circumstances, because
                                             and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and                      it provides financial services firms, plan sponsors,
                                             (3) protective of the rights of the                        plan participants and beneficiaries, IRA owners          (‘‘Given the ‘lead’ time required for compliance,
                                             participants and beneficiaries of such                     with the certainty of a clear target date. If the        only the date certain approach provides necessary
                                                                                                        circumstances approaching July 1, 2019, indicate         stability for retirement investors and their financial
                                             plans and IRA owners. Having made                                                                                   professionals by removing unnecessary and harmful
                                                                                                        the need for a further delay, we would expect that
                                             these findings in this case after                          the Department will, at that time, evaluate and          regulatory uncertainty. The contingent event
                                             reviewing the substantial public                           provide what would be a reasonable time period to        approach and the tiered approach both introduce
                                             comments received in response to the                       come into compliance based on the nature and             too much uncertainty. Not only would the
                                                                                                        extent of any changes to the existing regulation and     compliance deadline be vague and undefined,
                                             RFI and August 31 Notice, the                                                                                       based on when some future event may happen (and
                                                                                                        exemptions.’’); Comment Letter #39 (Financial
                                             Department is confident of its authority                   Services Institute) (tiered delay or conditional delay   accurately predicting when a Federal Agency may
                                             to grant the 18-month delay. In the                        ‘‘would harm consumers by adding uncertainty and         complete an action is a notoriously difficult thing
                                             Department’s view, it can delay, modify                    confusion to the market, while providing                 to achieve), but uncertainty would also result from
                                                                                                        insufficient certainty to industry stakeholders.’’);     which contingent act is selected as the basis for the
                                             or revoke, temporarily or otherwise,                                                                                end of the Transition Period.’’); Comment Letter
                                                                                                        Comment Letter #46 (American Bankers’ Assoc.)
                                             some or all of a PTE, using notice and                     (‘‘fixed 18-month period would minimize the costs        #116 (Financial Services Roundtable) (‘‘the
                                             comment rulemaking, as long as—                            that would be incurred by financial services             Department should not adopt a tiered transition
                                             pursuant to the appropriate                                providers to comply with Fiduciary Rule and              period . . .’’).
                                                                                                                                                                    22 See, e.g., Comment Letter #75 (Groom Law
                                             procedures—the Department makes the                        exemptions as currently written. It would also
                                                                                                        allow the Department to measure the progress of its      Group—Recordkeeping Clients) (‘‘The Groom
                                             required findings and is not arbitrary or                  regulatory review against a firm deadline. If, as the    Group supports a fixed delay as opposed to a tiered
                                             capricious in doing so. The Department                     deadline date approaches, it appears additional          delay structure because the Department has already
                                             has fully satisfied those requirements in                  time might be needed to complete its regulatory          evaluated the cost-benefit analysis of the Proposed
                                                                                                        review, then the Department can consider at that         Extension and because the Department could
                                             this case, just as it did when it delayed                                                                           always propose an additional delay closer to July
                                                                                                        time whether to propose such additional time as
                                             applicability dates from June 9, 2017,                     may be needed for completion.’’); Comment Letter         1, 2019 if it determines that additional time is
                                             through January 1, 2018.                                   #51 (Morgan Stanley) (‘‘A delay solely based on a        needed. Right now, it is most important that the
                                                                                                        specific contingent future event (e.g., the issuance     Department finalize the Proposed Extension
                                             Length of Delay                                            of new exemptive relief) poses a host of problems        promptly. Evaluating extensions of different lengths
                                                                                                        for financial institutions. . . . By enacting a time-    or with variable end points will only prolong the
                                                Although the August 31 Notice                                                                                    amount of time it takes for the Department to
                                                                                                        certain delay of at least eighteen months, financial
                                             proposed a fixed 18-month delay, the                       institutions will be better able to plan for and         finalize the Proposed Extension.’’); Comment Letter
                                             proposal also specifically solicited                       implement any changes that are necessary to              #7 (Tucker Advisors) (‘‘Should the Department
                                             comments on the benefit or harms of                        comply with new guidance and create or modify            determine that additional time is necessary to
                                                                                                        product and platform offerings. . . . A ‘floating        complete its review or should the Department
                                             two alternative delay approaches: (1) A                                                                             ultimately propose changes, the Department can, at
                                                                                                        timeline’ as suggested by the Department also poses
                                             contingent delay that ends a specified                     the risk of further confusing the retirement             that time, propose an additional extension to
                                             period after the occurrence of a specific                  investors that the Rule is intended to protect.’’);      provide plan service providers sufficient time to
                                             event, such as the Department’s                            Comment Letter #73 (Raymond James) (‘‘While              build out the systems necessary to comply with
                                                                                                        there are benefits and drawbacks to any method           such changes.’’); Comment Letter #27 (State Farm
                                             completion of the reexamination                                                                                     Mutual Automobile Insurance Company) (‘‘State
                                                                                                        chosen, we feel that the 18-month period certain
                                             ordered by the President or the                            delay provides a level of certainty which is             Farm suggests that the Department maintain a
                                             publication of changes to the Fiduciary                    beneficial to the Department’s ongoing analysis of       position of flexibility to the extent additional time
                                             Rule or PTEs; and (2) a tiered approach                    the Rule and the retirement marketplace. Along           is needed to ensure the implementation of an
                                                                                                        with the Department’s continued analysis and             effective, workable and efficient rule.’’); Comment
                                             postponing full applicability until the                    potential rulemaking, please consider that an 18-        Letter #57 (Pacific Life Insurance Company) (‘‘if the
                                             earlier of or the later of (a) a time certain              month delay may be insufficient to not only              Department retains flexibility in this delay,
                                             and (b) the end of a specified period                      complete the Department’s work, but also the             potentially revisiting when the revised final rule is
                                             after the occurrence of a specific event.                  subsequent implementation efforts firms will need        released and changes are actually known, then
                                                                                                        to undertake. As a means to maintain assurance in        Pacific Life does not feel the tiered-approach is a
                                             There was no consensus among the                           the marketplace and provide adequate time to             necessary method of delay.’’); Comment Letter #
                                             commenters as to either the proper                         accomplish all relevant objectives, please consider      #69 (Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association
                                             amount of time for a delay or the best                     during your analysis whether it may be prudent to        of America-TIAA) (‘‘While an extension tied to
                                             approach (time certain delay versus                        issue an additional delay further in advance of the      completion of the Department’s review may offer
                                                                                                        July 1, 2019 date.’’); Comment Letter #82 (Standard      some additional benefit, we believe it is more
                                             contingent or tiered delays). Pros and                     Insurance Company, Standard Retirement Services)         urgent that Proposed Extension be finalized.’’);
                                             cons were reported on all three                            (‘‘The Department should not adopt a tiered delay        Comment Letter #79 (Investment Company
                                             approaches.                                                approach. The other methods proposed in the              Institute) (‘‘The Department should clarify that it
                                                Many commenters supported the                           request for comments would only add further              will provide a period of at least one year following
                                                                                                        confusion. A fixed time period will be in the best       the finalization of any modifications, and more
                                             fixed 18-month delay in the proposal.                      interests of retirement investors because it will        time, depending on the nature of modifications
                                             The proposed 18-month period would                         allow financial service companies to be able to          made and the resultant lead time required to meet
                                             commence on January 1, 2018, and end                       continue to provide advice, education and services       any attendant compliance requirements.’’).
                                                                                                        to retirement plan investors without uncertainty.           23 Comment Letter #115 (Bank of New York
                                             on July 1, 2019, regardless of exactly
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                                                                                                        Once any changes to the Regulations and                  Mellon & Pershing, LLC) (‘‘we are supportive of an
                                             when the Department might complete                         Exemptions are proposed and finalized, the               18-month extension and delay to allow the
                                             its reexamination or take any other                        Department will be in a better position to evaluate      Department to complete its review and consider
                                             action or actions. The premise behind                      what, if any, additional time is needed to               modifications to the Rule and PTEs because it
                                             this approach is that, whatever action or                  implement the changes. A fixed time period for the       provides certainty that the marketplace needs to
                                                                                                        Extensions will provide the industry and retirement      minimize disruptions for retirement investors.
                                             actions may or may not be taken by the                     investors alike a more definite environment in           Whether the Department ultimately pursues a tiered
                                                                                                        which to conduct business.’’); Comment Letter #110       approach or a fixed duration approach with respect
                                               20 29   U.S.C. 1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2).   (Association for Advanced Life Underwriting)                                                         Continued




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                                             56552         Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             commenters generally opposed to any                     such revisions—all within that same 18-                    The proposal also solicited comments
                                             delay, one commenter stated that, as                    month period.26 They, therefore,                         on whether to condition any extension
                                             between a fixed 18-month delay and the                  identify the contingent and tiered                       of the Transition Period on the behavior
                                             more open-ended contingent or tiered                    varieties as the better approaches                       of the entity seeking relief under the
                                             approaches, the fixed 18-month delay                    because, in their estimation, these                      Transition Period. For example, the
                                             provides more certainty and protection                  approaches would ensure adequate time                    Department specifically asked for
                                             to consumers.24                                         for compliance with the Fiduciary Rule                   comment on whether to condition the
                                                By contrast, many commenters                         and PTEs, as revised, and thereby more                   delay on a Financial Institution’s
                                             believe a contingent or tiered approach                 effectively avoid a scenario of                          showing that it has, or a promise that it
                                             is the better way forward.25 Of                         consecutive or serial piecemeal delays                   will, take steps to harness recent
                                             paramount importance to most of these                   in the future.27 These commenters                        innovations in investment products and
                                             commenters is that they have sufficient                 generally favored a range of 12 to 24                    services, such as ‘‘clean shares.’’ All of
                                             time to ready themselves for compliance                 months following the Department’s                        the comments in response to this
                                             with any changes to the requirements of                 finalization of changes to the Fiduciary                 question opposed this idea. Some
                                             the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs, which                      Rule and PTEs or following the                           commenters expressed their concern
                                             they believe should be substantially                    publication of a decision that no                        that this approach would add confusion
                                             different than the current Fiduciary                    changes are on the horizon.                              for Financial Institutions, who would be
                                             Rule and PTEs. These commenters                            As between the proposed 18-month                      forced to change their products and
                                             assert that it is improbable that the                   fixed delay and the contingent and                       services, and for retirement consumers,
                                             Department will complete the directed                   tiered alternatives, the Department                      who would be forced to react to such
                                             reexamination within the proposed 18-                   continues to believe that using a date-                  changes.28 Other commenters believed
                                             month period, let alone propose and                     certain approach, rather than one of the                 that this approach would create an
                                             finalize amendments to the Fiduciary                    other alternatives, is the best way to                   unlevel playing field by providing relief
                                             Rule and PTEs and provide adequate                      respond to and minimize concerns                         to select business models and
                                             time to come into compliance with any                   about uncertainty with respect to the                    investments rather than providing more
                                                                                                     eventual application and scope of the                    neutral relief to many different business
                                             to the proposed extension and delay period, once        Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. Although the                    models and investments.29 Other
                                             any modifications to the Rule and PTEs are              contingent and tiered approaches have
                                             finalized, the Department will need to allow
                                             adequate time for firms to comply with such
                                                                                                     the built-in advantage of an automatic                      28 See, e.g., Comment Letter #76 (Groom Law

                                             modified Rule and PTEs. We expect any changes           extension, if needed, it is difficult to                 Group on Behalf of Annuity and Insurance
                                             proposed to the Rule and PTEs, or any newly             choose the appropriate triggering event                  Company Clients) (‘‘Not only would imposing
                                             proposed PTEs, will be made available to the public     before the Department completes its                      additional conditions reduce the benefit of the
                                             for notice and comment with the opportunity to                                                                   Proposed Extension, but additional conditions
                                             review. Because we don’t yet know the scope of          reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and                  would add confusion for Financial Institutions,
                                             these proposed changes or when such changes             PTEs. Interjecting unnecessary                           who would be forced to change their products and
                                             would become applicable, however, the need for          uncertainty regarding the future                         services, and for retirement consumers, who would
                                             additional potential transition period extensions       applicability and scope of the Fiduciary                 be forced to react to such changes.’’); Comment
                                             and applicability date delays with respect to the                                                                Letter #82 (Standard Life Insurance Company,
                                             PTEs is unavoidable.’’); Comment Letter #112            Rule and PTEs is harmful to all                          Standard Retirement Services) (‘‘To condition a
                                             (Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company)            stakeholders. In addition, the                           further delay on certain steps toward ‘innovations’
                                             (‘‘Northwestern Mutual supports a minimum delay         Department believes that the additional                  would only serve to confuse investors and the
                                             of eighteen months as proposed by the Department        18 months is sufficient to complete                      retirement industry.’’).
                                             and a further delay if the Department concludes                                                                     29 See, e.g., Comment Letter #62 (Lincoln
                                             that changes should be made to the Fiduciary Duty       review of the new information in the
                                                                                                                                                              Financial Group) (‘‘We continue to urge the
                                             Rule or the Exemptions. . . . If, for example, the      record and to implement changes to the                   Department to . . . hold fee-based compensation
                                             Department determines that significant changes          Fiduciary Rule and/or PTEs, if any,                      and commissions to the same standard and process,
                                             should be made to the BIC, and those changes are        including opportunity for notice and                     so that guaranteed lifetime income products can be
                                             made final in early 2019, then at least an additional                                                            made available to consumers on a level playing
                                             transition year should be provided from that date       comment and coordination with other
                                                                                                                                                              field with other products.’’); Comment Letter #65
                                             to allow firms enough time to make the necessary        regulatory agencies.                                     (Securities Industry and Financial Markets
                                             changes to processes and systems and to be able to                                                               Association) (‘‘Further, we do not believe the
                                             communicate in an orderly manner with their                26 See, e.g., Comment Letter #127 (Cetera             Department should condition delays upon adoption
                                             clients.’’); Comment Letter #114 (BBVA Compass)         Financial Group) (a delay to July 1, 2019, or any        of any specific ‘innovations’ by entities that rely on
                                             (‘‘In our view, however, the proposed 18-month          other fixed date does not take into account the          the Transition Period. [E]xemptions should be
                                             extension provides the minimum period needed to         possibility that the review itself takes more than 18    generally applicable to many different business
                                             allow the Department and other interested parties       months, the additional time that it will take            models, and not simply the model that the
                                             to review the Rule and the accompanying                 financial advisers to digest any amendments to the       Department prefers.’’); Comment Letter #48
                                             Exemptions, make appropriate determinations             rule and incorporate changes to their own systems        (American Council of Life Insurers) (‘‘we strongly
                                             regarding what changes to the Rule are warranted        and processes after a final rule is published, and the   oppose a delay approach based on subjective
                                             and afford financial institutions reasonable time to    likelihood of confusion on the part of investors as      criteria. . . . A subjective delay approach, based on
                                             develop and implement processes and systems             to what standards apply to advice they receive in        undefined and ambiguous factors, such as whether
                                             changes necessary to conduct activity in a              connection with retirement investments prior to          firm has taken ‘concrete steps’ to ‘harness’ market
                                             compliant manner.’’).                                   publication of any amendments to the Fiduciary           developments, would require the Department to
                                                24 See, e.g., Comment Letter # 68 (AARP)             Rule.).                                                  subjectively and inappropriately pick and choose
                                             (although generally opposed to any delay, as               27 See, e.g., Comment Letter #65 (Securities          among providers and products based on vague
                                             between a fixed 18-month delay and a contingent         Industry and Financial Markets Association) (‘‘We        factors. We question the constitutionality and
                                             or tiered delay, the commenter stated it ‘‘is           believe that a tiered approach extending the delay       legality of such an approach.’’); Comment Letter #53
                                             concerned that tiered compliance dates will             to the later of the 18-month period the Department       (PSF Investments/Primerica) (‘‘Tying a delay to
                                             exacerbate investor confusion and will make it          proposed and a period ending 24 months after the         firms’ adoption of certain ‘innovations’ or business
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                                             more difficult for Americans saving for retirement      completion of the review and publication of final        models would only add further to the perception or
                                             to understand. A single compliance date would be        rules will best avoid the confusion, uncertainty and     actuality that the government is favoring a product,
                                             preferred.’’).                                          cost associated with continued piecemeal delays.’’);     an industry, a business model or a compensation
                                                25 See, e.g., Comment Letter #29 (American           Comment Letter #97 (Insured Retirement Institute)        structure.’’); Comment Letter #109 (Fidelity
                                             Retirement Association) (Recommends a tiered            (‘‘the tiered approach . . . would provide the           Investments) (‘‘Finally, we agree with the
                                             approach in which the applicability date is delayed     greatest level of certainty for our members and the      Department that applicability of the delay should
                                             until ‘‘the later of January 1, 2019, or a date that    customers they serve. This structure would avoid         not be conditioned on an advice provider engaging
                                             is at least 18-months from the date a revised           the need for the Department to propose additional        in certain behavior, such as making a promise to
                                             exemption or rule is promulgated.’’).                   delays in the future. . .’’).                            harness recent innovations in investment products



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                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                  56553

                                             commenters are concerned that this                        continue to be bought and sold by IRAs                the 18-month extension of the
                                             approach would create uncertainty and                     and plans, including, but not limited to,             Transition Period under the BIC and
                                             confusion as to whether a particular                      foreign currency, municipal bonds, and                Principal Transactions Exemptions and
                                             firm is being held to a different legal                   equity and debt IPOs. A different                     the 18-month delay in the applicability
                                             standard than its peers, which would be                   commenter requested that the                          of certain amendments to PTE 84–24. It
                                             detrimental to clients, investors, and                    Department revise the ‘‘grandfather’’                 is largely the continued imposition of
                                             other stakeholders.30 One commenter                       exemption, in section VII of the BIC                  the Impartial Conduct Standards that
                                             indicated that it is strongly opposed to                  Exemption, so that grandfathering                     enables the Department to grant the
                                             this approach because essentially it                      treatment would apply to                              delay under these standards, but other
                                             would be a new or different exemption,                    recommendations made prior to the                     factors are also important to these
                                             and not really an extension of the                        expiration of the extended Transition                 findings. For instance, it is in the
                                             current Transition Period.31 The                          Period (July 1, 2019).32 Inasmuch as                  interests of plans and their participants
                                             Department is persuaded that                              amendments such as these were not                     and beneficiaries and IRA owners to
                                             conditions of this type generally seem                    suggested in the August 31 Notice, the                avoid the cost and confusion of a
                                             more relevant in the context of                           public did not have notice or a full                  potentially disorderly transition to PTE
                                             considering the development of                            opportunity to comment on these issues                conditions that are under reexamination
                                             additional and more streamlined                           and they are beyond the scope of this                 pursuant to a Presidential Executive
                                             exemption approaches that take into                       final rule. The Department, however, is               Order and that may change in the near
                                             account recent marketplace innovations,                   open to further consideration of the                  future. In addition, to be protective of
                                             and less appropriate and germane in the                   merits of these requests, and the                     the rights of participants, beneficiaries,
                                             context of a decision whether to extend                   submission of additional relevant                     and IRA owners, the Department chose
                                             the Transition Period.                                    information, as part of its ongoing                   a time certain delay of 18 months, rather
                                                                                                       reexamination of the Fiduciary Rule and               than a more open-ended contingent or
                                             Miscellaneous                                             related exemptions.                                   tiered alternative. These factors are
                                               The Department rejects certain                                                                                discussed further in the RIA section of
                                             comments beyond the scope of this                         D. Findings by Secretary of Labor
                                                                                                                                                             this document.
                                             rulemaking, whether such comments                            ERISA section 408(a) specifically
                                             were received pursuant to the August 31                   authorizes the Secretary of Labor to                  E. Extension of Temporary Enforcement
                                             Notice or the RFI. For instance, one                      grant administrative exemptions from                  Relief—FAB 2017–02
                                             commenter urged the Department to                         ERISA’s prohibited transaction                           On May 22, 2017, the Department
                                             amend the Principal Transactions                          provisions.33 Reorganization Plan No. 4               issued a temporary enforcement policy
                                             Exemption for the Transition Period to                    of 1978 generally transferred the                     covering the transition period between
                                             remove the limits on products that can                    authority of the Secretary of the                     June 9, 2017, and January 1, 2018,
                                             be traded on a principal basis, and allow                 Treasury to grant administrative                      during which the Department will not
                                             those products that have historically                     exemptions under Code section                         pursue claims against investment advice
                                             been traded in the principal market to                    4975(c)(2) to the Secretary of Labor.34               fiduciaries who are working diligently
                                                                                                       Regulations at 29 CFR 2570.30 to                      and in good faith to comply with their
                                             and services. Such conditions would unduly                2570.52 describe the procedures for                   fiduciary duties and to meet the
                                             pressure advice providers to engage in whatever           applying for an administrative                        conditions of the PTEs, or otherwise
                                             behavior might be designated. Slanting advice in          exemption. Under these authorities, the
                                             this manner, however favorably the Department or
                                                                                                                                                             treat those investment advice fiduciaries
                                             any other person might view a particular product          Secretary of Labor has discretionary                  as being in violation of their fiduciary
                                             or service or behavior, will necessarily constrain        authority to grant new or modify                      duties and not compliant with the PTEs.
                                             choice and options to the detriment of retirement         existing administrative exemptions                    See Field Assistance Bulletin 2017–02
                                             savers. Making an advice provider’s use of a              under ERISA and the Code on an
                                             specific product or service the price of avoiding the
                                                                                                                                                             (May 22, 2017) (FAB 2017–02).
                                             needless costs and investor confusion associated          individual or class basis, if the Secretary           Comments were solicited on whether to
                                             with the January 1 applicability date is not              finds that the exemptions are (1)                     extend this policy for the same period
                                             appropriate or warranted.’’).                             administratively feasible, (2) in the                 covered by the proposed extension of
                                                30 See, e.g., Comment Letter #64 (BlackRock)
                                                                                                       interests of plans and their participants             the Transition Period.
                                             (‘‘The uncertainty and confusion as to whether a
                                             particular firm is being held to a different legal
                                                                                                       and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and                    Commenters supporting an extension
                                             standard than its peers would be detrimental to           (3) protective of the rights of the                   of the Transition Period
                                             clients, investors and other stakeholders.’’). See also   participants and beneficiaries of such                overwhelmingly indicated their support
                                             Comment Letter #103 (Committee of Annuity                 plans and IRA owners. The Department                  for also extending the temporary
                                             Insurers) (stated that ‘‘it could stifle innovation in
                                             product and advice models,’’ that ‘‘the Department
                                                                                                       has made such findings with respect to                enforcement policy in FAB 2017–02, to
                                             should not substitute its own investment                                                                        align the two periods.35 These
                                                                                                          32 Due to the delay of certain exemption
                                             preferences for the preferences and insights of
                                             advisers,’’ and that ‘‘the conditional relief             conditions as part of the April Delay Rule, the          35 See, e.g., Comment Letter #29 (American
                                             contemplated in the Department’s proposal would           standards applicable to grandfathered assets and      Retirement Association) (‘‘ARA would strongly
                                             be ‘too imprecise’ for any firm seeking to avail          non-grandfathered assets during the Transition        recommend continuing the temporary enforcement
                                             themselves of the potential relief.’’).                   Period are similar. For this reason, the Department   policy announced in Field Assistance Bulletin
                                                31 Comment Letter #86 (Spark Institute) (‘‘The         sees no compelling reason to extend grandfathering    2017–02. This would be consistent with the
                                             circumstances necessitating the existing Transition       treatment through the Transition Period. The          Department’s announced intention to assist (rather
                                             Period have not changed in any way since its              primary purpose of the grandfathering exemption       than citing violations and imposing penalties on)
                                             announcement in the spring. The Department has            was to preserve compensation for services rendered    plans, plan fiduciaries, financial institutions and
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                                             not completed its examination and it has not              prior to the Fiduciary Rule and to permit orderly     others who are working diligently and in good faith
                                             announced whether, and how, the Investment                transition from past arrangements, not to exempt      to understand and come into compliance with the
                                             Advice Regulation will be amended. Until the              future advice and investments from important          fiduciary duty rule and exemptions. Further, if a
                                             Department has completed both of those tasks, it          protections scheduled to become applicable after      Financial Institution acts in bad faith, the
                                             should not alter its existing Transition Period rules     the Transition Period. Nevertheless, commenters       Department could pursue an enforcement action.’’);
                                             in any way, other than to extend its expiration. Any      are encouraged to supplement their comments on        Comment Letter #30 (Neuberger Berman Group)
                                             contrary decision would result in significant market      this point during the reexamination period.           (‘‘We unconditionally support the common sense
                                                                                                          33 29 U.S.C. 1108(a).
                                             disruptions, substantial confusion, and would be                                                                answer that the Temporary Enforcement Policy be
                                             difficult to monitor and administer.’’).                     34 5 U.S.C. app at 214 (2000).                                                               Continued




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                                             56554        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             commenters believe such an alignment                       Although the Department has a                        required of fiduciaries during the
                                             will significantly help to avoid market                 statutory responsibility and broad                      Transition Period.
                                             disruptions during the Transition                       authority to investigate or audit                          Accordingly, as the Department
                                             Period. These commenters strongly                       employee benefit plans and plan                         reviews the compliance efforts of firms
                                             oppose adding any new conditions to                     fiduciaries to ensure compliance with                   and advisers during the Transition
                                             the enforcement policy during this                      the law, compliance assistance for plan                 Period, it will focus on the affirmative
                                             period. They also request clarification                 fiduciaries and other service providers                 steps that firms have taken to comply
                                             that the relief under FAB 2017–02 is                    is also a high priority for the                         with the Impartial Conduct Standards
                                             conditioned on diligent and good faith                                                                          and to reduce the scope and severity of
                                                                                                     Department. The Department has
                                             efforts to comply with the Fiduciary                                                                            conflicts of interest that could lead to
                                                                                                     repeatedly said that its general approach
                                             Rule and Impartial Conduct Standards,                                                                           violations of those standards. The
                                                                                                     to implementation will be marked by an                  Department recognizes that the
                                             and does not also require diligent and
                                             good faith efforts towards implementing                 emphasis on assisting (rather than citing               development of effective, long-term
                                             the delayed provisions of the PTEs.36                   violations and imposing penalties on)                   compliance solutions may take time, but
                                                                                                     plans, plan fiduciaries, financial                      it remains critically important that firms
                                             extended to line up with the final applicability        institutions, and others who are working                take action to ensure that investment
                                             dates in respect of those originally scheduled for      diligently and in good faith to                         recommendations are governed by the
                                             January 1, 2018.’’); Comment Letter #48 (American       understand and come into compliance
                                             Council of Life Insurers) (‘‘An extension of FAB                                                                best interests of retirement investors,
                                             2017–02’s temporary enforcement policy is               with the Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.                       rather than the potentially competing
                                             consistent with the Department’s stated ‘good faith’    Consistent with that approach, the                      financial incentives of the firm or
                                             compliance approach to implementation. . . .’’);        Department has determined that                          adviser.
                                             Comment Letter # 86 (Spark Institute) (‘‘SPARK
                                             strongly supports an extension of the Department’s      extended temporary enforcement relief                      As the Department explained in
                                             temporary enforcement policy because of all of the      is appropriate and in the interest of                   previous guidance, although firms
                                             uncertainty surrounding the future of the               plans, plan fiduciaries, plan participants              ‘‘retain flexibility to choose precisely
                                             Investment Advice Regulation. The Department’s                                                                  how to safeguard compliance with the
                                             proposal to extend the Transition Period notes that     and beneficiaries, IRAs, and IRA
                                             the Department is considering an extension of the       owners. Accordingly, during the phased                  Impartial Conduct Standards’’ 40 during
                                             Transition Period because it is still not known         implementation period from June 7,                      the Transition Period, they certainly
                                             whether, and to what extent, there will be changes                                                              may look to the specific provisions of
                                             to the Department’s interpretation of ‘‘investment      2016, to July 1, 2019, the Department
                                             advice’’ and the new and revised PTEs. Given this       will not pursue claims against                          the Best Interest Contract Exemption
                                             rationale, it simply would not make any sense for       fiduciaries who are working diligently                  and Principal Transactions Exemption
                                             the Department to start enforcing portions of a
                                                                                                     and in good faith to comply with the                    for guidance on ways to comply with
                                             regulation that is actively being reconsidered.’’);                                                             the Impartial Conduct Standards. Thus,
                                             Comment Letter #92 (E*TRADE) (‘‘any delay should        Fiduciary Rule and applicable
                                             include a corresponding extension of Field                                                                      for example, the Department noted:
                                                                                                     provisions of the PTEs, or treat those
                                             Assistance Bulletin 2017–02. As firms are already                                                               ‘‘Section IV of the BIC Exemption
                                             subject to the Impartial Conduct Standards . . . we     fiduciaries as being in violation of the
                                                                                                                                                             provides a detailed statement of how
                                             believe a corresponding extension of FAB 2017–02        Fiduciary Rule and PTEs.37 At the same
                                             will benefit financial service providers without
                                                                                                                                                             firms that limit adviser’s investment
                                                                                                     time, however, the Department                           recommendations to proprietary
                                             harming retirement investors, while retaining
                                             enforcement powers for firms not implementing           emphasizes, as it has in the past, that                 products or to investments that generate
                                             requirements in good faith.’’); Comment Letter #128     firms and advisers should work                          third party payments can comply with
                                             (U.S. Chamber of Commerce) (‘‘The Chamber               ‘‘diligently and in good faith to
                                             believes the Department should extend the                                                                       the best interest standard.’’ ‘‘If the firm
                                             applicability of Field Assistance Bulletin 2017–02
                                                                                                     comply’’ 38 with their fiduciary                        and the adviser meet the terms of
                                             from January 1, 2018, until the end of the Transition   obligations during the Transition                       Section IV. . . they are ‘deemed’ to
                                             Period.’’).                                             Period. The ‘‘basic fiduciary norms and                 satisfy the best interest standard.’’ 41
                                                36 See, e.g., Comment Letter #28 (Empower
                                                                                                     standards of fair dealing’’ 39 are still                Thus, while firms are not required to
                                             Retirement) (‘‘The relief offered under FAB 2017–
                                             02 was conditioned on fiduciaries working                                                                       rely on Section IV during the Transition
                                             diligently and in good faith to comply with the            37 On March 28, 2017, the Treasury Department
                                                                                                                                                             Period, such reliance would certainly
                                             fiduciary rule and exemptions. The DOL should           and the IRS issued IRS Announcement 2017–4
                                             make clear that this does not require continuing
                                                                                                                                                             constitute good faith compliance.
                                                                                                     stating that the IRS will not apply § 4975 (which
                                             implementation efforts that would have been             provides excise taxes relating to prohibited               The Department also remains
                                             required for the January 1, 2018 applicability date,    transactions) and related reporting obligations with    ‘‘broadly available to discuss
                                             but is based on continued adherence to the              respect to any transaction or agreement to which        compliance approaches and related
                                             Impartial Conduct Standards.’’); Comment Letter         the Labor Department’s temporary enforcement
                                             #41 (Great-West Financial) (‘‘To avoid disruption in
                                                                                                                                                             issues with interested parties, and
                                                                                                     policy described in FAB 2017–01, or other
                                             the market, the DOL should refrain from adding          subsequent related enforcement guidance, would          would invite interested parties to
                                             new conditions but should simultaneously                apply. The Treasury Department and the IRS have         contact the Department’’ 42 about the
                                             announce that the non-enforcement policy                confirmed that, for purposes of applying IRS            compliance approaches they have
                                             announced in FAB 2017–02 will be extended               Announcement 2017–4, the discussion in this
                                             during the eighteen-month extension. The relief                                                                 adopted or plan to adopt. This
                                                                                                     document constitutes ‘‘other subsequent related
                                             offered under FAB 2017–02 was conditioned on            enforcement guidance.’’                                 document accordingly supplements
                                             fiduciaries working diligently and in good faith to        38 See Conflict of Interest FAQs (Transition         FAB 2017–02.
                                             comply with the fiduciary duty rule and
                                                                                                     Period), May 2017, p.11. (https://www.dol.gov/sites/
                                             exemptions. The DOL should make clear that this
                                                                                                     default/files/ebsa/about-ebsa/our-activities/
                                                                                                                                                             F. Regulatory Impact Analysis
                                             does not require continuing implementation efforts
                                             that would have been required for the January 1,        resource-center/faqs/coi-transition-period-1.pdf);        The Department expects that the
                                                                                                     see also FAB 2017–02 (‘‘The Department has
                                             2018 applicability date, but is based on continued
                                                                                                     repeatedly said that its general approach to
                                                                                                                                                             extension of the Transition Period under
                                             adherence to the Impartial Conduct Standards.’’).                                                               the BIC and Principal Transactions
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                                             See also Comment Letter #82 (Standard Insurance         implementation will be marked by an emphasis on
                                             Company and Standard Retirement Services, Inc.)         assisting (rather than citing violations and imposing   Exemptions and the delay of the
                                             (‘‘we ask that The Department also extend the           penalties on) plans, plan fiduciaries, financial        amendments to PTE 84–24 (other than
                                             temporary enforcement policy providing relief to        institutions, and others who are working diligently
                                                                                                     and in good faith to understand and come into
                                                                                                                                                             the Impartial Conduct Standards) will
                                             investment advice fiduciaries who are working in
                                             good faith to comply with the Regulations. Adding       compliance with the fiduciary duty rule and
                                                                                                                                                              40 Id. at p.6.
                                             subjective requirements like ‘taking steps toward       exemptions.’’).
                                                                                                        39 Conflict of Interest FAQs (Transition Period),     41 Id. at p.6 n.4.
                                             innovations’ would only add further uncertainty
                                             and confusion to the current situation.’’).             May 2017, p.3.                                           42 Id. at p.6.




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                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                 56555

                                             produce benefits that justify associated                1. Executive Order 12866 Statement                     from the expanded fiduciary status and
                                             costs. These actions will avert the                        This final rule is an economically                  the Impartial Conduct Standards, which
                                             possibility of a costly and disorderly                  significant action within the meaning of               already have taken effect, and this rule
                                             transition from the Impartial Conduct                   section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866,              simply delays the implementation of
                                             Standards to full compliance with the                   because it would likely have an effect                 some other exemption conditions.47
                                             exemptions’ conditions that ultimately                  on the economy of $100 million in at                   Furthermore, these commenters urged
                                             could be modified or repealed, and                      least one year. Accordingly, the                       the Department to weigh the harms to
                                             thereby reduce some compliance costs.                   Department has considered the costs                    investors from not delaying the January
                                             Similarly, it could avert the possibility               and benefits of the final rule, which has              1, 2018, applicability date. According to
                                                                                                     been reviewed by the Office of                         them, there is no evidence that investors
                                             of unnecessary costs to consumers as a
                                                                                                     Management and Budget (OMB).                           would be harmed by this delay, and
                                             result of an unnecessarily confusing or
                                                                                                                                                            because the Fiduciary Rule already has
                                             disruptive transition. As stated above,                 a. Investor Gains                                      negatively affected many investors, they
                                             the Department currently is engaged in                                                                         would suffer more harm if the
                                                                                                        Beginning on June 9, 2017, Financial
                                             the process of reviewing the Fiduciary                                                                         remaining conditions of the PTEs were
                                                                                                     Institutions and Advisers generally were
                                             Rule and PTEs as directed in the                                                                               not delayed.48
                                                                                                     required to (1) make recommendations
                                             Presidential Memorandum and                             that are in their client’s best interest                  Another group of commenters argued
                                             reviewing comments received in                          (i.e., recommendations that are prudent                that the delay would cause significant
                                             response to the RFI. The delay will                     and loyal), (2) avoid misleading                       losses to investors,49 because they found
                                             allow the Department to reexamine the                   statements, and (3) charge no more than                that many financial services firms have
                                             Fiduciary Rule and PTEs and to update                   reasonable compensation for their                      preserved business models that the
                                             its economic analysis. The Department’s                 services. If they fully adhere to these                commenters view as conflict-laden and
                                             objective is to complete its review                     requirements, the Department expects                   not made meaningful changes to root
                                             pursuant to the President’s                             that affected investors will generally                 out conflicts of interest.50 They also
                                             Memorandum, analyze comments                            receive impartial advice and                           asserted that many financial services
                                             received in response to the RFI,                        accordingly a significant portion of the               firms could flout the requirements of the
                                             determine whether future changes to the                 gains it estimated in the 2016 RIA.44                  Impartial Conduct Standards due to the
                                             Fiduciary Rule and PTEs are necessary,                  However, because the PTE conditions                    lack of a strong enforcement mechanism
                                             and propose and finalize any changes to                 are intended to support and provide                    in the retail IRA market and the
                                                                                                     accountability mechanisms for such                     Department’s non-enforcement policy
                                             the Fiduciary Rule or PTEs sufficiently
                                                                                                     adherence and remedies for lapses                      during the extended transition period.51
                                             before July 1, 2019, to provide firms                                                                          To support their claims, these
                                             with sufficient time to design and                      thereof (e.g., conditions requiring
                                                                                                     advisers to provide a written                          commenters cited media reports that
                                             implement an orderly transition to any                                                                         financial services firms are not
                                                                                                     acknowledgement of their fiduciary
                                             new requirements.                                                                                              implementing further changes because
                                                                                                     status and adherence to the Impartial
                                                If the Department revises or repeals                 Conduct Standards and enter into                       they anticipate that the Department will
                                             some aspects of the Fiduciary Rule and                  enforceable contracts with IRA                         issue a lengthy delay of the transition
                                             PTEs in the future, the delay will allow                investors), the Department                             period 52 and some pockets of industry
                                             affected firms to avoid incurring                       acknowledges that the delay may result                 suspended their implementation.53 One
                                             significant implementation costs now                    in the loss or deferral of some of the                 commenter referenced a market survey
                                             which later might turn out to be                        estimated investor gains. On the other                 of broker-dealers in which many
                                             unnecessary. Furthermore, the delay                     hand, potential revisions to PTE                       respondents reported that they have not
                                             will provide firms with more time to                    conditions may reduce costs and                        yet made efforts to adhere to the
                                             develop new products and practices that                 thereby yield additional investor gains.               Fiduciary Rule and the Impartial
                                                                                                        The Department received many                        Conduct Standards.54 For example,
                                             can provide long-term solutions for
                                                                                                     comments on the question of whether                    about 64 percent of surveyed broker-
                                             mitigating conflicts of interests. For
                                                                                                     the delay would reduce investor gains.                 dealers responded that they have not
                                             example, a commenter cited numerous
                                             logistical obstacles that must be                       One group of commenters argued that
                                                                                                                                                               47 See, e.g., Comment Letter #229 (Investment
                                                                                                     the delay would not cause any harms to
                                             surmounted before using clean share                                                                            Company Institute) to the RFI; Comment Letter #79
                                                                                                     investors, 45 because the Impartial                    (Investment Company Institute).
                                             classes in the market.43 The delay
                                                                                                     Conduct Standards already are in place                    48 See, e.g., Comment Letter #65 (Securities
                                             provides firms with additional time to                  and provide sufficient protection for                  Industry and Financial Markets Association).
                                             address these issues and successfully                   investors.46 They asserted that investor                  49 See, e.g., Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy
                                             launch products that benefit investors.                 gains would be largely preserved during                Institute); Comment Letter #68 (AARP); Comment
                                             The delay also will provide the                                                                                Letter #80 (Consumer Federation of America);
                                                                                                     the extended transition period, because                Comment Letter #84 (Better Markets); Comment
                                             Department with time to consult further                 the investor gains primarily are derived               Letter #91 (Public Investors Arbitration Bar
                                             with other regulators including the                                                                            Association); Comment Letter #108 (American
                                             NAIC and the SEC. Such consultations                       44 The Department’s baseline for this RIA           Association for Justice); Comment Letter #126
                                                                                                                                                            (Institute for Policy Integrity at New York
                                             may advance the development of a                        includes all current rules and regulations governing
                                                                                                                                                            University School of Law).
                                             regulatory framework that could                         investment advice including those that would
                                                                                                                                                               50 See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer
                                                                                                     become applicable on January 1, 2018, absent this
                                             promote market efficiency and                           delay. The RIA did not quantify incremental gains      Federation of America).
                                             transparency, while reducing the
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                                                                                                                                                               51 See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer
                                                                                                     by each particular aspect of the rule and PTEs.
                                                                                                        45 See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and   Federation of America).
                                             burden to the financial sector and                                                                                52 Greg Iacurici, Investment News, August 16,
                                                                                                     Direct Securities Investment Association); Comment
                                             associated consumer costs.                              Letter #38 (Federated Investors, Inc.); Comment        2017, ‘‘Anticipating delay to DOL fiduciary rule,
                                                                                                     Letter #65 (Securities Industry and Financial          broker-dealers and RIAs change course.’’
                                               43 Comment Letters #229 (Investment Company           Markets Association); Comment Letter #79                  53 Diana Britton, Wealth Management.com, June

                                             Institute) (dated July 21, 2017), #442 (Morningstar,    (Investment Company Institute).                        19, 2017, ‘‘DOL in the Real World.’’
                                             Inc.) (dated August 3, 2017), and #594 (Fi360, Inc.)       46 See, e.g., Comment Letter #11 (Alternative and      54 Comment Letter #141 (Consumer Federation of

                                             (dated August 7, 2017) (responding to RFI).             Direct Securities Investment Association).             America).



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                                             56556        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             made any changes to the product mix;                    delayed. Absent delay, firms would be                 PTEs. These firms have considerable
                                             another 64 percent of broker-dealers                    forced to rush to comply with                         flexibility to choose precisely how they
                                             responded that they have not made                       provisions that the Department may                    will achieve compliance with the PTEs
                                             changes to their internal compensation                  soon revise or rescind. Notwithstanding               during the extended transition period.
                                             arrangements to accommodate the                         whatever steps firms already have taken               According to some commenters, the
                                             Fiduciary Rule.55 (It is unclear,                       toward compliance, it is likely that for              majority of broker-dealers have not yet
                                             however, whether the survey                             many, such a rush to comply would be                  made any changes to their internal
                                             respondents accurately represent the                    costly, disruptive, and/or infeasible.                compensation arrangements and have
                                             overall industry.) Another commenter                    Smaller firms, which may be least                     not fully developed monitoring
                                             urged the Department to consider that                   prepared to comply fully, might be                    systems.60 The Department does not
                                             the delay would unfairly harm firms                     affected most. The disruption also could              have sufficient data to estimate such
                                             that expended resources for timely                      adversely affect many investors. Some                 costs; therefore, they are not quantified
                                             compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and                  of the costs incurred could turn out to               here.
                                             create an unlevel playing field with                    be wasted if costly provisions are later                 Some commenters have asserted that
                                             non-compliant firms.56 One commenter                    revised or rescinded—and subsequent                   the delay could result in cost savings for
                                             estimated that an 18-month delay would                  implementation of revised provisions                  firms compared to the costs that were
                                             cost investors about $10.9 billion over                 might sow confusion and yield                         estimated in the Department’s 2016 RIA
                                             30 years assuming a 50 percent                          additional disruption. This delay will                to the extent that the requirements of
                                             compliance rate.57 Based on this                        avert such disruption along with the                  the Fiduciary Rule and PTE conditions
                                             commenter’s estimated investor losses,                  potentially wasted cost of complying                  are modified in a way that would result
                                             several commenters claimed that the                     with provisions that the Department                   in less expensive compliance costs.
                                             Department cannot justify the delay                     later revises or rescinds. In addition, the           However, the Department generally
                                             because investor losses outweigh the                    Department notes that some                            believes that start-up costs not yet
                                             estimated compliance cost savings.58                    commenters’ observations that investor                incurred for requirements previously
                                                The Department carefully reviewed                    losses from this delay may exceed                     scheduled to become applicable on
                                             and weighed these comments and the                      associated compliance cost savings do                 January 1, 2018, should not be included,
                                             referenced reports on potential investor                not reflect the totality of economic                  at this time, as a cost savings associated
                                             losses caused by this delay. Steps some                 considerations properly at hand. While                with this rule because the rule would
                                             firms already have taken toward                         some investor losses will reflect                     merely delay the full implementation of
                                             compliance, if not reversed, may limit                  decreases in overall social welfare,                  certain conditions in the PTEs until July
                                             investor losses. By some accounts, 59                   others will reflect transfers from                    1, 2019, while the Department considers
                                             compliance efforts may be most                          investors to the financial industry,                  whether to propose changes and
                                             advanced among the larger firms that                    which, while undesirable, are not social              alternatives to the exemptions. The
                                             account for the majority of the market,                 costs per se. Compliance costs in turn                Department would be required to
                                             so the number of retirement investors                   represent only some of the societal costs             assume for purposes of this regulatory
                                             potentially benefiting from compliance                  that may be averted by this delay.                    impact analysis that those start-up costs
                                             efforts might be large. Firms may be                    Others include those attributable to the              that have not been incurred generally
                                             especially motivated to comply in                       potential disruption and confusion that               would be delayed rather than avoided
                                             connection with advice on rollovers                     could adversely affect both firms and                 unless or until the Department acts to
                                             from ERISA-covered plans to IRAs,                       investors.                                            modify the compliance obligations of
                                             where they may face liability for any                      The Department acknowledges
                                                                                                                                                           firms and advisers to make them more
                                             fiduciary breaches under ERISA itself.                  uncertainty surrounding potential
                                                                                                                                                           efficient. Nonetheless, even based on
                                             Nonetheless, gaps in compliance may                     investor losses from this delay. On
                                                                                                                                                           that assumption, there may be some cost
                                             subject investors to some potentially                   balance, however, the Department
                                                                                                                                                           savings that could be quantified as
                                             avoidable losses, of uncertain incidence                concludes that the delay is justified,
                                                                                                                                                           arising from the delay because some
                                             and magnitude.                                          insofar as avoiding the market
                                                                                                                                                           ongoing costs would not be incurred
                                                These potential losses, however, must                disruption that would occur if regulated
                                                                                                                                                           until July 1, 2019. The Department has
                                             be weighed against the costs that firms                 parties incur costs to comply quickly
                                                                                                                                                           taken two approaches to quantifying the
                                             and investors would incur if the January                with conditions or requirements the
                                                                                                     Department subsequently revises or                    savings resulting from the delay in
                                             1, 2018 applicability date were not                                                                           incurring such ongoing costs: (1)
                                                                                                     repeals and the resultant significant
                                                                                                     consumer confusion justifies any                      Quantifying the costs based on a shift in
                                                55 John Crabb, International Financial Law
                                                                                                     attendant investor losses.                            the time horizon of the costs (i.e.,
                                             Review, October 2017, ‘‘The Fiduciary Rule Poll.’’
                                                56 Comment Letter #84 (Better Markets).
                                                                                                                                                           comparing the present value of the costs
                                                57 See Comment Letter #44 (Economic Policy
                                                                                                     b. Cost Savings                                       of complying over a ten year period
                                             Institute). According to this comment, the investor        Some firms that are fiduciaries under              beginning on January 1, 2018, with the
                                             losses over 30 years would range from $5.5 billion      the Fiduciary Rule may have committed                 costs of complying, instead, over a ten
                                             (75 percent compliance rate) to $16.3 billion (25                                                             year period beginning on July 1, 2019);
                                             percent compliance rate).
                                                                                                     resources to implementing procedures
                                                58 See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer           to support compliance with their                      and (2) quantifying the reduced costs
                                             Federation of America); Comment Letter #91              fiduciary obligations. This may include               during the 18-month period of delay
                                             (Public Investors Arbitration Bar Association);         changing their compensation structures                from January 1, 2018, to July 1, 2019,
                                             Comment Letter #120 (AFL–CIO); Comment Letter           and monitoring the practices and                      during which time regulated parties
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                                             #126 (Institute for Policy Integrity at New York                                                              would otherwise have had to comply
                                             University School of Law).                              procedures of their advisers to ensure
                                                59 John Crabb, International Financial Law           that conflicts of interest do not cause               with the full conditions of the BIC
                                             Review, October 2017, ‘‘The Fiduciary Rule Poll.’’      violations of the Fiduciary Rule and
                                             According to this report, some firms already            Impartial Conduct Standards of the                       60 See, e.g., Comment Letter #80 (Consumer

                                             adopted fiduciary standards for business reasons;                                                             Federation of America); Greg Iacurici, Investment
                                             therefore, they would continue to comply with the
                                                                                                     PTEs, and maintaining sufficient                      News, August 16, 2017, ‘‘Anticipating delay to DOL
                                             rule using the adopted changes during this              records to corroborate that they are                  fiduciary rule, broker-dealers and RIAs change
                                             transition period.                                      complying with the Fiduciary Rule and                 course.’’



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                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                                    56557

                                             Exemption and Principal Transaction                     review of the data and evidence                        declines this suggestion for now but
                                             Exemption but for the delay.                            submitted in response to the RFI.                      agrees to give the matter further
                                                The first of the two approaches                         The Department also cannot                          consideration during the course of the
                                             reflects the time value of money (i.e., the             determine at this time the degree to                   reexamination. The efficacy and effect
                                             idea that money available at the present                which the infrastructure that affected                 of these transitional requirements need
                                             time is worth more than the same                        firms have already established to ensure               to be considered very carefully as the
                                             amount of money in the future, because                  compliance with the Fiduciary Rule and                 Department considers possible changes
                                             that money can earn interest). The                      PTEs exemptions would be sufficient to                 to the exemptions and their disclosure
                                             deferral of ongoing costs by 18 months                  facilitate compliance with the Fiduciary               requirements. The Department is
                                             will allow the regulated community to                   Rule and PTEs conditions if they are                   concerned that after completing its
                                             use money they would have spent on                      modified in the future.                                reexamination, it might change the
                                             ongoing compliance costs for other                                                                             disclosure requirements, the
                                                                                                     c. Alternatives Considered
                                             purposes during that time period. The                                                                          implementation of which would have
                                             Department estimates that the ten-year                     While the Department considered                     imposed approximately $50.4 million of
                                             present value of the cost savings arising               several alternatives that were informed                operational costs 68 plus additional
                                             from this 18 month deferral of ongoing                  by public comments, the Department’s                   start-up costs.
                                             compliance costs, and the regulated                     chosen alternative in this final rule is                  The Department also considered not
                                             community’s resulting ability to use the                likely to yield the most desirable                     extending the transition period, which
                                             money for other purposes, is $551.6                     outcome, including avoidance of                        would mean that the remaining
                                             million using a three percent discount                  investor losses otherwise associated                   conditions in the PTEs would become
                                             rate 61 and $1.0 billion using a seven                  with costly market disruptions. In                     applicable on January 1, 2018. The
                                             percent discount rate.62                                weighing different options, the
                                                                                                                                                            Department rejected this alternative
                                                The second of the two approaches                     Department took numerous factors into
                                                                                                                                                            because it would not provide sufficient
                                             simply estimates the expenses foregone                  account. The Department’s objective
                                                                                                                                                            time for the Department to complete its
                                             during the period from January 1, 2018,                 was to facilitate orderly marketplace
                                                                                                                                                            ongoing review of, or propose and
                                             to July 1, 2019, as a result of the delay.              innovation and avoid unnecessary
                                                                                                                                                            finalize any changes to the Fiduciary
                                             When the Department published the                       confusion and uncertainty in the
                                                                                                                                                            Rule and PTEs. Moreover, absent the
                                             Fiduciary Rule and accompanying PTEs,                   investment advice market and
                                                                                                                                                            extended transition period, Financial
                                             it calculated that the total ongoing                    associated expenses for America’s
                                                                                                                                                            Institutions and Advisers would feel
                                             compliance costs of the Fiduciary Rule                  workers and retirees.
                                                                                                        The Department solicited comments                   compelled to prepare for full
                                             and PTEs were $1.5 billion annually.                                                                           compliance with PTE conditions that
                                             Therefore, the Department estimates the                 at the proposed rule stage regarding
                                                                                                     whether it should adopt an extension                   become applicable on January 1, 2018,
                                             ten-year present value of the cost
                                                                                                     that would end (1) a specified period                  despite the possibility that the
                                             savings of firms not being required to
                                                                                                     after the occurrence of a specific event               Department might identify and adopt
                                             incur ongoing compliance costs during
                                                                                                     (a contingent approach) or (2) on the                  more efficient alternatives or other
                                             an 18 month delay would be
                                                                                                     earlier or the later of (a) a time certain             significant changes to the rule. This
                                             approximately $2.2 billion using a three
                                                                                                     and (b) the end of a specified period                  could lead to unnecessary compliance
                                             percent discount rate 63 and $2.0 billion
                                                                                                     after the occurrence of a specific event               costs and market disruptions. As
                                             using a seven percent discount rate.64 65
                                                Based on its progress thus far with the              (a tiered approach). Several commenters                compared to a shorter delay with the
                                             review and reexamination directed by                    supported a contingent or tiered
                                                                                                                                                            BIC Exemption and Section VII of the Principal
                                             the President, however, the Department                  approach,66 while others expressed                     Transactions Exemption, not just the Impartial
                                             believes there may be evidence                          concern that a potentially indefinite                  Conduct Standards. These include: (1) The minimal
                                             supporting alternatives that reduce costs               delay might erode compliance with the                  transition written disclosure requirements in which
                                             and increase benefits to all affected                   Impartial Conduct Standards. The                       firms acknowledge their fiduciary status and that of
                                                                                                                                                            their advisers with respect to their advice, state the
                                             parties, while maintaining protections                  Department decided not to adopt these                  Impartial Conduct Standards and provide a
                                             for retirement investors. The                           approaches, because they could inject                  commitment to adhere to them, and describe the
                                             Department anticipates that it will have                too much uncertainty into the market                   firm’s material conflicts of interest and any
                                             a clearer sense of the range of such                    and cause investor confusion.                          limitations on product offering; (2) the requirement
                                                                                                        As discussed above in this preamble,                that firms designate a person responsible for
                                             alternatives once it completes a careful                                                                       addressing material conflicts of interest and
                                                                                                     some commenters urged the Department                   monitoring advisers’ adherence to the Impartial
                                               61 Annualized over ten years to $64.7 million per     to require firms to comply with the                    Conduct Standards; and (3) the requirement that
                                             year or over a perpetual time horizon, discounted       original transitional requirements of the              firms maintain records necessary to prove that the
                                             back to 2016, to $15.6 million per year.                                                                       conditions of the exemption have been met.’’).
                                               62 Annualized over ten years to $143.9 million
                                                                                                     exemptions, not just the Impartial                        68 Using the same methodology that was used to
                                             per year or over a perpetual time horizon,              Conduct Standards.67 The Department                    calculate the burden of the transition disclosure
                                             discounted back to 2016, to $61.8 million per year.                                                            that was originally envisioned in the April 2016
                                               63 Annualized over ten years to $252.1 million          66 See, e.g., Comment Letter #48 (American
                                                                                                                                                            final rule and exemptions, the Department
                                             per year or over a perpetual time horizon,              Council of Life Insurers); Comment Letter #51          estimates that during the transition period, 34.2
                                             discounted back to 2016, to $57.3 million per year.     (Morgan Stanley); Comment Letter #57 (Pacific Life     million transition disclosures would be produced to
                                               64 Annualized over ten years to $291.1 million        Insurance Company); Comment Letter #73                 comply with the requirements of the Best Interest
                                             per year or over a perpetual time horizon,              (Raymond James Financial); Comment Letter #82          Contract Exemption at a cost of $47.2 million, and
                                             discounted back to 2016, to $109.2 million per year.    (Standard Insurance Company and Standard               2.7 million transition disclosures would be
                                               65 The Department notes that firms may be             Retirement Services, Inc.); Comment Letter #112        produced to comply with the requirements of the
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                                             incurring some costs to comply with the impartial       (Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company);          Principal Transactions Exemption at a cost of $3.2
                                             conduct standards; however, it does not have            Comment Letter #121 (HSBC North America                million. These estimates assume that all investment
                                             sufficient data to estimate these costs. The            Holdings Inc.); Comment Letter #124 (Morgan,           advice clients receiving advice covered by the
                                             Department, as it continues to update its analysis      Lewis & Bockius LLP).                                  applicable exemptions between January 1, 2018 and
                                             of the rule, solicits comments on the costs of            67 See, e.g. Comment Letter #80 (Consumer            December 31, 2018 would receive the transition
                                             complying with the impartial conduct standards,         Federation of America) (‘‘at a bare minimum, the       disclosures and all new investment advice clients
                                             and how these costs interact with the costs of all      Department must require firms and advisers to          receiving advice covered by the applicable
                                             other facets of compliance with the conditions of       comply with the original transitional requirements     exemptions between January 1, 2019 and June 30,
                                             the PTEs.                                               of the exemptions, as set forth in Section IX of the   2019 would receive the transition disclosures.



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                                             56558        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             possibility of consecutive additional                   uncertainty surrounding the                           and furnish the independent fiduciary
                                             delays, if needed, the 18-month delay                   Department’s ongoing consideration of                 with a written disclosure in order to
                                             provides more certainty for affected                    whether to propose changes and                        receive commissions in conjunction
                                             stakeholders because it sets a firm date                alternatives to the exemptions, they are              with the purchase by a plan of securities
                                             for full compliance, which allows for                   reflected in the revised burden estimate              issued by an investment company
                                             proper planning and reliance.                           summary below. The ongoing costs of                   Principal Underwriter. Section V of PTE
                                                                                                     the information collections will remain               84–24, as amended, requires Financial
                                             2. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                                                                     inactive through the remainder of the                 Institutions to maintain records
                                                The Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)                    current approval period.                              necessary to demonstrate that the
                                             (44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq.) prohibits                        For a more detailed discussion of the              conditions of the PTE have been met.
                                             federal agencies from conducting or                     information collections and associated                   The rule delays the applicability date
                                             sponsoring a collection of information                  burden of this PTE, see the                           of amendments to PTE 84–24 until July
                                             from the public without first obtaining                 Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR                    1, 2019, except that the Impartial
                                             approval from the Office of Management                  21002, 21071.                                         Conduct Standards became applicable
                                             and Budget (OMB). See 44 U.S.C. 3507.                      PTE 2016–02, the Prohibited                        on June 9, 2017. The Department does
                                             Additionally, members of the public are                 Transaction Exemption for Principal                   not have sufficient data to estimate that
                                             not required to respond to a collection                 Transactions in Certain Assets Between                number of respondents that will use
                                             of information, nor be subject to a                     Investment Advice Fiduciaries and                     PTE 84–24 with the inclusion of
                                             penalty for failing to respond, unless                  Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs                       Impartial Conduct Standards but
                                             such collection displays a valid OMB                    (Principal Transactions Exemption):                   delayed applicability date of
                                             control number. See 44 U.S.C. 3512.                     The information collections in PTE                    amendments. Therefore, the Department
                                                OMB has previously approved                          2016–02, the Principal Transactions                   has not revised its burden estimate.
                                             information collections contained in the                Exemption, are approved under OMB                        For a more detailed discussion of the
                                             Fiduciary Rule and PTEs. The                            Control Number 1210–0157 through                      information collections and associated
                                             Department now is extending the                         June 30, 2019. The exemption requires                 burden of this PTE, see the
                                             transition period for the full conditions               Financial Institutions to provide                     Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR
                                             of the PTEs associated with its                         contract disclosures and contracts to                 21147, 21171.
                                             Fiduciary Rule until July 1, 2019. The                  Retirement Investors (Section II), adopt                 These paperwork burden estimates,
                                             Department is not modifying the                         written policies and procedures (Section              which comprise start-up costs that will
                                             substance of the information collections                IV), make disclosures to Retirement                   be incurred prior to the July 1, 2019,
                                             at this time; however, the current OMB                  Investors and on a publicly available                 effective date (and the June 30, 2019,
                                             approval periods of the information                     Web site (Section IV), maintain records               expiration date of the current approval
                                             collection requests (ICRs) expire before                necessary to prove they have met the                  periods), are summarized as follows:
                                             the new applicability date for the full                 PTE conditions (Section V). Although                     Agency: Employee Benefits Security
                                             conditions of the PTEs as they currently                the start-up costs of the information                 Administration, Department of Labor.
                                             exist. Therefore, many of the                           collections as they are set forth in the                 Titles: (1) Best Interest Contract
                                             information collections will remain                     current PTE may not be incurred prior                 Exemption and (2) Final Investment
                                             inactive for the remainder of the current               to June 30, 2019, due to uncertainty                  Advice Regulation.
                                             ICR approval periods. The ICRs                          surrounding the Department’s ongoing
                                             contained in the exemptions are                         consideration of whether to propose                      OMB Control Number: 1210–0156.
                                             discussed below.                                        changes and alternatives to the                          Affected Public: Businesses or other
                                                PTE 2016–01, the Best Interest                       exemptions, they are reflected in the                 for-profits; not for profit institutions.
                                             Contract Exemption: The information                     revised burden estimate summary                          Estimated Number of Respondents:
                                             collections in PTE 2016–01, the BIC                     below. The ongoing costs of the                       19,890 over the three-year period;
                                             Exemption, are approved under OMB                       information collections will remain                   annualized to 6,630 per year.
                                             Control Number 1210–0156 through                        inactive through the remainder of the                    Estimated Number of Annual
                                             June 30, 2019. The exemption requires                   current approval period.                              Responses: 34,046,054 over the three-
                                             disclosure of material conflicts of                        For a more detailed discussion of the              year period; annualized to 11,348,685
                                             interest and basic information relating                 information collections and associated                per year.
                                             to those conflicts and the advisory                     burden of this PTE, see the                              Frequency of Response: When
                                             relationship (Sections II and III),                     Department’s PRA analysis at 81 FR                    engaging in exempted transaction.
                                             contract disclosures, contracts and                     21089, 21129.                                            Estimated Total Annual Burden
                                             written policies and procedures (Section                   Amended PTE 84–24: The                             Hours: 2,125,573 over the three-year
                                             II), pre-transaction (or point of sale)                 information collections in Amended                    period; annualized to 708,524 per year.
                                             disclosures (Section III(a)), web-based                 PTE 84–24 are approved under OMB                         Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:
                                             disclosures (Section III(b)),                           Control Number 1210–0158 through                      $2,468,487,766 during the three-year
                                             documentation regarding                                 June 30, 2019. As amended, Section                    period; annualized to $822,829,255 per
                                             recommendations restricted to                           IV(b) of PTE 84–24 requires Financial                 year.
                                             proprietary products or products that                   Institutions to obtain advance written                   Agency: Employee Benefits Security
                                             generate third-party payments (Section                  authorization from an independent plan                Administration, Department of Labor.
                                             IV), notice to the Department of a                      fiduciary or IRA holder and furnish the                  Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction
                                             Financial Institution’s intent to rely on               independent fiduciary or IRA holder                   Exemption for Principal Transactions in
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                                             the PTE, and maintenance of records                     with a written disclosure in order to                 Certain Assets between Investment
                                             necessary to prove that the conditions of               receive commissions in conjunction                    Advice Fiduciaries and Employee
                                             the PTE have been met (Section V).                      with the purchase of insurance and                    Benefit Plans and IRAs and (2) Final
                                             Although the start-up costs of the                      annuity contracts. Section IV(c) of PTE               Investment Advice Regulation.
                                             information collections as they are set                 84–24 requires investment company                        OMB Control Number: 1210–0157.
                                             forth in the current PTE may not be                     Principal Underwriters to obtain                         Affected Public: Businesses or other
                                             incurred prior to June 30, 2019 due to                  approval from an independent fiduciary                for-profits; not for profit institutions.


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                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations                                           56559

                                                Estimated Number of Respondents:                     and exemption. Any future guidance                    and positive benefits are categorized as
                                             6,075 over the three-year period;                       will be subject to notice and comment                 a combination of (opposite-direction)
                                             annualized to 2,025 per year.                           and contain a Regulatory Flexibility Act              transfers and negative benefits in this
                                                Estimated Number of Annual                           analysis. Accordingly, pursuant to                    final rule. Accordingly, OMB has
                                             Responses: 2,463,802 over the three-year                section 605(b) of the RFA, the Deputy                 determined that this final rule is an E.O.
                                             period; annualized to 821,267 per year.                 Assistant Secretary of the Employee                   13771 deregulatory action.
                                                Frequency of Response: When                          Benefits Security Administration hereby
                                                                                                                                                           G. List of Amendments to Prohibited
                                             engaging in exempted transaction;                       certifies that the final rule will not have
                                                                                                                                                           Transaction Exemptions
                                             Annually.                                               a significant economic impact on a
                                                Estimated Total Annual Burden                        substantial number of small entities.                    The Secretary of Labor has
                                             Hours: 45,872 over the three-year                                                                             discretionary authority to grant
                                             period; annualized to 15,291 per year.                  4. Congressional Review Act                           administrative exemptions under ERISA
                                                Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:                     This final rule is subject to the                  and the Code on an individual or class
                                             $1,955,369,661 over the three-year                      Congressional Review Act (CRA)                        basis, but only if the Secretary first finds
                                             period; annualized to $651,789,887 per                  provisions of the Small Business                      that the exemptions are (1)
                                             year.                                                   Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of                administratively feasible, (2) in the
                                                Agency: Employee Benefits Security                   1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.) and will be               interests of plans and their participants
                                             Administration, Department of Labor.                    transmitted to Congress and the                       and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
                                                Titles: (1) Prohibited Transaction                   Comptroller General for review. The                   (3) protective of the rights of the
                                             Exemption (PTE) 84–24 for Certain                       final rule is a ‘‘major rule’’ as that term           participants and beneficiaries of such
                                             Transactions Involving Insurance                        is defined in 5 U.S.C. 804, because it is             plans and IRA owners. 29 U.S.C.
                                             Agents and Brokers, Pension                             likely to result in an annual effect on the           1108(a); see also 26 U.S.C. 4975(c)(2).
                                             Consultants, Insurance Companies and                    economy of $100 million or more.                      The Secretary of Labor has found that
                                             Investment Company Principal                                                                                  the delay finalized below is: (1)
                                                                                                     5. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                             Underwriters and (2) Final Investment                                                                         Administratively feasible, (2) in the
                                             Advice Regulation.                                         Title II of the Unfunded Mandates                  interests of plans and their participants
                                                OMB Control Number: 1210–0158.                       Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4)                    and beneficiaries and IRA owners, and
                                                Affected Public: Businesses or other                 requires each Federal agency to prepare               (3) protective of the rights of
                                             for-profits; not for profit institutions.               a written statement assessing the effects             participants and beneficiaries of such
                                                Estimated Number of Respondents:                     of any Federal mandate in a proposed or               plans and IRA owners.
                                             21,940.                                                 final agency rule that may result in an                  Under this authority, and based on
                                                Estimated Number of Annual                           expenditure of $100 million or more                   the reasons set forth above, the
                                             Responses: 3,306,610.                                   (adjusted annually for inflation with the             Department is amending the: (1) Best
                                                Frequency of Response: Initially,                    base year 1995) in any one year by State,             Interest Contract Exemption (PTE 2016–
                                             Annually, When engaging in exempted                     local, and tribal governments, in the                 01); (2) Class Exemption for Principal
                                             transaction.                                            aggregate, or by the private sector. For              Transactions in Certain Assets Between
                                                Estimated Total Annual Burden                        purposes of the Unfunded Mandates                     Investment Advice Fiduciaries and
                                             Hours: 172,301 hours.                                   Reform Act, as well as Executive Order                Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE
                                                Estimated Total Annual Burden Cost:                  12875, this final rule does not include               2016–02); and (3) Prohibited
                                             $1,319,353.                                             any federal mandate that the                          Transaction Exemption 84–24 (PTE 84–
                                                                                                     Department expects would result in                    24) for Certain Transactions Involving
                                             3. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                                                                     such expenditures by State, local, or                 Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension
                                                The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5                    tribal governments, or the private sector.            Consultants, Insurance Companies, and
                                             U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (RFA) imposes                       The Department also does not expect                   Investment Company Principal
                                             certain requirements with respect to                    that the delay will have any material                 Underwriters, as set forth below. These
                                             Federal Rules that are subject to the                   economic impacts on State, local or                   amendments are effective on January 1,
                                             notice and comment requirements of                      tribal governments, or on health, safety,             2018.
                                             section 553(b) of the Administrative                    or the natural environment.                              1. The BIC Exemption (PTE 2016–01)
                                             Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) or                                                                       is amended as follows:
                                             any other laws. Unless the head of an                   6. Executive Order 13771: Reducing
                                                                                                                                                              A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ is
                                             agency certifies that a final rule is not               Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
                                                                                                                                                           deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in
                                             likely to have a significant economic                   Costs
                                                                                                                                                           its place in the introductory DATES
                                             impact on a substantial number of small                    The impacts of this final rule are                 section.
                                             entities, section 604 of the RFA requires               categorized consistently with the                        B. Section II(h)(4)—Level Fee
                                             that the agency present a final                         analysis of the original Fiduciary Rule               Fiduciaries provides streamlined
                                             regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA)                  and PTEs, and the Department has also                 conditions for ‘‘Level Fee Fiduciaries.’’
                                             describing the rule’s impact on small                   concluded that the impacts identified in              The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ is deleted
                                             entities and explaining how the agency                  the RIA accompanying the Fiduciary                    and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in its place.
                                             made its decisions with respect to the                  Rule may still be used as a basis for                 Thus, for Level Fee Fiduciaries that are
                                             application of the rule to small entities.              estimating the potential impacts of this              robo-advice providers, and therefore not
                                             Small entities include small businesses,                final rule. It has been determined that,              eligible for Section IX (pursuant to
                                             organizations and governmental                          for purposes of E.O. 13771, the impacts               Section IX(c)(3)), the Impartial Conduct
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                                             jurisdictions.                                          of the Fiduciary Rule that were                       Standards in Section II(h)(2) are
                                                The final rule merely extends the                    identified in the 2016 analysis as costs,             applicable June 9, 2017, but the
                                             transition period for the PTEs associated               and that are presently categorized as                 remaining conditions of Section II(h) are
                                             with the Fiduciary Rule. The impact on                  cost savings (or negative costs) in this              applicable July 1, 2019, rather than
                                             small entities will be determined when                  final rule, and impacts of the Fiduciary              January 1, 2018.
                                             the Department issues future guidance                   Rule that were identified in the 2016                    C. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the
                                             after concluding its review of the rule                 analysis as a combination of transfers                amendment of existing contracts by


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                                             56560        Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 228 / Wednesday, November 29, 2017 / Rules and Regulations

                                             negative consent. The date ‘‘January 1,                 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                      On December 19, 2016, the
                                             2018’’ is deleted where it appears in this                                                                    Department published a final regulation
                                             section, including in the definition of                 Employee Benefits Security                            (‘‘Final Rule’’) amending the existing
                                             ‘‘Existing Contract,’’ and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’             Administration                                        claims procedure regulation; the Final
                                             inserted in its place.                                                                                        Rule revised the claims procedure rules
                                                                                                     29 CFR Part 2560                                      for ERISA-covered employee benefit
                                                D. Section IX—Transition Period for
                                                                                                     RIN 1210–AB39
                                                                                                                                                           plans that provide disability benefits.
                                             Exemption. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’                                                                       The Final Rule was made effective
                                             is deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in                                                                   January 18, 2017, but the Department
                                             its place. Thus, the Transition Period                  Claims Procedure for Plans Providing
                                                                                                     Disability Benefits; 90-Day Delay of                  delayed its applicability until January 1,
                                             identified in Section IX(a) is extended                                                                       2018, in order to provide adequate time
                                                                                                     Applicability Date
                                             from June 9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather                                                                    for disability benefit plans and their
                                             than June 9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.                  AGENCY:  Employee Benefits Security                   affected service providers to adjust to it,
                                                2. The Class Exemption for Principal                 Administration, Department of Labor.                  as well as for consumers and others to
                                             Transactions in Certain Assets Between                  ACTION: Final rule; delay of applicability            understand the changes made.
                                             Investment Advice Fiduciaries and                       date.                                                    On February 24, 2017, the President
                                             Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (PTE                                                                          issued Executive Order 13777 (‘‘E.O.
                                                                                                     SUMMARY:   This document delays for                   13777’’), entitled Enforcing the
                                             2016–02), is amended as follows:
                                                                                                     ninety (90) days—through April 1,                     Regulatory Reform Agenda.1 E.O. 13777
                                                A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ is                   2018—the applicability of a final rule                is intended to reduce the regulatory
                                             deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in                amending the claims procedure                         burdens agencies place on the American
                                             its place in the introductory DATES                     requirements applicable to ERISA-                     people, and directs federal agencies to
                                             section.                                                covered employee benefit plans that                   undertake specified activities to
                                                B. Section II(a)(1)(ii) provides for the             provide disability benefits (Final Rule).             accomplish that objective. As a first
                                             amendment of existing contracts by                      The Final Rule was published in the                   step, E.O. 13777 requires the
                                             negative consent. The date ‘‘January 1,                 Federal Register on December 19, 2016,                designation of a Regulatory Reform
                                             2018’’ is deleted where it appears in this              became effective on January 18, 2017,                 Officer and the establishment of a
                                                                                                     and was scheduled to become                           Regulatory Reform Task Force within
                                             section, including in the definition of
                                                                                                     applicable on January 1, 2018. The                    each federal agency covered by the
                                             ‘‘Existing Contract,’’ and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’
                                                                                                     delay announced in this document is                   Order. The Task Forces were directed to
                                             inserted in its place.                                                                                        evaluate existing regulations and make
                                                                                                     necessary to enable the Department of
                                                C. Section VII—Transition Period for                 Labor to carefully consider comments                  recommendations regarding those that
                                             Exemption. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’                 and data as part of its effort, pursuant              can be repealed, replaced, or modified
                                             is deleted and ‘‘July 1, 2019’’ inserted in             to Executive Order 13777, to examine                  to make them less burdensome. E.O.
                                             its place. Thus, the Transition Period                  regulatory alternatives that meet its                 13777 also requires that Task Forces
                                             identified in Section VII(a) is extended                objectives of ensuring the full and fair              seek input from entities significantly
                                             from June 9, 2017, to July 1, 2019, rather              review of disability benefit claims while             affected by regulations, including state,
                                             than June 9, 2017, to January 1, 2018.                  not imposing unnecessary costs and                    local and tribal governments, small
                                                                                                     adverse consequences.                                 businesses, consumers, non-
                                                3. Prohibited Transaction Exemption
                                                                                                     DATES: The amendments are effective on                governmental organizations, and trade
                                             84–24 for Certain Transactions
                                                                                                     January 1, 2018.                                      associations.
                                             Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers,                                                                          Not long thereafter, certain
                                             Pension Consultants, Insurance                          FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                                                                           stakeholders asserted in writing that the
                                             Companies, and Investment Company                       Frances P. Steen, Office of Regulations               Final Rule will drive up disability
                                             Principal Underwriters, is amended as                   and Interpretations, Employee Benefits                benefit plan costs, cause an increase in
                                             follows:                                                Security Administration, (202) 693–                   litigation, and consequently impair
                                                                                                     8500. This is not a toll free number.                 workers’ access to disability insurance
                                                A. The date ‘‘January 1, 2018’’ is
                                                                                                     SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                            protections.2 In support of these
                                             deleted where it appears in the
                                             introductory DATES section and ‘‘July 1,                A. Background                                         assertions, the stakeholders said, among
                                             2019’’ inserted in its place.                             Section 503 of the Employee                           1 82 FR 12285 (March 1, 2017).
                                               Signed at Washington, DC, this 24th day of            Retirement Income Security Act of 1974,                 2 Some  of the stakeholders also asserted a
                                             November 2017.                                          as amended (‘‘ERISA’’), requires that                 comment that was previously provided with respect
                                             Jeanne Klinefelter Wilson,                              every employee benefit plan shall                     to the 2015 proposed amendments, specifically that
                                                                                                                                                           the Department exceeded its authority and acted
                                             Acting Assistant Secretary, Employee Benefits           establish and maintain reasonable                     contrary to Congressional intent by applying certain
                                             Security Administration, Department of                  procedures governing the filing of                    ACA protections to disability benefit claims,
                                             Labor.                                                  benefit claims, notification of benefit               arguing that if Congress had wanted these
                                                                                                     determinations, and appeal of adverse                 protections to apply to disability benefit claims, it
                                             [FR Doc. 2017–25760 Filed 11–27–17; 11:15 am]                                                                 would have expressly extended the claims and
                                             BILLING CODE 4510–29–P
                                                                                                     benefit determinations. In accordance                 appeals rules in section 2719 of the Public Health
                                                                                                     with its authority under ERISA section                Service Act to plans that provide disability benefits.
                                                                                                     503, and its general regulatory authority             However, the Department did not take the position
                                                                                                     under ERISA section 505, the                          that the ACA compelled the changes in the Final
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                                                                                                                                                           Rule. Rather, because disability claims commonly
                                                                                                     Department of Labor (‘‘Department’’)                  involve medical considerations, the Department
                                                                                                     previously established regulations                    was of the view that disability benefit claimants
                                                                                                     setting forth minimum requirements for                should receive procedural protections similar to
                                                                                                     employee benefit plan procedures                      those that apply to group health plans, and thus it
                                                                                                                                                           made sense to model the Final Rule on procedural
                                                                                                     pertaining to claims for benefits by                  protections and consumer safeguards that Congress
                                                                                                     participants and beneficiaries. 29 CFR                established for group health care claimants under
                                                                                                     2560.503–1.                                           the ACA.



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Document Created: 2017-11-29 01:26:29
Document Modified: 2017-11-29 01:26:29
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionExtension of the transition period for PTE amendments.
DatesThis document extends the special transition period under sections II and IX of the Best Interest Contract Exemption and section VII of the Class Exemption for Principal Transactions in Certain Assets between Investment Advice Fiduciaries and Employee Benefit Plans and IRAs (82 FR 16902) to July 1, 2019, and delays the applicability of certain amendments to Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 from January 1, 2018 (82 FR 16902) until July 1, 2019. See Section G of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for a list of dates for the amendments to the prohibited transaction exemptions.
ContactBrian Shiker or Susan Wilker, telephone (202) 693-8824, Office of Exemption Determinations, Employee Benefits Security Administration.
FR Citation82 FR 56545 

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