STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 1090 – Retail Investor Protection Act
(Rep. Wagner, R-MO, and 34 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes H.R. 1090 because the bill would derail
an important Department of Labor rulemaking critical to protecting
Americans’ hard-earned savings and preserving their retirement security.
H.R.
1090 prohibits Labor from issuing a rule to protect investors until the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) acts. It also impinges on the
SEC’s ability to move forward with its own rulemaking by requiring the
SEC to take the misguided step of providing definitive findings before
promulgating a rule.
Further,
the bill ignores the fact that significant study has already been
conducted by both agencies and that Labor has had extensive engagement
with the public, industry, and numerous stakeholders in its rulemaking
process. This includes more than 140 days of
public comment period, four days of public hearings, and approximately
100 meetings with stakeholders after the proposal was published in
April. Moreover, Labor and the SEC are already working closely
to ensure the smooth operation of the proposed safeguards, and this
legislation would hamper effective coordination between the two
agencies.
Under
existing, outdated rules, savers cannot count on receiving the unbiased
advice that they need and expect. This bill would effectively block
action to protect working and middle-class families from the harmful
conflicts of interest that lead to biased advice. The Council of
Economic Advisers estimates that these conflicts cost savers $17 billion
every year.
The
Administration is committed to ensuring that American workers and
retirees are able to receive advice about how to invest their money in
safe, secure, and transparent financial products that are free from
harmful conflicts of interest. Labor's ongoing rulemaking is
designed to protect the retirement savings of millions of workers and
retirees by ensuring that paid advisors and other entities do not place
their own financial interests over those of their customers. This
legislation puts a roadblock in the way of preventing such harmful
conflicts, which hurts businesses, consumers, and retirees and their
families.
If the President were presented with H.R. 1090, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
Source: Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget

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