What is Fiduciary Duty?
Fiduciary duty is the highest standard of care in financial services, requiring advisors to act in their clients' best interests at all times. This legal and ethical obligation means putting client interests ahead of the advisor's own interests, disclosing all conflicts of interest, and providing transparent, honest advice.
Components of Fiduciary Duty
- Duty of Loyalty: Act solely in the client's interest
- Duty of Care: Provide competent, thorough advice
- Duty of Disclosure: Reveal all material facts and conflicts
- Duty of Good Faith: Act honestly and fairly
- Duty of Prudence: Exercise reasonable judgment
Fiduciary vs. Suitability Standard
| Standard | Fiduciary | Suitability |
|---|---|---|
| Applies to | RIAs | Broker-dealers |
| Requirement | Best interest | Suitable |
| Conflicts | Must eliminate or disclose | Disclose only |
| Ongoing duty | Continuous | At point of sale |
Who Has Fiduciary Duty?
- Registered Investment Advisers (RIAs)
- Investment Adviser Representatives (IARs)
- ERISA fiduciaries for retirement plans
- CFP professionals when providing financial advice
- Trustees and executors
Regulation Best Interest (Reg BI)
In 2019, the SEC adopted Reg BI, requiring broker-dealers to act in clients' "best interest" when making recommendations. While not a full fiduciary standard, it raised the bar above suitability.
Practical Application
Fiduciary advisors should:
- Document the rationale for recommendations
- Disclose all compensation arrangements
- Avoid or manage conflicts of interest
- Regularly review client portfolios
- Provide clear, complete information
