How to Fix the SEC

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I suspect I'm not the only person who gets nervous whenever I hear talk of a self-funded SEC; that is, a regulatory organization that has the power to assess fines from those it oversees, and then put the money in its own pocket.  If we believe that incentives matter in the financial services world – and who doesn't? – then just as we want advisors focusing their full attention on the consumer's best interests, so too do we want the SEC focusing on consumer protection, rather than on allowing heinous misdeeds to happen and then rushing in after the fact to assess a fat fine that will raise staff bonuses across the board in late December.

My own view is that the SEC is adequately funded already, but perhaps is not ideally allocating the resources it already has.  After an online conversation with a respected advisor, it is becoming clear to me that fiduciary standards and regulatory reform are only part of the solution to protecting consumers from the predatory behavior of some financial services professionals in our midst.  The fix is potentially uncomplicated.

Let's take it in steps.

First, the SEC could reallocate (free up) precious resources by completely rewriting the job descriptions of its field examiners.

The press and those who want to characterize registered investment advisory firms as "unregulated" or "under-regulated" are fond of trotting out the statistic that the average firm is only visited once every ten years or so.  But this manpower problem, as every advisory firm knows, is entirely one of focus, not of personnel: much of the SEC examiner's time is spent looking for fussy procedural issues – so much so that even Bernie Madoff, according to his jailhouse interview, became impatient with the process.  The examiners triumphantly wrote him up on two minor issues that had nothing to do with the fact that he was routinely stealing money from his clients.

You can see how the SEC got into its current fixation with unimportant foot-faults: The odds of any examiner uncovering a Ponzi schemer or advisor who is funneling away client assets are rather low – for the simple reason that there aren't that many of them.  So promotion and performance evaluations have to have more detailed metrics.  Every advisory firm provides endless metrics which are almost totally beside the point of consumer protection, but offer ways to measure the thoroughness of one examiner compared with another.  The examiners pay a lot of attention to who has received your ADV this year, how good you are documenting your daily activities, the wording of your privacy forms – spending days in every advisor's office when it would take (at most) hours to determine if there are real and present dangers to the investing public.