Is the Independent Advisor Community Losing Its Soul?

Scott MacKillopAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives

In the beginning, the movement towards independent advice was a reaction.

The prevailing wirehouse model was profit-driven and conflict-ridden. As brokers, individual reps were not subject to the fiduciary standard. They were in-house salespeople, subject only to the much looser suitability standard.

Reps were paid when they sold something. The commission system encouraged churning. The client’s best interest often took a backseat to generating high turnover revenue.

Even when fee-based programs eventually emerged in the wirehouses, they were not designed to benefit clients by eliminating the urge to churn. They were developed to make up for commission revenues that had been lost when fixed commissions were eliminated. The asset managers that participated in those programs were required to trade in-house.

Brokers had sales quotas and were encouraged to push proprietary products and securities issued by investment banking clients. House interests prevailed over client interests. The primary function of these firms was to keep the wheels of commerce turning, not to ensure the financial security of individual investors.

Gatekeepers decided what products were available. Pay-to-play was rampant. Shelf space was valuable real estate. Quality alone was not enough to gain access. But if a manager had a large sales force and “invested” in the relationship, gates opened.

Many advisors wanted something different. The main driver was the ability to better serve their clients with open architecture, objective advice and fewer conflicts.