MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Before the Court are the parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment (ECF Nos. 48, 51, 54, 67). On November 17, 2016, the Court held oral argument on the Motions. For the reasons stated below, Plaintiffs’ Motions for Summary Judgment are DENIED and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.
Plaintiffs U.S. Chamber of Commerce (“COC”), the Indexed Annuity Leadership Council (“IALC”) and the American Council of Life Insurers (“ACLI”) (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) bring this lawsuit to challenge three rules published by the Department of Labor (“DOL”) on April 8, 2016, which were to become effective on April 10, 2017.
Prior to the new rules, a financial professional who did not give advice to a consumer on a regular basis was not a “fiduciary,” and therefore was not subject to fiduciary standards under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (“ERISA”) and the Internal Revenue Code (the “Code”). Unless fiduciaries qualify for an exemption, they are prohibited by ERISA and the Code from receiving commissions, which are considered to present a conflict of interest. Prior to the new rules, fiduciaries could qualify for an exemption known as the Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 (“PTE 84-24”), which, if they qualified, allowed them to receive commissions on all annuity sales as long as the sale was as favorable to the consumer as an arms-length transaction and the adviser received no more than reasonable compensation.
The new rules modify the regulation of conflicts of interest in the market for retirement investment advice, and consist of: 1) a new definition of “fiduciary” under ERISA and the Code; 2) an amendment to, and partial revocation of, PTE 84-24; and 3) the creation of the Best Interest Contract Exemption (“BICE”). The first rule revises the definition of “fiduciary” under ERISA and the Code, and eliminates the condition that investment advice must be provided “on a regular basis” to trigger fiduciary duties.
Plaintiffs complain that financial professionals are improperly being treated as fiduciaries and should not be required to comply with heightened fiduciary standards for one-time transactions. Plaintiffs also complain that the conditions to qualify for an exemption under BICE are so burdensome that financial professionals will be unable to advise the IRA market and sell most annuities to ERISA plans and IRAs. They challenge the new rules and rulemaking procedure, and ask the Court to vacate them in their entirety.
II. Definitional Issues
A. Annuities
Annuities are insurance contracts where the purchaser invests money and receives payments at set intervals or over the lifetime of the individual. They are generally used as retirement vehicles. Annuity payments may be immediate or deferred. Deferred annuities have two phases: in the first phase, they accumulate value through premium payments and interest; in the second phase, they pay out based on an application of a predetermined formula. The three most common types of deferred annuities are fixed rate annuities, variable annuities, and FIAs (fixed indexed annuities).
Fixed rate annuities guarantee the purchaser will earn a minimum rate of interest during the accumulation phase. Insurance companies bear the market risk on fixed rate annuities because the annuity is guaranteed to earn at least the declared interest rate for the time period specified in the contract. When the purchaser begins to receive payments, income payments are either based on the original guaranteed rate or the insurer’s current rate, whichever is higher. Fixed rate annuities are subject to state insurance regulations and are not regulated by federal securities laws. Fixed rate annuities are usually sold by banks and insurance agents.
Variable'annuities do not guarantee future income. Instead, returns on such annuities depend on the success of the underlying investment strategy. Premiums are invested, and the consumer bears the investment risk for both principal and interest. There is opportunity for greater return, but it comes with a higher risk. Variable annuities are regulated under federal securities laws and are usually sold by broker-dealers.
FIAs share features of fixed rate and variable annuities. FIAs earn interest based on a market index, such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, or the S&P 500. Depending on the performance of the market index chosen by the consumer, returns on FIAs can be higher or- lower than the guaranteed rate of a fixed rate annuity. At the same time, the rate of return cannot be less than zero, even if the index is negative for the relevant time period. Principal, therefore, is shielded from poor market performance. FIAs give the purchaser more risk but more potential return than fixed rate annuities, but less risk and less potential return than variable annuities. FIAs are not regulated under federal securities laws and are usually sold by insurance agents. They, like fixed rate annu
B. Investment Advisers and the Distribution Model for Sale of FIAs
Three groups of professionals generally provide investment advice to retirees: registered investment advisers, broker-dealers, and insurance agents. Registered investment advisers must register with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). Broker-dealers are not required to register with the SEC as investment advisers if their advice is “solely incidental” to the conduct of their business and they receive no “special compensation” for advisory services.
Financial professionals generally charge for their services in one of two ways. In a transaction-based compensation model, the professional receives a commission, markup, or sales load on a per transaction basis. In a fee-based compensation model, the investor pays based on either the amount of assets in the account, or pays a flat, hourly, or annual fee.
FIAs are most often sold by independent insurance agents. Independent marketing organizations (“IMOs”) serve as intermediaries between independent agents and insurance companies, and provide product education, marketing, and distribution services to agents.
C. Title I of ERISA: Employee Benefit Plans
To protect employee benefit plan beneficiaries, Title I of ERISA, 29 U.S.C §§ 1021 et seq., imposes obligations on persons who engage in activities related to employee benefit plans as fiduciaries. Under Title I, a person “is a fiduciary with respect to a plan” if:
i) [h]e exercises any discretionary authority or discretionary control respecting management of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or disposition of its assets,
ii) [h]e 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, or
iii) [h]e has any discretionary authority or discretionary responsibility in the administration of such plan.9
Under Title I, a fiduciary must adhere to the duties of loyalty and prudence, which requires the fiduciary to:
[discharge his duties with respect to a plan solely in the interest of the participants and the beneficiaries and for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to participants and their beneficiaries, and defraying reasonable expenses of plan administration; and act with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing that a prudent man acting in a like capacity and familiar with such matters would use in the conduct of an enterprise of alike character and with like aims. 10
Title I also protects plan beneficiaries from a broad range of transactions deemed to present a conflict of interest for fiduciaries.
[k]nows or should know that such transaction constitutes a direct or indirect sale or exchange, or leasing, of any property between the plan and a party in interest; lending of money or other extension of credit between the plan and a party in interest; furnishing of goods, services, or facilities between the plan and a party in interest; transfer to, or use by or for the benefit of a party in interest, of any assets of the plan.12
Congress delegated authority to the DOL to grant conditional or unconditional exemptions from the prohibited transaction rule, so long as such an exemption is 1) administratively feasible; 2) in the interests of the plan, its participants and beneficiaries; and 3) protective of the rights of the plan participants and beneficiaries.
D. Title II of ERISA: IRAs
Title II of ERISA establishes rules for the tax treatment of IRAs and other plans not subject to Title I. Unlike Title I, Title II applies to IRAs and other plans that are not created or maintained by either the plan beneficiary’s employer or union.
E. 1975 Definition of “Fiduciary”
Under the second prong of ERISA’s fiduciary definition, a person is a fiduciary
1) [The person] [r]enders advice as to the value of securities or other property, or makes recommendations as to the advisability of investing in, purchasing, or selling securities or other property,
2) On a regular basis,
8) Pursuant to a mutual agreement, arrangement or understanding, with the plan or a plan fiduciary,
4) The advice will serve as a primary basis for investment decisions with respect to plan assets, and
5) The advice will be individualized • based on the particular needs of the plan.22
Until the DOL’s recent rulemaking, the five-part test had governed the applicability of the prohibited transaction rules under Title I and Title II. Because of the second element of the test, sporadic or one-time advice would not constitute advice on a regular basis that would activate ERISA’s prohibited transaction rule, which only applies to fiduciaries.
F. Prohibited Transaction Exemption 84-24 (PTE 84-24)
The DOL originally adopted PTE 84-24 in 1977 as PTE 77-9, providing ex-emptive relief for parties who “receive[d] commissions when plans and IRAs purchased recommended insurance and annuity contracts.”
G. Recent Rulemaking
a. Proposed Rule
In 2010, the DOL published a notice proposing to revise the 1975 regulation’s
1.The DOL Proposed Replacing the Five-Part Test
The DOL stated in the 2015 notice that the five part-test had been created “prior to the existence of participant-directed 401(k) plans, widespread investments in IRAs, and the now commonplace rollover of plan assets from fiduciary-protected plans to IRAs,” and that these rollovers “will total more than $2 trillion over the next 5 years.”
The 2015 notice also stated that since 1975, “the variety and complexity of financial products has increased,” and that retirees “are increasingly moving money from ERISA-covered plans, where their employer has both the incentive and the fiduciary duty to facilitate sound investment choices, to IRAs where both good and bad investment choices are myriad and advice that is conflicted is commonplace.”
2.Proposed Changes to PTE 84-24
The DOL also proposed significant modifications to PTE 84-24. The proposal “revoke[d] [PTE 84-24] relief for insurance agents, insurance brokers and pension consultants to receive a commission in connection with the purchase by IRAs of variable annuity contracts and other annuity contracts that are securities under federal securities laws.”
3.BICE Proposal
Finally, the DOL proposed BICE, a new exemption from prohibited transactions for
b. Final Rules
The DOL provided a ninety-day comment period on the three proposed rules, during which it held a four-day public hearing in August 2015, and received over three thousand comment letters. On April 8, 2016, the DOL published its final rules.
1. Fiduciary Rule
By this rule (“Fiduciary Rule”), the DOL replaced the five-part test with a new approach to the analysis of when one “renders investment advice,” and in turn redefined who is a fiduciary under ERISA. The DOL concluded that significant developments since 1975 in the retirement savings and investment market warranted removing the “regular basis” limitation in the definition of “fiduciary.”
(1) Such person provides to a plan, plan fiduciary, plan participant or beneficiary, IRA, or IRA owner the following types of advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect:
(i) A recommendation as to the advisability of acquiring, holding, disposing of, or exchanging, securities or other investment property, or a recommendation as to how securities or other investment property should be invested after the securities or other investment property are rolled over, transferred, or distributed from the plan or IRA;
(ii) A recommendation as to the management of securities or other investment property, including, among other things, recommendations on investment policies or strategies, portfolio composition, selection of other persons to provide investment advice or investment management services, selection of investment account arrangements(e.g., brokerage versus advisory); or recommendations with respect to rollovers, transfers, or distributions from a plan or IRA, including whether, in what amount, in what form, and to what destination such a rollover, transfer, or distribution should be made; and
(2) With respect to the investment advice described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the recommendation is made either directly or indirectly (e.g., through or together with any affiliate) by a person who:
(i) Represents or acknowledges that it is acting as a fiduciary within the meaning of the Act or the Code;
(ii) Renders the advice pursuant to a written or verbal agreement, arrangement, or understanding that the advice is based on the particular investment needs of the advice recipient; or
(iii) Directs the advice to a specific advice recipient or recipients regarding the advisability of a particular investment or management decision with respect to securities or other investment property of the plan or IRA.37
The Fiduciary Rule defines “recommendation” as “a communication that, based on its content, context, and presentation, would reasonably be viewed as a suggestion that the advice recipient engage in or refrain from taking a particular course of action.”
2. PTE 84-24
The DOL’s final revised PTE 84-24 eliminated the 2010 proposal’s exemption for FIAs.
3. BICE
To qualify for BICE
1) Acknowledge fiduciary status with respect to investment advice to the Retirement Investor;
2) Adhere to Impartial Conduct Standards requiring them to:
• Give advice that is in the Retirement Investor’s Best Interest (i.e., prudent advice that is based on the investment objectives, risk tolerance, financial circumstances, and needs of the Retirement Investor, without regard to financial or other interests of the Adviser, Financial Institution, or their Affiliates, Related Entities or other parties);
• Charge no more than reasonable compensation; and
• Make no misleading statements about investment transactions, compensation, and conflicts of interest;
3) Implement policies and procedures reasonably and prudently designed to prevent violations of the Impartial Conduct Standards;
4) Refrain from giving or using incentives for Advisers to act contrary to the customer’s best interest; and
5) Fairly disclose the fees, compensation, and Material Conflicts of Interest associated with their recommendations.43
If a Financial Institution provides investment advice to IRAs or other plans not covered by Title I, it must enter into a written contract with the consumer that includes all but the fourth provision listed above.
III. Analysis
Plaintiffs’ challenge is based on several grounds. First, Plaintiffs argue the Fiduciary Rule exceeds the DOL’s statutory authority under ERISA. Second, Plaintiffs argue BICE exceeds the DOL’s exemptive authority, because it requires fiduciaries who advise Title II plans, such as IRAs, to
A. The Fiduciary Rule Does Not Exceed the DOL’s Authority
Courts analyze an agency’s interpretation of a statute using the two-step approach set forth in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
a. The Fiduciary Rule is Not Unambiguously Foreclosed by ERISA
A person is a “fiduciary” under ERISA if “he renders investment advice for a fee or other compensation, direct or indirect, with respect to any moneys or other property of such plan.”
The plain language of ERISA does not foreclose the DOL’s interpretation. ERISA does not expressly define “investment advice,” and expressly authorizes the DOL to “prescribe such regulations as [it] finds necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of [ERISA],” and to “define [the] accounting, technical and trade terms used in [ERISA].”
1. The Common Law of Trusts
Plaintiffs argue Congress confined the definition of “fiduciary” under ERISA to relationships where special intimacy or trust and confidence exists between parties, in accordance with the common law of trusts. Plaintiffs contend that because everyday business interactions are not relationships of trust and confidence, a person acting as a broker or an insurance agent engaged in sales activity is not a fiduciary. This argument is not supported by the plain language of ERISA.
Although fiduciary duties under ERISA “draw much of their content from the common law of trusts,” “trust law does not tell the entire story ... [and] will offer only a starting point.” Varity Corp. v. Howe,
In its reply brief, COC claims that the express statutory departure referenced by the Supreme Court in Mertens applies only to “those expressly named as trustees.”
Further, even if the interpretation of “renders investment advice” were limited to the common law of trusts, Plaintiffs do not convince the Court that the Fiduciary
2. The Investment Advisers Act (“IAA”)
The IAA defines the term “investment adviser,” and in doing so, specifically excludes “any broker or dealer whose performance of such services is solely incidental to the conduct of his business as a broker or dealer and who receives no compensation therefor.” Plaintiffs assert this distinction must be maintained by the DOL because in drafting ERISA, Congress closely tracked the IAA’s definition of an investment adviser.
In defining a “fiduciary,” ERISA does not exempt investment advice that is “solely incidental to the conduct of [the] business.”
3. The Fiduciary Rule Regulates Those Rendering Advice for a Fee
A person is a fiduciary under ERISA if he:
(i) exercises any authority or discretionary control respecting management of such plan or exercises any authority or control respecting management or disposition of its assets or
(ii) he 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, or
(iii) he has any discretionary authority or discretionary responsibility in the administration of such plan.59
Plaintiffs argue the Fiduciary Rule exceeds the coverage of ERISA because it imposes fiduciary status on those who earn a commission merely for selling a product, regardless of whether advice is given. Actually, the Fiduciary Rule plainly does not make one a fiduciary for selling a product without a recommendation. The rule states:
[I]n the absence of a recommendation, nothing in the final rule would make a person an investment advice fiduciary merely by reason of selling a security or investment property to an interested buyer. For example, if a retirement investor asked a broker to purchase a mutual fund share or other security, the broker would not become a fiduciary investment adviser merely because thebroker purchased the mutual fund share for the investor or executed the securities transaction. Such ‘purchase and sales’ transactions do not include any investment advice component. 60
Because Plaintiffs’ contention is directly contradicted by the plain language of the Fiduciary Rule, the Court rejects it.
Plaintiffs also argue that financial professionals who receive sales commissions are not rendering investment advice for a fee. However, Plaintiffs’ interpretation truncates the statute and does not address the next clause, “or other compensation, direct or indirect.” The word “indirect” contradicts the notion that compensation must be paid principally for investment advice, as opposed to advice rendered in the course of a broader sales transaction. Plaintiffs’ interpretation is also at odds with market realities and their own description of the role insurance agents and brokers play in annuity sales. ACLI notes that insurance agents and broker-dealers help consumers assess whether an annuity is a good choice and which types of annuities and optional features suit consumers’ financial circumstances. Such advice requires significant and detailed analysis, often more than is required to sell other financial products, and therefore “insurers typically pay a sales commission to compensate agents and broker-dealers for the significant effort involved in learning about, marketing, and selling annuities.”
4. ERISA Does Not Require Covered Advice to Be Given on a Regular Basis
Plaintiffs argue the first and third prongs of ERISA’s definition of fiduciary require a “meaningful, substantial, and ongoing relationship to the plan,” and that advice must be “provided on a regular basis and through an established relationship,” as had been required by the five-part test.
Plaintiffs also claim that the first and third prongs of ERISA’s definition of a fiduciary involve a direct connection to the essentials of plan operation and that management and administration of a plan are central functions; as a result, they argue the second prong must be read consistently with the other two subsections, and a
5. The Dodd-Frank Act Does Not Foreclose the DOL’s Interpretation
Plaintiffs argue that because § 913(g) of the Dodd-Frank Act prohibits the SEC from adopting a standard of conduct that disallows commissions for broker-dealers, it is implausible that Congress intended to allow the DOL, through ERISA, to promulgate a regulation that would do just that. The enactment of § 913(g) in Dodd-Frank does not address what Congress intended when it enacted ERISA. Further, the DOL’s final rules do not prohibit commissions for broker-dealers. They only provide for modifications to exemptions from prohibited transactions, and if a person or entity qualifies for an exemption, that would allow the applicant to receive commissions and other forms of third party compensation.
6. Congress Has Not Ratified the Five-Part Test
Plaintiffs argue that because Congress has repeatedly amended ERISA since 1975, without ever amending the five-part test, that test has de facto been incorporated into ERISA by way of ratification.
There is a stark difference between Congress acquiescing to a permissible interpretation and Congress affirmatively deciding that an interpretation is the only permissible one. If Plaintiffs’ argument were correct, the DOL could never revisit the five-part test because it has been, in effect, enshrined into the statute. To the contrary, courts have “consistently required express congressional approval of an administrative interpretation if it is to be viewed as statutorily mandated.” AFL-CIO v. Brock,
b. The Fiduciary Rule Is a Permissible Interpretation Under Chevron Step Two
Because the Fiduciary Rule is not unambiguously foreclosed by the plain language of ERISA, the Court’s analysis moves to Chevron step two. Chevron,
1. The DOL Reasonably Removed the Regular Basis Requirement
Plaintiffs argue the DOL’s interpretation of what it means to render investment advice is entitled to no deference, because ERISA requires regular contact between an investor and a financial professional to trigger a fiduciary duty. If anything, however, the five-part test is the more difficult interpretation to reconcile with who is a fiduciary under ERISA. The broad and disjunctive language of ERISA’s three prong fiduciary definition suggests that significant one-time transactions, such as rollovers, would be subject to a fiduciary duty. Under the five-part test, however, such a transaction would not trigger a fiduciary duty.
Plaintiffs argue the coverage of the Fiduciary Rule will be vast, involving billions of dollars, presenting issues “of deep economic and political significance,” and that, therefore, the DOL is not entitled to Chevron deference under King v. Burwell, — U.S. —,
[qjuestion of deep economic and political significance that is central to this statutory scheme; had Congress wished to assign that question to [the IRS], it surely would have done so expressly. It is especially unlikely that Congress would have delegated this decision to the IRS, which has no expertise in crafting health insurance policy of this sort. This is not a case for the IRS.
Id. at 2489. The Court decided Chevron was not applicable in the first instance, not that the IRS’ interpretation was entitled to no deference at Chevron step two.
Here, in contrast, the DOL may “prescribe such regulations as [it] finds necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of [ERISA],” and to “define [the] accounting, technical and trade terms used in [ERISA].”
Plaintiffs argue the Fiduciary Rule contradicts congressional intent because it in effect rejects the “disclosure regime established by Congress under the securities laws.”
4. The DOL Justified Its New Interpretation
Plaintiffs argue the DOL did not justify changing the regulatory treatment of those giving incidental advice in connection with sales of annuities. The DOL may change existing policy “as long as [it] provide[s] a reasoned explanation for the change ... and show[s] there are good reasons for the new policy.” Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro, — U.S. —,
For the reasons stated above, the Fiduciary Rule is a reasonable interpretation under ERISA and is entitled to Chevron deference.
B. DOL Did Not Exceed Its Statutory Authority to Grant Conditional Exemptions
Plaintiffs next challenge the DOL requirement that fiduciaries who advise Title II plans, such as IRAs, agree to be bound by duties of loyalty and prudence as conditions to qualify for BICE. Although fiduciaries under Title I of ERISA are expressly subject to duties of loyalty and prudence, fiduciaries under Title II are not.
a. The Exemptions Are Not Unambiguously Foreclosed by ERISA or the Code
Nothing in ERISA or the Code unambiguously prevents the DOL from conditioning exemptive relief under Title II on the fiduciary’s adherence to the duties of loyalty and prudence. The DOL does not impose the duties of loyalty and prudence on fiduciaries covered by Title II; it only provides an exemption from prohibited transactions. In other words, the DOL simply specifies conditions to qualify for exemptions when fiduciaries engage in transactions that are otherwise prohibited by ERISA and the Code.
Congress, however, expressly granted the DOL broad authority to adopt “conditional or unconditional exemption[s]” from prohibited transactions under Title II, so long as any exemption is 1) administratively feasible; 2) in the interests of the plan, its participants and beneficiaries; and 3) is protective of the rights of the plan participants and beneficiaries.
1. The DOL May Require Compliance with Title II Duties
Congress’ decision to impose duties of loyalty and prudence to plans under Title I, but not under Title II, does not answer the question of whether Congress intended to foreclose the DOL from requiring that fiduciaries under Title II comply with the duties of loyalty and prudence as a condition for exemptive relief. Congressional silence does not overcome the DOL’s express statutory authority to grant exemptive relief. If Plaintiffs’ reasoning were correct, the DOL “would be barred from imposing any condition on a [TJitle II exemption that relies on a duty or obligation that Congress imposed categorically on Title I plans.” Nat’l Ass’n for Fixed Annuities,
2. BICE Is Not Unduly Burdensome, Nor Is It a Mandate
Plaintiffs make two claims as to why BICE fails at Chevron step one; first, that the DOL’s exemptive authority is limited to reducing regulatory burdens, and second, that financial professionals have no choice but to comply with BICE, making it a mandate that exceeds the DOL’s authority, rather than an exemption.
Any exemption the DOL grants from the prohibited transaction rules reduces the industry’s regulatory burden. Without PTE 84-24, BICE, or some other exemption, the plain language of ERISA and the Code would apply, and fiduciaries would be barred from engaging in prohibited transactions altogether. In fact, the DOL is not required to grant any exemptions under ERISA or the Code.
Plaintiffs further argue the DOL has not imposed conditions for exemptions, but instead has created a regulatory mandate where financial professionals have no choice but to meet the requirements of BICE. In particular, Plaintiffs contend that because certain accounts cannot be serviced using a fee-based compensation model and 95% of accounts under $25,000 rely on transaction-based models, in order to serve those customers, financial professionals must rely on BICE.
b. BICE Does Not Exceed the DOL’s Authority Under Chevron Step Two
Because the DOL’s use of its ex-emptive authority in BICE is not unambiguously foreclosed by the statute, the Court moves to an analysis of BICE under Chevron step two. The exemption created by the DOL is entitled to deference unless it is arbitrary and capricious. Am. Trucking Assocs. v. ICC,
1. Congress Has Delegated Exemptive Authority to the DOL
Plaintiffs cite several cases to support their argument that the DOL’s use of ex-emptive authority is arbitrary and capricious because:
when an agency claims to discover in a long-extant statute an unheralded power to regulate a significant portion of the American Economy, [the Supreme Court] greet[s] its announcement with a measure of skepticism [and] ... expects] Congress to speak clearly if it wishes to assign an agency decisions of vast economic and political significance.
Util. Air Grp. v. EPA, — U.S. —,
In Brown & Williamson, the FDA departed from statements it had repeatedly made to Congress since 1914 that it did not have jurisdiction over the tobacco industry. The FDA changed its position, despite the fact that Congress had created a distinct regulatory scheme over the tobacco industry and expressly rejected proposals to give the FDA such jurisdiction.
In Whitman, the Supreme Court held Congress “does not alter the fundamental details of a regulatory scheme in vague
In Utility Air, the Supreme Court held that “it would be patently unreasonable— not to say outrageous — for EPA to insist on seizing expansive power that it admits the statute is not designed to grant,” and found that a “long-extant statute [did not give EPA] an unheralded power to regulate a significant portion of the American Economy.”
In contrast to the situations in the cases cited by Plaintiffs, in ERISA Congress did speak clearly, and assigned the DOL the power to regulate a significant portion of the American economy, which the DOL has done since the statute was enacted. The circumstances of Utility Air, Brown & Williamson, MCI, Whitman, and King v. Burwell cannot reasonably be compared to the DOL’s decisions to move FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE and to condition the availability of BICE on a contract requiring exercise of the duties of loyalty and prudence. Congress gave the DOL broad discretion to use its expertise and to weigh policy concerns when deciding how best to protect retirement investors from conflicted transactions. Although BICE may cover more advisers and institutions and its conditions may be more onerous than past exemptions, it does not follow that the DOL’s rules are within the orbit of the cases Plaintiffs cite, nor that the DOL’s use of exemptive authority is unreasonable. Nat'l Ass’n for Fixed Annuities,
Plaintiffs also argue that if BICE is not arbitrary and capricious, the DOL would have “virtually unfettered authority to create substantive obligations.”
2. The Conditions and Consequences of BICE Are Reasonable
Plaintiffs claim the conditions to qualify for BICE, as well as BICE’s consequences, are arbitrary and capricious, thus running afoul of Chevron. In particular, Plaintiffs note that certain accounts cannot be serviced using a fee-based compensation model, and that IRA advisers who are paid on a commission basis thus must seek exemptive relief. If such relief is extended via BICE, they will be subject to Title I fiduciary duties, while those duties will not extend to those paid an asset management fee. Plaintiffs assert this outcome is unreasonable. However, the DOL reasonably found that institutions and advisers that are paid on a commission basis may very well make investment recommendations that benefit themselves, at the expense of plan participants and beneficiaries. Advisers who are paid in asset-based fee arrangements are not faced with such a conflict of interest. Because small differences in investment performance will accumulate over time, those differences can have a profound impact on an investor’s retirement income; as the DOL noted, an “investor who rolls her retirement savings into an IRA could lose 6 to 12 and possibly as much as 23 percent of the value of her savings over 30 years of retirement by accepting advice from a conflicted financial adviser.”
The DOL outlined several ways the industry could innovate and adapt to BICE. In particular, the DOL noted
there is ample room for innovation and market adaption on the way advisers are compensated ... as consumers gain awareness that advice was never ‘free,’ demand is likely to grow not only for asset-based fee arrangements, but also for hourly or flat fee arrangements ... Advisory firms may compensate advisers less by commission and more by salary or via rewards tied to customer acquisition or satisfaction.95
Here, the input of amicus Financial Planning Coalition (“FPC”) is pertinent. Although FPC heard the same concerns regarding compensation when it implemented similar standards to BICE in 2008, commission-based compensation has survived, and FPC’s financial professionals continue “to serve middle-income investors using all types of [] compensation models and other innovative methods.”
The Court also finds that the conditions to qualify for BICE are reasonable. FPC notes that its almost 80,000 members have since 2008 successfully operated under a regime similar to that in BICE, including a fiduciary standard, a written contract, disclosure of certain fees, costs, and conflicts of interest, prudency standards, and policies to mitigate conflicts.
BICE’s written contract requirement is reasonable because state law breach of contract claims for IRAs existed before the rulemaking, as an annuity is a contract enforceable under traditional principles of contract law. The imposition of the duties of loyalty and prudence are reasonable given the DOL’s findings on the negative impact that conflicted transactions have on retirement investors, and that the new standards could save retirement investors up to $36 billion over the next ten years, and $76 billion over the next twenty years.
C. BICE and PTE 84-24 Do Not Create a Private Right of Action
Plaintiffs bring an additional challenge to the DOL’s exemptive authority, arguing that BICE and PTE 84-24 imper-missibly create a private right of action, in violation of Alexander v. Sandoval, which held that “private rights of action to enforce federal law must be created by Congress.”
First, any lawsuit seeking to enforce the terms of the written contract must be brought under state law.
Second, prior to BICE and amended PTE 84-24, annuities held in IRAs were already subject to breach of contract claims. As ACLI noted during the rule-making, “[ijnsurers are familiar with the idea of an enforceable contract between a financial institution and its customer. All annuity owners have contractual rights enforceable against the insurer and recourse to state insurance departments and state courts;” therefore, BICE and the amended PTE 84-24 do not change the enforcement regime that existed prior to the current rulemaking.
Third, there is precedent for federal regulations that require regulated entities to enter into written contracts with mandatory provisions. The DOL, in fact, has previously imposed similar conditions to qualify for an exemption from a prohibited transaction under ERISA. Qualification for PTE 84-14 is conditioned on “Qualified Professional Asset Managers” acknowledging they are fiduciaries in a “written management agreement.”
Regulations with such conditions are not unique to the DOL. Under its export credit guarantee program, the Department of Agriculture requires each exporter to enter into a written sales contract with the importer that must include nine terms.
Plaintiffs attempt to distinguish the details of the aforementioned mandatory contractual terms with BICE and the amended PTE 84-24.
Plaintiffs cite three cases to support their argument that the written contract requirement creates a private right of action. In Astra USA, Inc. v. Santa Clara Cty., the Supreme Court held it was “in compatible with the statutory regime” to permit a medical facility to bring suit as a third-party beneficiary to an agreement between a federal agency, HHS, and drug manufacturers.
In Umland, the plaintiff brought a breach of contract suit based on the “implied terms” of a federal statute, FICA. Umland v. PLANCO Fin. Servs., Inc.,
D. Neither the New Rules Nor the Rulemaking Violate the APA
Plaintiffs argue that various parts of the new rules or the rulemaking process were arbitrary and capricious under the APA, for five reasons.
a. The Notice and Comment Period Was Adequate
In its proposed rule, the DOL kept existing exemptive relief from prohibited transactions for all fixed annuities. The final version of PTE 84-24, however, provides an exemption only for fixed rate annuity contracts, not variable annuities or FIAs. Plaintiffs claim the DOL failed to provide the requisite notice to the regulated industry or provide an opportunity to comment on its decision to shift FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE, in contravention of the APA.
The APA requires an agency to publish in its proposed rulemaking notice of “either the terms or substance of the proposed rule or a description of the subjects and issues involved.” Long Island Care at Home, Ltd. v. Coke,
In its 2015 notice of proposed rulemak-ing (“NPRM”) for the modified PTE 84-24 and for BICE, the DOL requested comment on the appropriate treatment of annuities. The NPRM distinguished between transactions that involve securities and those that involve insurance products that are not securities. It proposed keeping PTE 84-24 for annuities like FIAs, while subjecting securities, including variable annuities, to BICE.
whether we have drawn the correct lines between insurance and annuity products that are securities and those that are not, in terms of our decision to continue allow IRA transactions involving non-security insurance and annuity contracts to occur under the conditions of PTE 84-24 while requiring IRA transactions involving securities to occur under the conditions of [BICE] ... and ... whether the proposal to revoke relief for securities transactions involving IRAs (i.e., annuities that are securities and mutual funds) but leave in place relief for IRAtransactions involving insurance and annuity contracts that are not securities strikes the appropriate balance and is protective of the interests of the IRAs. 117
This language satisfies the APA because it notified the public and the industry about the possibility the DOL would remove FIAs from PTE 84-24 and make them instead subject to BICE. In the NPRM, the DOL expressly asked whether FIA transactions should continue under PTE 84-24. Requiring sellers of FIAs to rely on BICE, as opposed to PTE 84-24, was thus a logical outgrowth of the DOL’s proposal. The NPRM contemplated revoking relief for some types of annuities while leaving in place existing exemptive relief for others, but questioned whether the proposal drew the correct lines between types of annuities, and whether the proposal struck the appropriate balance in protecting IRA investors. Thus, it was “reasonably foreseeable” that the DOL could put FIAs on the other side of the line, and Plaintiffs could reasonably have anticipated such a modification.
Some commenters, including IALC, expressly anticipated what became the terms of the final rule, as a logical outgrowth of the DOL’s proposal.
The Fifth Circuit’s holding in Schuylkill Metals supports the Court’s conclusion that the DOL satisfied the APA’s notice requirement.
Plaintiffs also argue they did not have an opportunity to meaningfully comment because the DOL’s final rules were based on new reasoning and criteria. In particular, the DOL’s proposal reasoned PTE 84-24 would apply depending on whether or not an annuity is a security, but the final rules distinguished between annuities based on their complexity. The APA does not require such a detailed rationale and analysis to satisfy notice requirements. The rationale for a final rule can be different from that of a proposed rule, because the “whole rationale of notice and comment rests on the expectation that the final rules will be somewhat different — and improved — from the rules originally proposed by the agency.” Am. Fed’n of Labor & Cong. of Indus. Orgs. v. Donovan,
Plaintiffs also argue lack of notice because they did not learn the DOL was contemplating a deviation from the NPRM until another industry group’s meeting with the DOL in the final days of the comment period. In the meeting, the DOL indicated it was leaning toward grouping FIAs with variablé annuities in BICE. The meeting is not relevant to satisfying the APA, as the NPRM itself gave Plaintiffs adequate notice of the potential change. At the meeting, the DOL discussed its preliminary view with the industry, to receive additional feedback before the comment period closed. In any case, Plaintiffs had further opportunity to comment between the meeting and the close of the comment period, and there was nothing improper about the meeting. See Tex. Office of Pub. Util. Counsel v. FCC,
b. The DOL Reasonably Moved FIAs From PTE 84-24 to BICE
Plaintiffs argue retaining PTE 84-24 for fixed rate annuities, but subjecting FIAs and variable annuities to BICE, is action that is arbitrary and capricious, because fixed rate annuities and FIAs are nearly identical and the DOL failed to give a reasoned explanation for distinguishing them. An agency acts arbitrarily and capriciously if it applies different standards to similarly situated products without providing a reasoned explanation. Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. v. Surface Transp. Bd.,
1. The Complexity and Risk of FIAs
The DOL described the complexity of FIAs in its Regulatory Impact Analysis
Based on the RIA’s findings on complexity, the DOL determined that FIAs are “complex products requiring careful consideration of their terms and risks” and that FIA investors
can all too easily overestimate the value of these contracts, misunderstand the linkage between the contract value and the index performance, underestimate the costs of the contract, and overestimate the scope of their protection from downside risk (or wrongly believe they have no risk of loss). As a result, Retirement Investors are acutely dependent on sound advice that is untainted by the conflicts of interest posed by Advisers’ incentives to secure the annuity purchase, which can be quite substantial.128
Citing the RIA, the DOL further determined that “increasing complexity and conflicted payment structures associated with [FIAs] have heightened the conflicts of interest experienced by investment advice providers that recommend them.”
2. The Differences Between FIAs and Fixed Rate Annuities '
The DOL then differentiated FIAs from fixed rate annuities. In the RIA, the DOL described record sales of FIAs, cited graphs showing a steady decline of fixed rate annuities accompanied by a steady increase in FIAs, explained the features of the various annuity products, and distinguished them based on complexity and
It should be noted that in American Equity Inv. Life Insurance Co. v. S.E.C.,
3. The Similarities Between FIAs and Variable Annuities
The DOL further justified grouping FIAs with variable annuities. The DOL found FIAs “are as complex as variable annuities, if not more complex,” that “[s]imilar to variable annuities, the returns of [FIAs] can vary widely, which' results in a risk to investors,” and that “[u]nbiased and sound advice is important to all investors but it is even more crucial in guarding the best interests of investors in [FIAs] and variable annuities.”
The DOL determined that “[b]oth categories of annuities, variable and [FIAs], are susceptible to abuse, and Retirement Investors would equally benefit in both cases from the protections of [BICE].”
Contrary to Plaintiffs’ argument, the DOL drew a reasonable distinction between FIAs and fixed rate annuities and justified moving FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE. The DOL thoroughly considered and analyzed the relevant data and evidence, and determined that FIAs should be moved from PTE 84-24 to BICE because variable annuities and FIAs share common complexity, high commissions, and resulting conflicts of interest. The DOL acknowledged some similarities between FIAs and fixed rate annuities, but found the differences between them sufficient to justify different treatment. Because the DOL’s determina
c. The DOL Accounted for Existing Annuity Regulation
Relying on American Equity, Plaintiffs argue that in moving FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE, the DOL failed “to determine whether, under the existing regime, sufficient protections existed” for annuities.
The standard for determining whether the DOL’s decision to move FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE was arbitrary and capricious is “whether the agency examined the pertinent evidence, considered the relevant factors, and articulated a reasonable explanation for how it reached its decision.” Associated Builders,
The DOL comprehensively assessed existing securities regulation for variable annuities, state insurance regulation of all annuities, academic research, government and industry statistics on the IRA marketplace, and consulted with numerous government and industry officials, including the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (“NAIC”), SEC, FINRA, the Department of the Treasury, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Council of Economic Advisers, and the National Economic Council. The DOL found the protections prior to the current rule-making insufficient to protect investors.
The DOL found the annuity market to be influenced by contingent commissions, which “align the insurance agent or broker’s incentive with the insurance company, not the consumer,” that existing protections do not “limit or mitigate potentially harmful adviser conflicts,” and that “notwithstanding existing [regulatory] protections, there is convincing evidence that advice conflicts are inflicting losses on IRA investors.”
today’s marketplace [commissions] ... give[ ] ... advisers a strong reason, conscious or unconscious, to favor investments that provide them greater compensation rather than those that may be most appropriate for the participants ... an ERISA plan investor who rolls her retirement savings into an IRA could lose 6 to 12 and possibly as much as 23 percent of the value of her savings over 30 years of retirement by accepting advice from a conflicted financial adviser."142
The DOL also found that state insurance laws and their enforcement vary significantly because only thirty-five states have adopted the NAIC model regulation, producing inconsistent protections and confusion for consumers. The U.S. Department of the Treasury noted that the absence of a national standard is problematic because there are unprecedented numbers of retirement investors, and financial professionals are selling increasingly complex products, therefore more uniform regulation is necessary to protect investors.
The DOL considered comments recommending more regulation “to enhance retirement investor protection in an area lacking sufficient protections for investors in tax qualified accounts.”
With all these considerations in mind, the DOL explained:
The extensive changes in the retirement plan landscape and the associated investment market in recent decades undermine the continued adequacy of the original approach in PTE 84-24. In the years since the exemption was originally granted in 1977, the growth of 401(k) plans and IRAs has increasingly placed responsibility for critical investment decisions on individual investors rather than professional plan asset managers. Moreover, at the same time as individual investors have increasingly become responsible for managing their own investments, the complexity of investment products and range of conflicted compensation structures have likewise increased. As a result, it is appropriate to revisit and revise the exemption to better reflect the realities of the currentmarketplace. 148
The DOL’s rationale and findings satisfy the APA. Plaintiffs argue, however, that the DOL acted unreasonably when it relied upon studies focused almost exclusively on mutual funds, as opposed to FIAs, and that the studies relied on data collected before more stringent annuity regulation went into effect. The Court would find that the DOL satisfied the APA even without the mutual fund studies because the DOL relied on other evidence, as described below, but the Court will nonetheless address the mutual fund studies.
The DOL acted reasonably when it relied on studies that primarily involved mutual funds. It found FIAs and mutual funds comparable, because both are subject to disclosure and suitability requirements, and agents selling both products are compensated with upfront commissions that depend on the product sold.
The conclusion that the DOL reasonably extrapolated from mutual fund studies is further supported by the fact that annuity data is not readily and widely available, while mutual fund studies are obtainable because the relevant data is publicly disclosed under SEC regulations. The DOL requested annuity data from industry groups as early as 2011, but was told the information was not available and would be prohibitively expensive to collect.
Plaintiffs also argue the DOL acted unreasonably because it relied on studies from periods prior to the strengthened NAIC model rules, which mitigated the need for new regulation. But the DOL considered data through 2015, reviewed data from 2008 through 2014 submitted by commenters, considered that regulators continued to express concern that the prior regulatory scheme did not provide adequate protections, and came to the same conclusions.
It was reasonable to shift FIAs from PTE 84-24 to BICE given the DOL’s analysis of mutual fund studies; changes in the marketplace since 1975; harmful conflicts that could cost investors over the next decade, despite existing regulation; the opaque nature and incentives of commission-based compensation; concerns from SEC and FINRA regulators; and the lack of uniformity among the states.
d. BICE Is Not Unworkable
Plaintiffs’ next argument is that BICE is unworkable, and therefore contravenes the APA. Here, the Court is to determine “whether the agency examined the pertinent evidence, considered the relevant factors, and articulated a reasonable explanation for how it reached its decision.” Associated Builders,
1. Maintenance of the Independent Agent Distribution Model
IMOs and their independent insurance agents are the largest distribution channel for FIAs, and approximately 65% of FIAs are sold by insurance agents who are not affiliated with a broker-dealer. Plaintiffs claim that under the new rules, insurance companies selling covered annuities will be unable to maintain their independent agent distribution model, through which FIAs are primarily sold. However, the record reflects the DOL acknowledged the importance of independent insurance agents, IMOs, and the current distribution channel, but found that conflicts of interest for
The DOL discussed the various ways IMOs and independent agents could respond to the new rules, including: relying on BICE or another exemption, avoiding potential conflicts and thereby minimizing the need for an exemption, or ceasing to advise IRA clients to buy covered annuities.
The DOL anticipated the most common distribution model would remain workable, predicting firms “will gravitate toward structures and practices that efficiently avoid or manage conflicts to deliver impartial advice consistent with fiduciary con
2. The DOL Provided Guidance on Reasonable Compensation
Plaintiffs argue there is no meaningful guidance in the rules on what constitutes “reasonable compensation,” which is a provision in the written contract required to qualify for BICE, and that the exemption is therefore unworkable. In fact, the DOL has used the same “reasonable compensation” language in BICE in numerous exemptions from prohibited transactions going back to 1977.
The reasonableness of the fees depends on the particular facts and circumstances at the time of the recommendation. Several factors inform whether compensation is reasonable including ... the market pricing of service(s) provided and the underlying asset(s), the scope of monitoring, and the complexity of the product. No single factor is dis-positive in determining whether compensation is reasonable; the essential question is whether the charges are reasonable in relation to what the investor receives. Consistent with the [DOL’s] prior interpretations of this standard, [the DOL] confirms that an Adviser and Financial Institution do not have to recommend the transaction that is the lowest cost or that generates the lowest fees without regard to other relevant factors. In this regard, [the DOL] declines to specifically reference FINRA’s standard in the exemption, but rather relies on ERISA’s own longstanding reasonable compensation formulation.168
Plaintiffs respond that this provides no clarity. The DOL considered this critique and rejected it, noting that the standard “has long applied to financial services providers,” that parties could “refer to [the DOL’s] interpretations under ERISA § 408 (b)(2) and Code § 4975(d)(2)” for further guidance, that the industry could request the DOL to provide guidance, and that nothing prevents parties from “seeking impartial review of their fee structures to safeguard against abuse.”
Plaintiffs argue the “vague” and “ill-defined” best interest standard, along with inconsistent state law enforcement of contracts required under BICE, make those potentially covered by the exemption susceptible to unforeseeable, potentially conflicting, and staggering liability from private litigation.
should temper concerns about the risk of excessive litigation. In particular, the exemption permits Advisers and Financial Institutions to require mandatory arbitration of individual claims, so that claims that do not involve systemic abuse or entire classes of participants can be resolved outside of court. Similarly, the exemption permits waivers of the right to obtain punitive damages or rescission based on violation of the contract.173
The best interest standard is not vague; the standard is explained thoroughly in BICE, and is drawn from the duties of loyalty and prudence, which are “deeply rooted in ERISA and the common law of agency and trusts.”
4. The DOL’s Guidance on Proprietary Products Is Clear
Proprietary products are defined in BICE as products “that are managed, issued or sponsored by the Financial Institution or any of its Affiliates.”
5. Plaintiffs Misconstrue the Supervisory Responsibilities Imposed by the Rules
Plaintiffs claim insurance companies will be unable to comply with the responsibilities BICE imposes on financial institutions to supervise independent agents. COC presented for consideration by the Court a hypothetical case, where an independent agent sells seven FIAs established by four different insurance companies, which would evidence a conflict of interest if the agent’s compensation varied from insurer to insurer.
The DOL considered the relevant factors for BICE’s workability, addressed commenter concerns, and reasonably justified its conclusions, thereby satisfying the APA’s requirements.
e. The POL’s Cost Benefit Analysis Was Reasonable
Plaintiffs make four arguments that the DOL overstated the benefits and underestimated the costs of its rulemak-ing, and thus violated the APA, by conducting an unreasonable cost-benefit analysis. Plaintiffs’ claims are to be analyzed under the same standard of deference to the agency as their “workability” argument. An agency is not required to “conduct a formal cost-benefit analysis in which each advantage and disadvantage is assigned a monetary value.” Michigan v. EPA, - U.S. -,
1. Mutual Fund Studies Were Not a Single Unrepresentative Factor
First, Plaintiffs claim the DOL inappropriately relied on a single unrepresentative factor, front-end-load mutual fund conflicts, to conclude the rulemaking would save retirement investors billions of dol
The DOL’s assessment of mutual fund performance was reasonable. It did not, as COC argues, select an unrepresentative time frame. Using 1993 through 2009 as a relevant time period was not arbitrary, as it was the period used in the CEM study upon which the DOL relied. But this was not the only data set the DOL relied on. It conducted its own review of mutual fund performance analysis at points from 1980 through 2015, considered a study referenced by a commenter which used data from 2008 to 2014, and updated the record to include another study which used data from 2003 through 2012.
Nor did the DOL ignore criticisms made during the comment period of its methodology and its estimates of savings for consumers. The DOL responded to concerns cited by Plaintiffs and other commenters, but concluded its data was fairly representative and its methodology was sound.
2. The DOL Considered Costs on the Industry and Retirement Investors
Next, Plaintiffs claim the DOL did not consider the costs to the industry of more class action lawsuits or the costs to consumers of decreased access to investment advice. The DOL did not specifically quantify potential class action litigation costs, but it is not required to do so. It considered the relevant issues and satisfied the APA’s requirements. The DOL requested the industry provide supplemental litigation cost data, but again, the industry did not do so because “of the extreme uncertainties surrounding litigation risk.”
The DOL provided at least two reasons why Plaintiffs’ cost concerns are overstated. First] BICE’s class action provision does not drastically change the regulatory regime. Prior to the rulemaking, transactions regulated by FINRA were already subject to class actions, and there were
The DOL also assessed Plaintiffs’ concerns that the rules would decrease access to investment advice.
3. The DOL Considered the Compliance Costs of BICE
Third, Plaintiffs argue the DOL did not consider the cost for IMOs, and other agents who sell FIAs, to comply with BICE. In fact, the DOL considered compliance costs, which were quantified based on the industry’s own estimates.
The final estimate of “ten-year compliance cost [with the new rules] is estimated to be between $10.0 billion and $31.5 billion,” while estimated gain for IRA investors would be “between $33 billion and $36 billion over 10 years and between $66 and $76 billion over 20 years.”
4. The DOL Considered the Costs of Excluding Certain Annuities
Fourth, Plaintiffs argue the DOL did not weigh the costs and benefits of excluding FIAs and variable annuities from PTE 84-24. Actually, the DOL calculated additional costs for the FIA industry to comply with BICE, rather than PTE 84-24. It found providing relief under PTE 84-24 instead of BICE would reduce costs
by between $34.0 million and $37.8 million over ten years. The largest costs associated with [BICE] are fixed costs that are triggered during the first instance that a financial institution uses [BICE], These costs are borne by financial institutions whether they use the exemption once or regularly. Therefore, the financial institutions that would be most likely to realize significant cost savings from providing relief for [FIAs] under PTE 84-24 instead of [BICE] are those financial institutions that would not sell any other product requiring relief under [BICE].209
Plaintiff IALC argues the rulemaking is arbitrary and capricious because the DOL did not show the benefits of compliance would outweigh these costs. The DOL had no specific data to quantify likely investor gains from applying BICE to FIAs, either from its own work or that of the industry.
E. BICE Meets the Prohibited Transaction Rules Exemptive Requirements
As noted above, to grant exemp-tive relief from a prohibited transaction, the DOL must find the exemption is 1) administratively feasible; 2) in the interests of the plan, its participants and beneficiaries; and 3) is protective of the rights of the plan participants and beneficiaries.
First, assessing whether BICE is feasible for the industry would always require a cost-benefit or economic-impact analysis. When Congress requires a cost-benefit or economic-impact analysis to be conducted by an agency, it expressly states in a statute what is required.
F. Waiver Applies and the Rules Do Not Violate the First Amendment
Plaintiffs did not raise any First Amend-. ment issues during the rulemaking process. However, Plaintiffs now assert a First Amendment claim. Plaintiffs argue the rules violate the First Amendment be
Before the Court can address the First Amendment issue, it must decide the threshold issue of whether this argument was waived because it was not raised during the rulemaking process.
a. Plaintiffs Waived Any First Amendment Claim During the Rulemaking
Plaintiffs advance three arguments against waiver: first, that typical waiver principles do not apply because they assert a pre-enforcement First Amendment claim under the Declaratory Judgment Act; second, that it is impossible to waive a constitutional objection to an agency rule; and third, that the substance of the First Amendment was in fact raised in several comments. The Court finds these arguments unpersuasive.
Plaintiffs confuse issue exhaustion and administrative remedies under an existing statute with waiver principles arising from a notice and comment process. ACLI cites Weaver v. U.S. Info. Agency,
In the Court’s view, however, Weaver does not affect an analysis of the regulations promulgated by the DOL under ERISA. A statute requiring administrative exhaustion before a claim is brought in federal court plainly differs from a waiver of a challenge to an agency’s rulemaking.
With respect to an agency’s notice and comment rulemaking process, the Fifth Circuit has held:
[t]his court will not consider questions of law which were neither presented to nor passed on by the agency ... challenges to [agency] action are waived by the failure to raise the objections during the notice and comment period ... [F]or the federal courts to review a petitioner’s claims in the first instance would usurp the agency’s function and deprive the [agency] of an opportunity to consider the matter, make its ruling, and state the reasons for its action ... [T]here-fore, only in exceptional circumstances should a court review ,for the first time on appeal a particular challenge to the [agency’s] approval of [an agency decision] not raised during the agency proceedings.
BCCA Appeal Grp. v. EPA,
This rationale is directly applicable to the DOL’s rules, as this Court’s review of the First Amendment claim would “usurp the agency’s function and deprive the [agency] of an opportunity to consider the matter, make its ruling, and state the reasons for its action.” BCCA Appeal,
At oral argument, Plaintiffs argued waiver was inapplicable, because a person’s rights would be violated if he did not participate in a rulemaking process.
[s]uch a rule would require everyone who wishes to protect himself from arbitrary agency action not only to become a faithful reader of the notices of proposed rulemaking published each day in the Federal Register, but a psychic able to predict the possible changes that could be made in the proposal when the rule is finally promulgated.
These Plaintiffs were on notice that the [ ] rulemaking was relevant to them. The annual choice of outlier thresholds had direct impact on the potential cost exposure of hospitals in the Medicare acute inpatient program. Clearly the annual ratemaking was a significant concern to the entire healthcare industry, and particularly for hospitals — like the Plaintiffs here — that participated in the Medicare program. The size of the administrative record itself shows the interest taken by the industry in the comment process. The fact that this was an annual rate-making process rather than ad hoc agency action counters any notion that the Plaintiffs were blindsided by the parameter choice. In fact, several comments in the record addressed the accuracy of the [Secretary’s] forecasting. None of the comments, however, raised the current arguments advanced by the Plaintiffs.
Id. at 1021. The Court finds the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in Thompson persuasive. The Plaintiffs in this case have waived their First Amendment arguments, because- they were well aware that the rulemaking process was relevant to them, it could have a direct impact on their industry, and the size of the administrative record shows the interest of the industry. Plaintiffs were not blindsided.
Finally, the argument that several com-menters raised the substance of the First Amendment during the notice and comment period, thus not waiving it, is contradicted by the record; the citations Plaintiffs present neither name a First Amendment claim nor mention First Amendment principles.
b. Plaintiffs Bring a Facial Challenge
Even if Plaintiffs’ First Amendment challenge were not waived, the DOL’s rules do not violate the First Amendment. The parties dispute whether Plaintiffs’ pre-enforcement First Amendment claim under the Declaratory Judgment Act is a facial challenge or an as-applied challenge. The Court concludes it is a facial challenge, for three reasons. First, the rules have not been implemented. See Bowen v. Kendrick,
c. The Rules Regulate Professional Conduct, Not Commercial Speech
The Court finds the rules regulate professional conduct, not commercial speech, and therefore any incidental effect on speech does not violate the First Amendment. Under the professional speech doctrine, the government may regulate a professional-client relationship, as a “professional’s speech is incidental to the conduct of the profession,” and the First Amendment “does not prevent restrictions directed at commerce or conduct from imposing incidental burdens on speech.” Hines v. Alldredge,
The Fifth Circuit recently addressed when the professional speech doctrine applies in Serafine v. Branaman,
Here, the DOL’s rules only regulate personalized investment advice to a paying client, and thus would have an incidental effect on speech, if any. For example, the Fiduciary Rule frames the definition of recommendation to include advice “based on the particular investment needs of the advice recipient” and “advice to a specific advice recipient or recipients regarding the advisability of a particular investment or management decision.”
general communications that a reasonable person would not view as an investment recommendation, including general circulation newsletters, commentary in publicly broadcast talk shows, remarks and presentations in widely attended speeches and conferences, research or news reports prepared for general distribution, general marketing materials, general market data, including data on market performance, market indices, or trading volumes, price quotes, perform-anee reports, or prospectuses. 227
Plaintiffs argue the professional speech doctrine is inapplicable because the rules are not targeted at conduct, but instead directly regulate speech that proposes commercial transactions, and have more than an incidental burden on speech. Plaintiffs acknowledge that annuity salespeople help consumers assess whether an annuity is a good choice, and that the sales are made on a personalized basis. There is no dispute that the DOL’s rules regulate personalized advice in a private setting to a paying client.
Plaintiffs also contend the professional speech doctrine is inapposite because it has never commanded a majority of the Supreme Court.
Plaintiffs argue the DOL’s rules infringe on their right to commercial expression in personal solicitations, and therefore violate the First Amendment. Edenfield v. Fane,
one would not become a fiduciary merely by providing information on standard financial and investment concepts ... All of this is non-fiduciary education as long as the adviser doesn’t cross the line to recommending a specific investment or investment strategy ... without acting as a fiduciary, firms and advisers can provide information and materials onhypothetical asset allocations as long as they are based on generally accepted investment theories, explain the assumptions on which they are based, and don’t cross the line to making specific investment recommendations or referring to specific products ... without acting as a fiduciary, firms and advisers can provide a variety of ... materials that enable workers to estimate future retirement needs and to assess the impact of different investment allocations on retirement income, as long as the adviser meets conditions similar to those described for asset allocation models. These interactive materials can even consider the impact of specific investments, as long as the specific investments are specified by the investor, rather than the firm/adviser. 231
Next, Plaintiffs argue the rules are content-based and incompatible with the Supreme Court’s holding in Sorrell. In Sor-rell, a Vermont law was held to violate the First Amendment because it prohibited certain healthcare entities from “disclosing or otherwise allowing prescriber-identify-ing information to be used for marketing.”
The DOL’s rules do not regulate the content of speech. Instead, they require individuals who qualify as fiduciaries under ERISA to conduct themselves according to fiduciary standards. Plaintiffs claim the new rules create liabilities for receipt of commission-based compensation based on the content of speech.
The new rules must also be viewed in the context of ERISA’s prohibited transaction rule, in which Congress deemed certain transactions so fraught with conflicts that it banned them. As early as 1977, the DOL determined that, without an exemption, commission-based compensation would trigger the prohibited transaction rules.
Plaintiffs argue the rules make two specific content-based distinctions. First, they claim the Fiduciary Rule regulates speech with a particular subject matter, including investment advice or recommendations to purchase retirement products. If this were content-based regulation, then ERISA’s plain language, including the statute’s fiduciary definition, various prohibited transaction exemptions since 1974, and numerous securities laws would all trigger heightened scrutiny. As other courts have held, that position is untenable.
At worst, the only speech the rules even arguably regulate is misleading advice. Plaintiffs and their members may speak freely, so long as they recommend products that are in a consumer’s best interest. If an investment adviser recommends a product merely because the product makes the most money for the adviser or financial institution, despite the product not being in the investor’s best interest, such advice is not appropriate for the investor and would be misleading. Thus, even if Plaintiffs’ First Amendment claim were analyzed as a regulation of commercial speech, the rales would withstand First Amendment scrutiny because they only seek to regulate misleading advice and statements. For commercial speech to warrant First Amendment protection, the speech must “not be misleading,” because the government may regulate communieation that is “more likely to deceive the public than to inform it.” Cent. Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n of N.Y.,
Finally, Plaintiffs argue the rales “effectively ban[ ] commercial sales speech” because “all recommendations to retirement savers must be made in a fiduciary capacity or not at all.”
G. The Exemptions’ Contractual Provisions Do Not Violate the FAA
The FAA provides that a written provision in any contract that “settle[s] by arbitration a controversy thereafter arising out of such contract ... shall be valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, save upon such grounds as exist at law or in equity for the revocation of any contract.”
The DOL determined the protections associated with class litigation “ensure adherence to the impartial conduct standards and other anti-conflict provisions of the exemptions,” finding the provisions satisfied the three exemption requirements under ERISA and the Code.
Plaintiffs brought to the Court’s attention a recent district court decision which held a regulation promulgated by the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Service likely violated the FAA. Am. Health Care Ass’n v. Burwell, 3:16-CV-00233,
American Health Care is distinguishable from the DOL’s rules. The DOL’s rules do not implicate the power and potentially coercive nature of the spending clause, which was the central reason for concluding the agency had instituted a de facto ban in American Health Care. The conditions of BICE and PTE 84-24 do not constitute a de facto ban; any arbitration provision without the class action provision would remain valid, irrevocable, and enforceable, but the financial institution or
The “FAA’s pro-arbitration policy goals do not require [the DOL] to relinquish its statutory authority.” EEOC v. Waffle House, Inc.,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, Plaintiffs’ Motions for Summary Judgment are DENIED, and Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment is GRANTED.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. On February 3, 2017, the President issued a memorandum directing the Secretary of Labor to conduct a further review of the fiduciary rule. Memorandum from the President of the United States, to the Secretary of Labor (Feb. 3, 2017), https://www.whitehouse.gov/ the-press-office/2017/02/03/presidential-memorandum-fiduciary-duty-rule. That same day, the acting Secretary of Labor stated the DOL will now consider its legal options to delay the applicability date to comply with the President's memorandum. Those matters do not moot this dispute.
. Unless individually specified, the Court refers to Plaintiffs collectively.
. Definition of the Term "Fiduciary''; Conflict of Interest Rule — Retirement Investment Advice (Final Fiduciary Definition), 81 Fed. Reg. 20,946 (Apr. 8, 2016) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pts. 2509, 2510, and 2550).
. Amendment to and Partial Revocation of Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 84-24 for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (Final PTE 84-24), 81 Fed. Reg. 21,147 (Apr. 8, 2016) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 2550).
. Best Interest Contract Exemption (Final BICE), 81 Fed. Reg. 21,002 (Apr. 8, 2016) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 2550).
. 15 U.S.C. § 80b-2(a)(11)(C).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR348-50 (ECF No. 47-1) (citing FINRA rules).
. Insurance companies compensate IMOs based on a percentage of an agent’s sales. IMOs and their independent insurance agents are the largest distribution channel for FIAs, and approximately 65% of FIAs are sold by insurance agents who are not affiliated with a broker-dealer.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A) (emphasis added).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(A)-(B).
. Congress enacted the prohibited transactions to supplement a fiduciary’s general duty of loyalty to the plan’s beneficiaries by '’categorically barring certain transactions deemed likely to injure the pension plan.” Harris Trust Sav. Bank v. Salomon Smith Barney Inc.,
. 29 U.S.C. § 1106. In addition, “a fiduciary may not deal with the assets of the plan in his own interest or for his own account,” and "may not receive any consideration for his own personal account from any party dealing with such plan in connection with a transaction involving the assets of the plan.” Id.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1108(a); 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1132(a)(2), (3), (5).
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(1).
. Compare 26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(3), with 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A).
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c).
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2).
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(a)-(b).
. See 29 U.S.C. § 1144.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A)(ii).
. Definition of the Term "Fiduciary,” 40 Fed. Reg. 50,842 (Oct. 31, 1975).
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Amendments to Class Exemption for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies, Investment Companies and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (1984 Amendment to PTE 84-24),
. Id.
. Definition of the Term "Fiduciary,” 75 Fed. Reg. 65,263 (proposed Oct. 22, 2010) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. § 2510).
. Definition of the Term “Fiduciary;” Conflict of Interest Rule-Retirement Investment Advice, 80 Fed. Reg. 21,928, 21,932 (proposed Apr. 20, 2015) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pts. 2509 and 2510). In this context, a rollover transfers retirement savings from an employee benefit plan, such as a 401(k), to an IRA. See IRS.gov, https://www.irs.gov/ taxtopicsAc413.html (last visited February 7, 2017); see also Investopedia.com, http://www. investopedia.com/terms/i/ira-rollover.asp (last visited February 7, 2017).
. Id. at 21,951.
. Id. at 21,932.
. Id. at 21,928.
. Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of Prohibited Transaction Exemption (PTE) 84-24 for Certain Transactions Involving Insurance Agents and Brokers, Pension Consultants, Insurance Companies and Investment Company Principal Underwriters (Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of PTE 84—24), 80 Fed. Reg. 22,010, 22,012 (proposed Apr. 20, 2015) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 2550).
. Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption, 80 Fed. Reg. 21,960 (proposed Apr. 20, 2015) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. pt. 2550).
. Id. at 21,961, 21,969-72.
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. Id. at 20,948, 20,954.
. 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-21(a)(2016).
. Id. § 2510.3-21(b)(1).
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Id. at 21,153.
. Both PTE 84-24 and BICE have a written contract requirement. Although Plaintiffs challenge many aspects of BICE under various legal theories, Plaintiffs only challenge PTE 84 — 24's contract requirement by arguing it creates a private right of action and violates the FAA.
. BICE defines "Retirement Investor” as (1) a participant or beneficiary of a Plan subject to Title I of ERISA or described in section 4975(e)(1)(A) of the Code, with authority to direct the investment of assets in his or her Plan account or to take a distribution, (2) the beneficial owner of an IRA acting on behalf of the IRA, or (3) a Retail Fiduciary with respect to a Plan subject to Title I of ERISA or described in section 4975(e)(1)(A) of the Code or IRA. BICE defines "Financial Institution” as an entity that employs the Adviser or otherwise retains such individual as an independent contractor, agent or registered representative and that satisfies one of the four requirements laid out in the exemption.
. Id. at 21,007.
. Id. at 21,020. Section 11(a) of the exemption provides that the contract must be enforceable against the Financial Institution. As long as that is the case, the Financial Institution is not required to sign the contract. Id. at 21,024.
. Id. at 21,041, 21,078.
. Id.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A)(ii); 26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(3)(B).
. 29 C.F.R. 2510.3-21(a)(2016).
. Id. at 2510.3-21(b)(1).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1135.
. ERISA defines fiduciary in the same way under Title I and Title II.
. COC's reply brief cites Varity Corp. to argue it is appropriate to look at the common law. That point is not in dispute. Varity Corp. also held that trust law does not tell the entire story, only offers a starting point, that ERISA’s standards and procedural protections partly reflect a congressional determination that the common law of trusts did not offer completely satisfactory protection, and that the Court "believe[s] that the law of trusts often will inform, but will not necessarily determine the outcome of, an effort to interpret ERISA's fiduciary duties.”
. COC Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendants' Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 109 at 4).
. The Fifth Circuit has noted that ERISA imposed a duty on a broader class of fiduciaries than existing trust law before Mertens. Donovan v. Cunningham,
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 15).
. See Fin. Planning Ass’n v. S.E.C.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A); 26 U.S.C. § 4975(e)(3)(B).
. See 29 U.S.C. §§ 1002(38)(B), 1103(a)(2).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1002(21)(A) (emphasis added).
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. ACLI Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 49 at 4-5).
. See 40 Fed. Reg. 50,842 (Oct. 31, 1975); see also Farm King Supply Inc. v. Edward D. Jones & Co.,
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 18-19).
. Given that one time transactions such as rollovers can be the most important decision an investor makes, such transactions are both meaningful and substantial.
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 18).
. Plaintiffs cite the amendments in the Pension Protection Act of 2006 to support their ratification argument.
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 23-24). Further, as noted supra Page 16, the DOL has express authority to "prescribe such regulations as [it] finds necessary or appropriate to carry out the provisions of [ERISA]," and to
.
. ERISA was enacted to serve broad protective and remedial purposes; as the Supreme Court explained, "Congress commodiously imposed fiduciary standards on persons whose actions affect the amount of benefits retirement plan participants will receive.” John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Harris Tr. & Sav. Bank,
. Plaintiffs also point to the DOL's acknowledgment that its interpretation may include some "relationships that are not appropriately regarded as fiduciary in nature.”
. Plaintiffs concede the DOL has the authority to define who is a fiduciary under ERISA. See COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 23-24); see also 29 U.S.C. § 1135; Johnson v. Buckley,
. Plaintiffs also argue an agency may not use its definitional authority to expand its own jurisdiction and to invade the jurisdiction of other agencies. Am. Bankers Ass’n v. SEC,
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 22).
. “Experience ... has demonstrated the inadequacy of the ... Disclosure Act in regulating the private pension system for the purpose of protecting rights and benefits due to workers. It is weak in.its limited disclosure requirements and wholly lacking in substantive fiduciary standards." H.R. Rep. No. 93-533 (1973); see also S. Rep. No. 93-127 (1973).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). These standards are readily enforceable via "remedies, sanctions, and ready access to the Federal courts.” Id.
. Final BICE,
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. Id. at 20,946.
. Compare 29 U.S.C. § 1104, with 26 U.S.C. § 4975.
. Final BICE,
. The exemption conditions do not affect advisers to Title I plans, as they were already subject to these duties.
. The DOL has used its statutory authority to attach substantive conditions on exemptions since ERISA was enacted. See PTE 77-9, 42 Fed. Reg. 32,395, 32,398 (June 24, 1977) (qualifying for the exemption required the transaction was “on terms at least as favorable to the plan as an arm’s-length transaction with an unrelated party.”)
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2). The DOL made the required three findings. Final BICE,
. If Plaintiffs were correct, the DOL would have the inability to "condition that the advis
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 24-25).
. 29 U.S.C. § 1108(a); 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2) (The DOL “may grant a conditional or unconditional exemption”) (emphasis added).
. Transaction-based models refer to commissions, while fee-based compensation models refer to payments based on an hourly rate or an agreed-upon percentage of managed assets.
. The DOL has consistently granted conditional exemptions since ERISA was first enacted. See, e.g., PTE 93-33, 58 Fed. Reg. 31,-053 (May 28, 1993), as amended at 59 Fed. Reg. 22,686 (May 2, 1994); 64 Fed. Reg. 11,044 (March 8, 1999); PTE 97-11, 62 Fed. Reg. 5855 (Feb. 7, 1997), as amended at 64 Fed. Reg. 11,042 (Mar. 8, 1999); PTE 91-55, 56 Fed. Reg. 49,209 (Sept. 27, 1991), as corrected at 56 Fed. Reg. 50,729 (Oct. 8, 1991).
. The Court reads Plaintiffs’ briefs to argue only that BICE exceeds the DOL's exemptive authority under Chevron step two, but given that PTE 84-24's conditions are less stringent than BICE, the Court would come to the same conclusion with respect to PTE 84-24 as well.
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2).
. COC Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendants’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 109 at 16).
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2).
. Id. The DOL is required to establish a procedure for granting exemptions, and the DOL would have to provide a reasoned explanation for a change in its exemptive procedure.
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR638 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Brief of Amicus Curiae The Financial Planning Coalition in Support of Defendants (ECF No. 102 at 6-7).
. Id. (ECF No. 102 at 1-2, 14).
. Tr. Oral Arg. (ECF No. 126 at 119-120).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR326, 622 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Tr. Oral Arg. (ECF No. 126 at 21-22)
. An IRA holder, moreover, does not have the ability to enforce the Code’s prohibited transaction provisions; they may only be enforced by the IRS via excise tax.
. Tr. Oral Arg. (ECF No. 126 at 91).
. Compare 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a), with 26 U.S.C. § 4975.
. Cmt. 3050 ACLI (Sep. 24, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR46171-72). FIAs are insurance contracts.
. See, e.g., Knox v. Vanguard Group, Inc., No. 15-13411,
. PTE 84-14, 49 Fed. Reg. 9494, 9503 (Mar. 13, 1984).
. PTE 06-16, 71 Fed. Reg. 63,786, 63,796-97 (Oct. 31,2006).
. 7 C.F.R. § 1493.20. The mandatory terms include quantity, quality specifications, delivery terms to the eligible country or region, delivery period, unit price, payment terms, and Date of Sale.
. 7 C.F.R. § 1499.11(k).
. 14 C.F.R. § 212.3(c).
. 47 C.F.R. § 24.238(c).
. COC Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendants’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 109 at 23-24).
. Id.
. In a footnote, the Supreme Court expressly stated it did not reach the question of “whether a contracting agency may authorize third-party suits to enforce a Government contract.” Astra USA,
. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
. Proposed Amendment to and Proposed Partial Revocation of PTE 84—24,
. Proposed Best Interest Contract Exemption,
. Plaintiffs also argue they lacked notice that the final rule would make variable annuity sales to ERISA plans unavailable under PTE 84-24. This argument fails for the same reasons stated above. Regardless, even if this constituted lack of notice, it would not mandate setting aside the rule. See Mkt. Synergy Grp., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor, 16-CV-4083-DDC-KGS,
. Cmt. 718, Allianz Life Ins. Co. of North America (July 21, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR41624) ("The Proposal specifically requests comment on which exemption, the BICE, or a revised PTE 84-24, should apply to different types of annuity products.”).
. Cmt. 774, IALC (July 20, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR42540-41).
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR435 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at AR439.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at AR435.
. Id. at AR600.
. Final BICE,
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Id. (citing statement of the North American Securities Administrators Associations on FIAs).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR433-42, 447-48 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at AR448.
. Id. at AR600.
. Id. at AR439.
. Id.
. Final BICE,
. Id.
. ACLI also argues the DOL exceeded its statutory authority because “it deliberately disfavored variable annuities and FIAs and promoted other retirement products.” See ACLI Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 49 at 23-24). The DOL did not impermissibly discriminate between retirement products; rather, it used its express authority under ERISA to create a new exemption for otherwise prohibited transactions (BICE) and to change another (PTE 84-24). The DOL found the changes were in the best interest of retirement investors and sufficiently justified its distinctions.
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR344-63, 421-28, 430, 443-83, 585-87 (ECF No. 47-1). Plaintiffs' arguments are specifically refuted by sections of the record titled "Intersection with Other Governing Authorities” AR344, "Need For Regulatory Action” AR 421, "Current Protections” AR426, and "Conclusion” AR482-83. The DOL did consider whether existing regulation was sufficient, but this is not the standard the DOL must meet. Id.
. Id. at AR426-27, 475-76. As noted above, the DOL also considered product complexity and the rise of FIAs in the marketplace.
. Id. at 421.
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR358, 427, 601 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Id.
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,019.
. Final PTE 84-24,
. Consideration of the mutual fund studies also support the conclusion that the DOL considered the existing FINRA rule.
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR349, 357, 444, 447 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at 438, 447.
. Id. at 481.
. The DOL specifically considered an exemption based on disclosure alone, but after thorough analysis, found reliance only on disclosure would be ineffective and yield little to no investor gains. Id. at AR584-587.
. Id. at 485 n.385. The DOL also considered studies outside of the mutual fund context; in particular, it also analyzed studies that focused on continued commissions in casualty insurance and assessments relating to actual life insurance sales. Id. at 438, 464.
. Id. at AR435, 450, 456, 479-82, 600, 646-47, 649.
. Plaintiffs also argue that the Harkin Amendment to the Dodd-Frank Act prevents the DOL from regulating FIAs. This argument ignores the fact that the DOL has authority to do so under ERISA. The Harkin Amendment creates a safe harbor from securities regulations if certain standards are not met. Neither ERISA nor the Code is a securities law, and the DOL made its decision based on conflict of interest and complexity concerns. The Har-tón Amendment is not a congressional determination that state regulation is sufficient to address conflicts of interest in annuity sales. Further, the SEC is not currently regulating FIAs, so sellers of FIAs need not satisfy the SEC’s safe harbor.
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR483 (ECF No. 47-1).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR417-420 (discussing agents and IMOs, finding FIA sales "heavily rely on independent insurance agents”); AR447 (chart of annuity sales by distribution channel); AR460 (“Adviser compensation often is not fully transparent ... potential conflicts affecting insurance intermediaries are likewise varied, complex, and difficult for consumers to discern.”) (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at AR625-27.
. BICE defines "Financial Institution” as an entity that employs the Adviser or otherwise retains such individual as an independent contractor, agent or registered representative and that is either: (1) registered as an investment adviser under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or under the laws.of the state in which the adviser maintains its principal office and place of business; (2) a bank or similar financial institution supervised by the United States or state, or a savings association (as defined in section 3(b)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act); (3) an insurance company qualified to do business under the laws of a state (provided that such insurance company satisfies three requirements articulated in the exemption); or (4) a broker or dealer registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Final BICE,
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,067.
. Id.
. Mkt. Synergy Grp., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Labor, 16-CV-4083-DDC-KGS,
. Id. at AR419; see also Final BICE,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR626 (ECF No. 47-1).
. See
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,030-31.
. 29 U.S.C. § 1108(b)(2), 26 U.S.C. § 4975(d)(2); see also 26 C.F.R. § 1.162-7; 29 C.F.R. § 2550.408c-2(b)(5) (ERISA regulation incorporating 26 C.F.R. § 1. 162—7); 26 C.F.R. § 54.4975-6(e)(6) (Code regulation doing the same).
. See N.Y. State Teamsters Health & Hosp. Fund v. Centrus Pharmacy Sols.,
. ACLI Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 49 at 28).
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,027-29.
. See, e.g., Knox v. Vanguard Group, Inc., No. 15-13411,
. See Cmt. 3050 ACLI (Sep. 24, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR46171-72).
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,052-55.
. Id. at 21,029.
. Id. at 21,055.
. COC Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 61 at 39).
. Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,067.
. Because the DOL relied on its specific exemptive authority under 29 U.S.C. § 1108(a) and 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2), as opposed to its general authority under 29 U.S.C. § 1135, the DOL is not bound by the same requirements as the EPA in Michigan v. EPA (interpreting statute that required the EPA to determine whether its regulation was “appropriate and necessary”).
. A front-end load is a commission or sales charge applied at the time of the initial purchase of an investment, usually for purchase of mutual funds and insurance policies. It is deducted from the investment amount and, as a result, lowers the size of the investment. See Yameen v. Eaton Vance Distributors, Inc.,
. See also infra, Section III-(D)(c).
. Schwarcz & Siegelman, "Insurance Agents in the 21st Century: The Problem of Biased Advice.” Research Handbook in the Law and Economics of Insurance (Edw. Elgar 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR31681-84).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR485-94, 656-80. (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at AR479-82, 646-55. (ECF No. 47-1).
. Id. at AR481.
. Id. at AR479-82, AR666-68. The DOL rejected "ICI's contention that the data presented ... contradict the claims made in the 2015 NPRM ... [and] bases this rejection on the following findings.” The DOL also hired outside consultants who confirmed that its methodology and estimates were sound. Id. at 480-82.
. Id. at AR662-64.
. Id. at AR472, 477, 632-34. Market timing is the act of moving in and out of the market or switching between asset classes based on using predictive methods. Because it is difficult to predict the future direction of the stock market, investors who try to time the market, especially mutual fund investors, tend to un-derperform investors who remain invested. See In re Mut. Funds Inv. Litig.,
. Id. at AR485 n.385.
. Cmt. 3036 Financial Services Inst. (Sep. 24, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR46067).
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR555-58. (ECF No. 47-1). This also includes costs for at least some potential settlements.
. Final BICE,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR448 (ECF No. 47-1); see also Final BICE,
. Id. at 21,043.
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR623-34 (ECF No. 47-1). Plaintiffs also appear to argue the DOL was required to consider the costs of reducing investor access to FIAs and variable annuities, but the Court is unpersuaded that the new rules reduce consumer access to FIAs or variable annuities.
. Id. at AR628-29, 634.
. Id. at AR 393-94. The UK banned commissions, while the DOL’s rulemaking has not.
. Id. at AR553-54, 599-602, 622.
. Id. at AR554
. Id. at AR554 n.519.
. Id. at AR326, 622.
. Id. at AR622.
. Id.
. Id. at AR601-02.
. Id. at AR485 n.385; see ConocoPhillips,
. Final BICE,
. Regulatory Impact Analysis at AR602 (ECF No. 47-1). For example, compliance with BICE as opposed to PTE 84-24 was estimated at $14.1 million the first year, but just $2 million on average for the next nine years.
. 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2); 29 U.S.C. § 1108(a). The DOL found it satisfied the three requirements. See Final BICE,
. For example, in the EPA and Clean Air Act context, Congress provided "No fuel or fuel additive may be controlled or prohibited ... except after consideration of available scientific and economic data, including a cost benefit analysis ...” 42 U.S.C. § 7545(c)(2)(B).
. See supra page 6 (citing 29 U.S.C. § 1108(a) and 26 U.S.C. § 4975(c)(2)).
. S. Rep. No. 93-1090, at 60 (1974) (emphasis added); see also 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4639 (1973) (any use of the word "administrative” clearly refers to an agency).
. See 91 Pens. & Ben. Rep. (BNA) A-4 (June 21, 1976) (A DOL statement at American Bar Association event characterized "administratively feasible” as "involving] consideration of the resources of the Department and the Internal Revenue Service in relation to the amount of monitoring by the agencies that the exemption would require”); Bill Schmidheiser, Note, ERISA’s Prohibited Transaction Restrictions: Policies and Problems, 4 J. Corp. L. 377, 405 (1979) (citing Exhibit B for the proposition that administratively feasible "means feasible for the Departments to administer, given the Departments’ resources and the nature of the transaction sought to be exempted”).
. ACLI Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 49 at 7).
. Plaintiffs’ citation to Dawson Farms, LLC v. Farm Serv. Agency,
. The Ninth and Sixth Circuits have held an argument was waived when a party failed to raise the issue during the notice and comment period. See Mich. Dept. of Envtl. Quality v. Browner,
. Tr. Oral Arg. (ECF No. 126 at 45).
. See Cmt. 621 ACLI (July 21, 2015) (ECF No. 115 at AR 39737-39).
. ACLI Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendants’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 107 at 4).
. The Fourth Circuit also recently did the same. See Nat’l Ass’n for the Advancement of Multijurisdiction Practice v. Lynch,
. The Fifth Circuit held the professional speech doctrine did not apply to Serafine because the speech on her campaign website did not provide advice to any particular client, but communicated with voters at large.
. 29 C.F.R. § 2510.3-21 (a)(1)(2)(i)-(iii) (2016).
. Id. at (b)(2)(iii).
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. The Fourth, Ninth, and Eleventh Circuits have embraced the professional speech doctrine, and the Fifth Circuit’s decisions in Serafine and Hines embrace the doctrine as well.
. Serafine,
. Final Fiduciary Definition,
. ACLI Brief in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment (EOF No. 49 at 12).
. PTE 77-9,
. See Ohralik,
. Final PTE 84-24,
. ACLI Reply in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment and Opposition to Defendants’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 107 at 8).
. 9 U.S.C. § 2.
. Final BICE,
. Id.
. See Dep’t of Enforcement v. Charles Schwab & Co. (FINRA Bd. of Governors Apr. 24, 2014), available at https://www.finra.org/ sites/defaull/files/NACDecision/p496824.pdf (ruling Rule 12204 does not violate the FAA).
. Id. at 21,021.
