Missouri Court Strikes Down Anti-ESG Rules

A district court judge put a permanent injunction on rules that required advisers to disclose any time they made decisions based on “a social objective or other nonfinancial objective."

A federal court in Missouri ruled Wednesday in a favor of the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association’s lawsuit against two regulations enacted by the state that require additional recordkeeping for advisers and brokers recommending or selecting investments with a “nonfinancial objective.”

The Missouri rules, which took effect on July 30, 2023, required financial professionals who consider “a social objective or other nonfinancial objective”—such as environmental, social and governance factors—in their investment advice to disclose this to their clients and obtain their clients’ written consent to state-mandated language in the rules. In the order filed Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Stephen Bough issued a statewide permanent injunction halting the rules.

Want the latest retirement plan adviser news and insights? Sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters.

In those rules, an investment adviser’s client would be required to re-sign the document at least once every three years and every time new advice is given.

In SIFMA v. John R. Ashcroft, Secretary of State of Missouri; and Douglas M. Jacoby, Missouri Securities Commissioner, filed in U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri, SIFMA argued that federal law already required advisers to act in their clients’ best interest and that the regulation would restrict that ability because it does not precisely define what a “financial objective” means.

The first Missouri rule states that a “nonfinancial objective” is “the material fact to consider criteria in the investment or commitment of customer funds for the purpose of seeking to obtain an effect other than the maximization of financial return to the customer.”

SIFMA also argued in its complaint that Missouri cannot, without violating the First Amendment, require financial professionals to make “politically charged statements” that are not factual. According to the complaint, the state-mandated scripts require financial firms and clients to acknowledge that incorporating these objectives will result in advice and investments “that are not solely focused on maximizing a financial return” for the client.

The court ruled in favor of SIFMA on all counts, stating that “the rules are preempted by [the National Securities Markets Improvements Act (NSMIA)] and [Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)], are unconstitutional under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution, and are impermissibly vague under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”

Because the plaintiff showed a violation of constitutional rights and that those violations would “be suffered by others in the future,” the court also ordered a statewide permanent injunction prohibiting the implementation, application or enforcement of the rules.

SIFMA’s president and CEO, Kenneth E. Bentsen, wrote in a statement: “Congress enacted NSMIA to alleviate the redundant, costly, and ineffective dual federal/state regulation of our securities market system. Today’s ruling was necessary to prevent Missouri from violating NSMIA, among other things, and from hindering communications between Missouri investors and the financial professionals who serve them. This decision marks a major victory not only for our national securities market system, but also for our nation.” 

Bentsen also stated that federal securities laws already require financial professionals to provide investment advice and recommendations that are in their clients’ best interest, thus rendering the Missouri rules “unnecessary” and responsible for confusion.

The Investment Adviser Association applauded the court’s decision, stating in a press release that “allowing Missouri to impose obligations on SEC advisers or their adviser personnel would have had widespread negative consequences for investment advisers with a national business.”

The Department of Labor also has litigation pending on its ESG rule issued in 2022 regarding investing in DC retirement plans. That rule allows for ESG factors to be considered but does not require them. The lawsuit, Utah v. Su, was remanded to a Texas district court July 18 from the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Any appeal of the Missouri decision would be made to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals.

Digital Retirement Rollover Firm Capitalize Raises Series B Funding

The company will use the $19 million capital raise to support locating and then transferring legacy retirement account rollovers.

Capitalize Money Inc., a firm that digitally transfers retirement savings from accounts such as 401(k)s to individual retirement accounts, announced Wednesday it raised $19 million in a Series B fundraising round.

Venture capital firm RRE Ventures led the campaign, which included participation from existing funders Canapi Ventures and Bling Capital and new investor Industry Ventures. The firm’s Series A fundraising round, led by Canapi, was in 2021 and brought in $12.5 million.

Never miss a story — sign up for PLANADVISER newsletters to keep up on the latest retirement plan adviser news.

The funders are backing Capitalize’s business model of creating a more seamless system for transferring assets from retirement accounts into IRAs, including from consumers, recordkeepers and via financial firms offering IRAs. Capitalize makes money from its partner network when a rollover is made with one of its preferred IRA partners, when a user pays an additional fee to roll over into a non-preferred provider or when a user pays for premium services. Capitalize does not allow preferred partners to alter content on its platform, according to the firm.

The market for IRAs in the U.S. is massive. The investment vehicles accounted for the most retirement assets at $14.3 trillion as of the year’s first quarter, according to the Investment Company Institute. Defined contribution assets came in second among retirement pools at $11.1 trillion.

Capitalize, which launched in 2020, is processing “several billion dollars” of rollover volume annually, according to the firm. Both rollover volume and its revenue have grown by about six times in the last 18 months, according to the firm. Much of that growth has come from its “enterprise” model, called Embedded Rollover API, which offers financial firms the ability to embed Capitalize’s rollover technology directly into onboarding and funding flow for customers moving legacy, employer-sponsored retirement accounts into an IRA.

Capitalize’s enterprise partners, as listed on its website, include Betterment, Charles Schwab, M1 Finance, Robinhood and SoFi. The firm did not immediately respond to comment for a list of preferred partners.

“Together [with funder RRE], we’re excited to keep modernizing the antiquated rollover process so that Americans can better move and manage their money, and our partners can serve their users more efficiently,” said Gaurav Sharma, Capitalize’s co-founder and CEO, in a statement.

The firm notes the “manual” 401(k) rollover process that often involves paperwork and communication between multiple financial institutions to roll over employer-sponsored retirement savings. The firm, which has issued its own study on the subject of left-behind 401(k) assets, pegs the market at some $1.65 trillion.

The issue of leftover accounts has also been a focus of the Retirement Clearinghouse LLC, which started the Portability Services Network, currently made up of the country’s six largest recordkeepers. The network is designed to automatically transfer defined contribution assets between providers, should someone leave or forget their assets with a partnered provider.

In a separate announcement made Tuesday, a firm called Equity Trust Co. launched a self-directed IRA for its clients, designed to provide more options available in the savings vehicle.

Equity Trust’s Universal IRA allows users to invest their savings in both traditional and alternative assets. The firm, which has $52 billion in assets under custody and administration, has set up the IRA to provide the option of investing in assets, including real estate, private equity and cryptocurrency, according to the announcement.

“This capability eliminates the cumbersome process of managing accounts at multiple IRA companies to achieve true diversification,” the firm wrote.

«