DOL Will Appeal Stay on Fiduciary Rule

The Department of Labor will ask the 5th Circuit to reinstate the fiduciary rule after it was blocked by two federal courts in Texas. 

The Department of Labor will appeal two federal court stays on its fiduciary rule, which was originally slated to go into effect Monday. 

Notices of appeal were filed by the DOL on Friday in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas and U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Tyler Division, with the full appeal pending with the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. 

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The fiduciary rule, formerly called the Retirement Security Rule, was the DOL’s second attempt in the past decade to bring retirement investment advice, including individual retirement account rollovers and small employer-plan advisement under fiduciary obligation. The rule had been finalized with a September 23 start date but hit legal roadblocks from complaints filed by industry firms and member organizations. 

The Northern District court put a national stay on the rule in a July 26 opinion in American Council of Life Insurers v. DOL. One day prior to that ruling, the Eastern District court had also granted a stay for the plaintiffs in a separate case, Federation of Americans for Consumer Choice Inc. et al. v. DOL et al. 

On Friday, the DOL signaled it will appeal to get the fiduciary rule back, but it has yet to provide its full argument.  

In 2018, the 5th Circuit, which hears appeals from federal courts in Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas, invalidated a DOL fiduciary rule in Chamber of Commerce v. U.S. Department of Labor. The DOL has argued that the rule currently being challenged is different, in part because it more clearly addresses when retirement plan rollover advice and annuity sales fall under fiduciary guidance. 

U.S. District Judge Reed C. O’Connor, however, presiding in the Northern District, wrote in granting the stay that Chamber played a role in his decision. 

“As a whole, Defendants’ arguments [against the lawsuit] are nothing more than an attempt to relitigate the Chamber decision,” O’Connor wrote. “Because the Fifth Circuit’s Chamber decision unambiguously forecloses all of Defendant’s arguments, the Court need not repeat why those arguments fail here.” 

The Fifth Circuit will now docket the appeal and then review it to make sure they have jurisdiction, says Allie Itami, a partner with Lathrop GPM LLP. Furthermore, if the court questions “jurisdiction because of the interlocutory nature, they might ask the parties to brief whether the appeal is timely.” 

If the appeal does go ahead, the court will “instruct the parties to file a notice of appearance and eventually issue a briefing notice saying when the briefs will be due.”

Advisory M&A News – 9/23/24

True North Advisors announces acquisition of Clear Rock Advisors; Kestra Financial welcomes SZC Financial Planning & Management; Ty J. Young Wealth Management acquires financial practice of John Jaboor.

True North Advisors Announces Acquisition of Clear Rock Advisors

True North Advisors LLC, a Texas-based registered investment adviser with $3.9 billion in assets under Management as of August 31, has acquired Clear Rock Advisors LLC.

Clear Rock is a wealth management and investment firm managing approximately $470 million in AUM, as of August 31, with offices in Dallas, Austin and Kerrville, Texas. The firm was founded in 2016 by Charles F. Hall Jr., Ty Sanders and Royce Medlin.

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This is True North’s first acquisition since entering into a strategic growth partnership earlier this year with Wealth Partners Capital Group and HGGC’s Aspire Holdings platform.

“Clear Rock is a perfect cultural fit for True North. Their robust growth and strong base of private investors align seamlessly with our firm,” Mark Gehlbach, True North’s president and co-founder, said in a statement.

Kestra Financial Welcomes SZC Financial Planning & Management

Kestra Financial announced the onboarding of SZC Financial Planning & Management. Established in Montgomery County, Maryland, SZC Financial is led by David Shober and Steve Collins.

The firm is composed of a five-person team which provides financial planning and advisory services, overseeing $200 million in assets under management.

“The personalized support and comprehensive offerings that the Kestra Financial ecosystem provides—while allowing us to maintain our autonomy—is exactly what we’re looking for in a partner firm,” Shober, a founding partner in SZC Financial, said in a statement.

“SZC’s core values fit seamlessly into Kestra’s community of financial professionals, so we knew the firm would be a fit right away,” said Daniel Schwamb, executive vice president and head of business development at Kestra Financial, in a statement. “We’re looking forward to the opportunities this partnership will produce for the firm and for Kestra.”

Ty J. Young Wealth Management Acquires Financial Practice of John Jaboor

Ty J. Young Wealth Management has acquired the financial practice of John Jaboor. The acquisition of the Tiburon, California-based firm expands Ty J. Young Wealth Management’s footprint on the West Coast.

With John Jaboor’s retirement as a longtime adviser in financial services, his clients will now have access to the suite of solutions provided by Ty J. Young Wealth Management.

“We are excited about this acquisition,” CEO Ty Young said in a statement. “It allows us to extend our high-quality services to new clients, enhancing our ability to meet their financial needs with the same excellence and dedication we are known for.”

The acquisition is Ty J. Young Wealth Management’s 39th in the last six years.

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