Labor Says Fiduciary Proposal Is Coming by End of Year, but It's Yet to Arrive at OMB

The White House has yet to receive the proposal for review, which will make an end-of-year release difficult to meet.

By Nick Thornton | December 04, 2019 at 05:30 PM

U.S. Capitol building The fiduciary rule is not considered a "major" rule, meaning it has an economic impact of less than $100 million, according to Labor's regulatory agenda. (Photo: Shutterstock)

The Employee Benefits Security Administration set aggressive goals in its fall regulatory agenda, perhaps none as ambitious as advancing a new proposed fiduciary rule by the end of the 2019.

EBSA issued a notice for public rule making on The Fiduciary Rule and Prohibited Transaction Exemptions in its fall agenda, which was released in November.

Recommended For You

According to a brief regulatory abstract, EBSA, the arm of the Labor Department that enforces the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, is "considering regulatory options" after the Obama-era fiduciary rule was vacated by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in 2018.

Labor has put a December deadline for its latest proposed version of the fiduciary rule.

But according to the Office of Budget and Management website, the White House has yet to receive the proposal for review, which will make an end-of-year release of the proposal difficult to meet.

"If they are going to release the proposal this year, it has to get to OMB—like now," said Kevin Walsh, a partner with the Groom Law Group.

OMB took 30 days to review the Labor Department's proposed rule for the electronic distribution of retirement plan documents, noted Walsh.

The fiduciary rule is not considered a "major" rule, meaning it has an economic impact of less than $100 million, according to Labor's regulatory agenda.

Both the Obama-era fiduciary rule, and the Security and Exchange Commission's Regulation Best Interest rule, were deemed major rules given the broad economic impact of each.

"The idea that the proposal is not a major rule suggests it will hem closely to the original five-part test for fiduciary advice under ERSIA, or closely to Reg BI," said Walsh. "If they were to produce something else, it would be tough to impose a whole new compliance standard on retirement plan providers without triggering the $100 million threshold."

The Obama-era fiduciary rule expanded ERISA's "regular basis" requirement of the five-part fiduciary test to include one-time advice to roll 401(k) assets to an IRA.

"The Obama fiduciary rule was designed to close the gap on rollover recommendations," said Walsh.

While that expansion of the definition of fiduciary advice was rescinded when the rule was vacated in 2018, the SEC addressed the question of rollovers in its Regulation Best Interest, which applies a higher standard of care to brokers advising retail investors, and includes one-time recommendations to roll retirement plan assets into an IRA.

Walsh cautions that Labor has wide-latitude in crafting a new fiduciary rule.

However, a reasonable inference from the proposal's non-major status is that compliance with Labor's rule will be met if plan advisors are in compliance with the SEC's Reg BI, he said.

Labor may also clarify that non-fiduciary brokers not regulated by the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 are distinct from fiduciary advisers defined by ERISA.

Whatever the Labor Department does ultimately propose, the chances of a rule ultimately being finalized wane with each passing day.

"If Labor is going to get this done during President Trump's first term, the longer they take, the harder it is to get done," said Walsh.

Beyond OMB's review, the proposal will most likely have to put up for public comment, and Labor will need adequate time to review those comments, and make appropriate changes to a final rule.

If a new fiduciary rule is finalized in the last two months of the 116th Congressional session, it stands the threat of being overturned under the Congressional Review Act in the next Congress, should Democrats win control of the Senate.

NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2025 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Nick Thornton

Nick Thornton is a financial writer covering retirement and health care issues for BenefitsPRO and ALM Media. He greatly enjoys learning from the vast minds in the legal, academic, advisory and money management communities when covering the retirement space. He's also written on international marketing trends, financial institution risk management, defense and energy issues, the restaurant industry in New York City, surfing, cigars, rum, travel, and fishing. When not writing, he's pushing into some land or water.

By Jim DuPlessis | April 25, 2025

Breaking down the data of the credit union-bank-buying reality.

What Are Credit Unions Gaining From Bank Purchases?

By Jim DuPlessis | April 02, 2025

Cannabis company launched by Partner Colorado CU loses $48 million in its second full year of operation.

Safe Harbor Losses Nearly Triple in 2024

By Michael Ogden | March 28, 2025

Live video discussion for our CU Times PRO members.

Growth & Auto Lending Trends: Let’s Go West!
5 Steps to Banking App Success link

White Paper

Sponsored by Elan Credit Card

Did you know that nearly three-quarters of all banking interactions now happen through digital channels? A well-designed mobile banking app is no longer optional -- it’s essential.

The 2025 Digital Banking Performance Metrics Report link

Report

Sponsored by Alkami

What’s going on in digital banking? This sixth edition report explores KPIs and metrics to gauge your credit union’s progress, effectiveness, and efficiency in digital banking services.

Speed Item Processing, Lower Costs, and Mitigate Fraud link

Infographic

Sponsored by Alogent

Discover a better way to manage deposits from all channels--faster, more cost-effective, and fraud-resilient. This quick-read infographic shows how credit unions can streamline operations, reduce software maintenance, and protect against check fraud using modern automation and a single platform.