The Certified Financial Planner Board of Standards Inc. announced Thursday it has approved a tougher punishment for credential holders who don't report their own ethical missteps.
The update to the organization’s sanctions guidelines recommends a public censure for certificants who fail to tell the Board within 30 days about information that may reveal misconduct or who file an incomplete ethics declaration.
The previous punishment was a private censure. A public censure entails highlighting the CFP in a press release and posting the violations on the CFP website.
On Thursday, the CFP Board also announced a proposal to create a new appeals commission to adjudicate appeal hearings. The commission would make the final decision regarding a CFP mark holder’s appeal of an order of the Disciplinary and Ethics Commission or an administrative order. The proposal is open for public comments until Dec. 14.
The CFP Board released its proposal for beefing up its sanctions guidelines in July. A public comment period concluded in September. The rule on inaccurate ethics declarations will take effect on Jan. 1. The public censure for failure to report misconduct will take effect on Jan. 1, 2024.
“These changes are the latest developments in CFP Board’s work to strengthen enforcement of the Code of Ethics and Standards of Conduct for CFP® professionals,” CFP Board chief executive Kevin Keller said in a statement. “Timely and accurate self-reporting to CFP Board helps us maintain effective enforcement processes that are fair to CFP® professionals whose conduct is being evaluated and credible to the public.”
The work on revising the sanctions guidelines comes in the wake of criticism over the last couple years of the CFP Board’s ability to enforce the ethical standards attached to the mark.
In late 2019, a task force issued recommendations for improving CFP enforcement. The task force was formed in response to a Wall Street Journal article that took the board to task over omitting negative information about CFPs on the board’s website, including regulatory and criminal problems and customer complaints.
Over the last year, the CFP Board has reformed enforcement procedures and governance practices to align with strengthened conduct standards that went into force in June 2020. They center on holding CFPs, including brokers, to a fiduciary standard whenever they provide investment advice.
Carson is expanding one of its relationships in Florida while Lido Advisors adds an $870 million practice in Silicon Valley.
The approval of the pay proposal, which handsomely compensates its CEO and president, bolsters claims that big payouts are a must in the war to retain leadership.
Integrated Partners is adding a husband-wife tandem to its network in Missouri as Kestra onboards a father-son advisor duo from UBS.
Futures indicate stocks will build on Tuesday's rally.
Cost of living still tops concerns about negative impacts on personal finances
RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.
As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.