SEC Wants to Protect Teachers, Military Members from Getting Duped

New program would help employees avoid falling victim to securities fraud.

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) this week announced it is implementing preventative measures that protect teachers and military service members from falling victim to securities fraud and other related misconduct, as part of SEC Chairman Jay Clayton’s promise to “protecting the most vulnerable market participants.”

“My colleagues and I are particularly focused on ensuring that our teachers, veterans, and active duty military, who often leave financial planning to others, know the financial services they are getting, what they are paying for those financial services, and to call us if something doesn’t seem right,” Clayton said in a prepared remark.

There were approximately 230 instances of securities fraud in the United States in fiscal year 2017, according to the United States Sentencing Commission’s latest report on the issue. That number fluctuated between 221, 218, 237, and 282, for each respective year prior.

The office found that the median loss for these offenses was approximately $2.1 million; 36% of these fraud offenses involved losses greater than $3.5 million, and 21.5% of the offenses involves losses of $550,000 or less.

Never miss a story — sign up for CIO newsletters to stay up-to-date on the latest institutional investment industry news.

Coined the Teachers’ Initiative and the Military Service Members’ Initiative, the overall program will be spearheaded by the SEC Enforcement Division’s Retail Strategy Task Force, which will focus on outreach efforts to these employees to enhance their knowledge on general concepts regarding saving money for retirement, investment fees, and retirement programs tailored to individuals in their areas of work.

“The Enforcement Division is committed to fighting for our country’s educators, service members, and veterans, who may be vulnerable to fraud in the securities markets,” Steven Peikin, co-director of the SEC’s Enforcement Division, said in a statement.

“Teachers and members of the military community have already made tremendous financial sacrifices for our country and can quickly face financial ruin as the result of securities fraud,” added Stephanie Avakian, co-director of the SEC’s Enforcement Division.

The agency already has an aid program for teachers. The Teacher Investment Outreach program offers tools and resources to help educators learn about 403(b) and 457(b) retirement plans that are offered in most public school districts. The new initiative will complement this by helping to ensure these retirees don’t fall victim to securities fraud.

Related Stories:

SEC Extends Enforcement Reach in 2019

Trustee Pleads Guilty to Defrauding Disability Charity Pension

SEC Charges Former CFO with Defrauding Thousands of Investors

Tags: , , ,

Global Pension Funding Gap to Hit $15.8 Trillion in 30 years

Report warns of 'severe crisis' facing governments worldwide.

The gap between expected or promised Lifetime Financial Security (LFS) benefits and what can likely be provided will hit nearly $16 trillion among 21 countries by 2050, according to a report from Group of Thirty, an international think tank of financiers and academics.

The report said that in real terms at 2017 prices, the gap will grow to $15.8 trillion in 2050 from $1.1 trillion in 2017, which represents a financial gap equivalent to 23% of GDP in 2050. This is based on current expenditure patterns, expectations of income in retirement, and policy settings, including planned changes. It comprises approximately 90% of global GDP and 60% the world’s population. The Group of Thirty said this will happen even with optimistic assumptions for economic growth, wages and rates of return on pension investments.

The report listed two key explanations for the rising trend in the global pension gap, which hit both the demand side and the supply side. It said that despite existing planned changes to official retirement ages, the combination of increasing dependency ratios and of static replacement rates increases the gap on the demand side. On the supply side, assumptions of a protracted low rate of return on financial assets limit the growth of wealth accumulation and income generation to help close the gap and meet that demand.

“Planned existing changes to the retirement age in many countries are falling well short of what is necessary to have a significant impact on the LFS gap,” said the report. “If public policies and individual behaviors do not change, many countries’ systems for providing LFS will face a severe crisis, threatening either unaffordable public expenditure pressures or inadequate income provision for retirees.”

Want the latest institutional investment industry
news and insights? Sign up for CIO newsletters.

Because people are living longer, and fertility rates are falling worldwide, the existing approaches to closing the gap are unsustainable, said the report.

“People cannot save the same amounts during their working years as they do currently, retire at the same age as today, and still receive the same retirement payouts, unless future generations pay additional taxes to enable them to do so,” the report said. “And there are almost certainly political limits to how much of the burden can be shifted to future generations of workers.”

To combat this double whammy, the Group of Thirty said it is inevitable that countries will be required to make some tough adjustments and identified three policy “levers” that will have to be used.  

These three levers include increasing the retirement age and enabling people to work longer; increasing taxes and incentivizing savings; and reducing retirement income.  The Group acknowledges that it likely won’t be politically feasible, or even desirable, to rely on just one of those levers alone.

For the first lever to be enough, the retirement age would have to rise more than proportionately with life expectancy, which would significantly reduce the number of years of retirement. For the second to work alone, significant increases in savings or taxation rates would be needed. And if the third one is relied on alone, severe reductions in replacement rates would be required in ways that the Group of Thirty said will not be socially equitable. It said it is only realistic to adopt a balanced mix of the three main levers.

“All governments, workers, retirees, and populations (as voters) face the complex and difficult challenge of securing Lifetime Financial Security for all,” said the report. “No single lever could close the ever increasing LFS gap; the scale of the challenge is simply too large.”

Related Stories:

Sluggish Wage Growth Leads to Lagging Retirement Savings, Professor Says

UK Loses Decade of Improving Life Expectancies

Public Pension Gap Widening Between Top and Bottom Funds

Tags: , , , ,

«