The Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts told the SEC on Wednesday to ban the use of mandatory pre-dispute arbitration clauses (MPDAC) in the contracts of RIAs, saying that such clauses may not be in the best interests of clients and that they may even be “inconsistent with the fiduciary duty that advisors owe their customers.”
In the letter, William Galvin described a survey conducted by the Massachusetts Securities Division. The survey went to 710 Massachusetts RIAs asking about their contracts. Among the approximately 350 respondents, about half indicated that their contracts did indeed carry such clauses, with many specifying the arbitrator and also the location where the proceedings would be held.
In his letter, Galvin told the SEC, “Such widespread use of mandatory pre-dispute arbitration clauses in advisory contracts is troubling and a cause for regulatory concern.” He added, “By law, investment advisers are required to act as fiduciaries for their clients, with an obligation to act in their best interests. While arbitration may be appropriate in some cases, a clause binding an investor to arbitration before the circumstances are known may not be in the client’s best interest nor consistent with an investment adviser’s fiduciary duty.”