Eakinomics: You
Will Have to Pry My 401(k) Out of My Cold, Dead Hands
It doesn’t matter what flavor of government bureaucrat is in vogue –
nanny-state, nationalistic, progressive, paternalistic – the fight to keep
them out of your life is never-ending. The latest edition is the Department
of Labor (DOL) rule proposed at the end of June,
which stated: “This proposed regulation is designed in part to make clear
that ERISA plan fiduciaries may not invest in ESG vehicles when they
understand an underlying investment strategy of the vehicle is to
subordinate return or increase risk for the purpose of non-pecuniary
objectives.”
“ESG” refers to factoring environmental, social, and governance issues into
the calculus when buying stocks or choosing a fund in which to invest. The
rule has engendered some resistance, with Bloomberg reporting, “The world’s largest asset
managers are speaking out against a Trump administration plan that would
make it more difficult for them to incorporate environmental, social and
governance factors when making investment decisions, a move that could
limit green investing in 401(k) plans.”
One objection is the cost of complying with the rule. At AAF, we take the
burden of regulations seriously. But when the mega-giant Black Rock labels
the rule “burdensome,” it rings slightly hollow. And when Fidelity claims
that “the proposal’s assumption that ESG investment strategies sacrifice
returns, increase risks and promote goals unrelated to financial
performance isn’t ‘well grounded or supported by much of the emerging
data,’” it makes you wonder what the problem really is. After all, if you
really aren’t sacrificing returns, why would you object to the
rule?
Does this mean the rule is a good idea after all? No.
First of all, it is none of DOL’s business how I choose my portfolio. If
asset managers want to offer a licorice 401(k) that exclusively invests in
Twizzlers, Red Vines, Good & Plenty, and other licorice brands, I can
decide whether I want that unique combination of return, risk, and social
virtue. I don’t need to have Labor Secretary Gene Scalia
second-guessing me, nor, for that matter, second-guessing asset
managers by restricting their ability to operate in their own and their
shareholders' best interest. Let asset managers manage assets.
Second, such a fund may very well have either a lower return or higher risk
because it is less diversified. If nobody is interested, the fund will
simply go away. If people are interested in just exactly that, why should
they be forced to hold Cadbury, Toblerone, Godiva, and other detestable
commodities as well?
Third, the notion that such a licorice 401(k) harms the chocolate industry
reveals a misunderstanding of financial markets. Chocolate firms will be as
valuable as their future profits; purchasing stock simply gives one the
right to those future profits. One can buy the desired investment in the
chocolate sector by purchasing stocks directly, by investing in a
chocolate-specific fund, by purchasing a broad-based mutual fund, or any
combination of the above. The existence of a licorice fund in no way limits
the ability of investors to value the chocolate companies for what they are
worth, provide them the capital to earn a competitive return, or limit
their access to credit. Forcing chocolate into the licorice 401(k) in the
interests of no longer “subordinating return” just means there will be less
demand for chocolate shares elsewhere and the bottom line will be
unchanged.
The DOL followed up this stroke of wisdom with another proposed rule just
yesterday, this time prohibiting financial advisors from voting on
proposals that concern anything other than financial return. These
proposed rules are a classic unnecessary, ineffective intrusion into
the private sector. It is the Groundhog Day of the regulatory state.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment