Thursday 26 October 2017

Why The New SIE Exam Is The Wrong Track To Become A Financial Advisor

Many financial advisors getting started in their careers have historically faced the same conundrum: In order to get started with a broker-dealer, you needed to pass your Series 6 or Series 7 exam. However, you couldn’t actually start on your Series exam until you got hired by a broker-dealer, so they could sponsor you in the first place! Which created issues for both prospective financial advisors, and the broker-dealers hiring them. Acknowledging the problems this creates, earlier this year FINRA received approval from the SEC to begin offering the SIE (Securities Industry Essentials) exam starting next year, which will finally allow prospective financial advisors to get started on their Series exams without being sponsored!

In this week’s #OfficeHours with @MichaelKitces, my Tuesday 1PM EST broadcast via Periscope, we discuss the new SIE exam, including how it works, what it covers (and doesn’t cover), and why it ultimately isn’t actually a good path to becoming a financial advisor in the future.

Under FINRA Regulatory Notice 17-30, the SIE (Securities Industry Essentials) Exam will actually first become available next October of 2018, allowing prospective brokers to be able to sit for the SIE exam without first being sponsored by a broker-dealer. Instead, the individual will be able to register themselves directly with FINRA, and then register to take the SIE exam at a local testing center from organizations like Prometric and Pearson. The SIE exam will cover, as the “Securities Industry Essentials” name implies, the basics of the financial services industry, including knowledge of basic products, and the rules and regulatory structure of the financial services industry itself.

Notably, however, the SIE exam is not actually a replacement for the Series 6 or Series 7 exams. Those who have passed the SIE will still need to take abbreviated Series 6 and Series 7 exams, to “top off” the initial SIE exam, after getting hired by a broker-dealer and being sponsored for the final Series exam. But the SIE exam will provide the initial pathway to the Series 6 or Series 7 exams… allowing prospective brokers to get started without first getting sponsored. Additionally, though, the SIE exam doesn’t actually prepare anyone to be/join a Registered Investment Adviser (RIA), because the SIE exam prepares for broker-dealer jobs, not for RIA jobs that require the Series 65 exam instead.

And that’s ultimately why I’m actually concerned about the introduction of the SIE exam. Particularly for college students and young entrants to the profession, given that college students studying financial planning are likely going to be pushed to take the SIE exam before they graduate to get started as a financial advisor. Only to discover once they search for financial planning jobs, that increasingly the jobs require them to have a Series 65 exam and work under an RIA or a hybrid RIA… which means their SIE exam will be useless!

The bottom line is to recognize that while the SIE exam may be a great expedited pathway to getting a job at a broker-dealer to sell financial services products, it’s still ultimately a path to getting a Series 6 or Series 7 or similar license, which are licenses for salespeople. The path to getting paid for financial advice, under the current regulatory environment, is all about passing the Series 65 and becoming or joining an RIA (or at least a hybrid RIA), which the SIE exam doesn’t cover at all!

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source https://www.kitces.com/blog/securities-industry-essentials-sie-exam-financial-advisor-series-65-6-7-sponsor/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=securities-industry-essentials-sie-exam-financial-advisor-series-65-6-7-sponsor

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