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Fidelity Is Changing the Way It Charges for Financial Advice

The new fees begin in July for the more than 800,000 customers of the wealth unit.

By Charles Stein

(Bloomberg) --Fidelity Investments is changing the way it charges wealth management customers for advice, based on the amount they have invested with the firm.

The new fees begin in July for the more than 800,000 customers of the wealth unit. The charges range from 50 basis points for accounts of more than $5 million to 1.5 percent for customers with less than $500,000. Currently, fees are tied more closely to the individual products, said Robert Beauregard, a Fidelity spokesman.

“This should make it easier for customers to understand what they are paying,” he said in an interview.

Firms like Morgan Stanley and Merrill Lynch have already moved to a unified system, where customers pay a single price based on their relationship with the firm, said Tom O’Shea, research director for managed accounts at Cerulli Associates in Boston.

The Wall Street Journal reported the news earlier Wednesday.

The advice business has been under pressure. Under President Barack Obama, the Department of Labor passed a fiduciary rule which required brokers to put clients’ interests ahead of their own when handling retirement investments. While the future of that rule is unclear, it has been credited with pushing more advisers towards a fee-based system and for speeding the adoption of low-cost index products.

At the same time, robo-advisers are building portfolios for clients at a fraction of the cost typically charged by advisers. Fidelity has its own robo product, called Fidelity Go, which charges 35 basis points for accounts with as little as $5,000.

Boston-based Fidelity’s wealth management business has just over $300 billion in assets.
 
 
To contact the reporter on this story: Charles Stein in Boston at [email protected] To contact the editors responsible for this story: Margaret Collins at [email protected] Vincent Bielski, Alan Mirabella

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