|
Overview
Simply put, a “fiduciary” is someone who is managing the assets of another person
and stands in a special relationship of trust, confidence, and/or legal responsibility.
A fiduciary is required by law to always act in the best interests of their client,
beneficiary, or retirement place participant. Yet, many fiduciaries are not even
aware of their duties and responsibilities.
AIF and AIFA designees have acquired a thorough knowledge of fiduciary
responsibility and can be an invaluable resource to investment fiduciaries and
individual investors alike. An AIF designation represents that person’s knowledge
of a Global Fiduciary Standard of Excellence and their application of the global
standard into their own practice. An AIFA designee has received the same training
on a fiduciary standard, complemented by training on ISO-like assessment
procedures to assess whether other fiduciaries conform to the standard of
excellence.
Don’t risk going at it alone, AIF and AIFA designees have the training necessary to
ensure that an investment process is managed to an appropriate fiduciary standard
of care.
Training
AIF and AIFA designees have successfully completed a specialized program on
investment fiduciary standards of care. Fi360 Training began in 1999 to provide the
investment industry with the first full-time training and research organization
focused exclusively on investment fiduciary responsibility and portfolio
management. The Practices and handbooks described below form the basis of the
classroom instruction.
Designees are required to complete a rigorous training program, successfully pass
an examination, conform to a Code of Ethics, and adhere to continuing education
requirements on a yearly basis. These requirements ensure designees are familiar
with the prudent process developed by fi360, as well as kept up to date with recent
industry events affecting fiduciaries.
Prudent Process for Investment Fiduciaries
An investment fiduciary fits into one of three groups: Investment Stewards,
Investment Advisors, and Investment Managers. Each has a unique function in the
investment process. The Prudent Practices for Investment Fiduciaries handbook
series details Practices based on legislation, case law, regulatory opinion letters, and
best practices that form a prudent investment process for each group of fiduciaries,
respectively. The Practices make good investment sense, and should help to
improve long-term investment performance. |