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I support a lot of what Andy Phillipson has to say above with a few minor exceptions.
Andy, if you are giving mortgage advice along with risk management advice as well as "some" investment advice then I believe you should be able and required to show competence in all of these areas. This is closer to comprehensive advice than simple mortgage structuring, a little bit of plumbing can be as dangerous as a lot.
I also have a problem with the product providers having too much control over the advisers dealing directly with the members of the public as this is more than likely leading toward product bias that is not needed. I do like the idea and have promoted this in the past, that all companies should be required to pay a set standard amount of commissions/brokerages for any new business placed and it seems that this amount should be around 20% - 25% per annum flat. NO MORE CHURN!!!
With regard to Andy's comments around the process of formulating legislation in New Zealand, I couldn't agree with him more fervently, the government is reaction to the recent finance company slides in a knee jerking manner and are in my view loosing sight of the real issues and their own objectives - to protect the investing public in a way that promotes the use of and growth of financial assets.
I feel the Government is being sidetracked on many of these real issues and we are ending up with what amounts to paralysis by analysis.
I came into this profession some 21 years ago and was told at the time to "keep it simple stupid" and feel that that advice is as appropriate now as it was then, are you listening Lianne??
With the swift timing of the Select Committee reply I feel we may be very close to the Bill being enacted most likely rushed through before the election and I wonder whether we as affected individuals and corporates should not be canvassing our local MP's in an attempt to have it held over rather than allowing this hastily constructed Bill to be passed in it's current form.
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I would suggest that at this time as a profession we should be greatly worried by just who is making these regulations and so, very much, should the general public. We have a complete fiasco going on just now within the political arena:
• We have a minister who may or may not have taken funds in an inappropriate way
• We have a finance minister who just happened to give away nearly all of a healthy surplus in an election year – how appropriate…..not!
• We have the opposition saying they may need to sell state assets to fund their plans – and a Government [who blew the surplus] trying to lay claim to the high ground
• We have a minister looking at regulating financial services having previously been involved with NZ’s immigration policy – not perhaps the very best training.
Does the Financial Services need regulation – yes as a profession we should have a structure which provides the public with confidence that they are indeed working with professionals and ones who work to a code of ethics which will offer a level of protection to the public in the event of loss due to negligence but which will also offer protection to Advisers against inappropriate and unsustainable claims made by the public.
Let’s face it EVERY profession has its bad apples – every single one and unfortunately no amount of regulation will actually stop that – a bad apple will still operate!
My view is that we should have an industry wide set of ethics and a code of practice – the very best people to create those are us the professionals through our respective professional bodies and which should have oversight from either a Government department or the Securities Commission. Any disciplinary panels or complaints panels should be staffed by both industry and non-industry people [lawyers, accountants etc] and with a chairmanship from the Securities Commission.
The most important thing in my eyes is to keep it simple as the more complex it becomes the less effective it will become and the more expensive it will become for the public!