FMA chief executive Samantha Barrass told the FSC conference yesterday the regulator will be looking to do what it can in the months ahead to respond to the Commerce Commission’s banking report.
The key issue, she says, is around transparency in mortgage advice.
"The Minister and the Commerce Commission have clearly expressed concerns about practices in this space," she said.
"We will be looking to work with financial advice providers and firms across the mortgage spectrum to consider how to tackle this issue.
"As the CoFI regime settles in from early next year, there will also be opportunities for us to use our supervisory engagement with banks to look at the issues raised in the market study from this angle."
The Commerce Commission wanted standardised loan applications and also wanted pro-rata clawbacks and ban on banks using conversion rates.
It wants advisers to not only say which lenders are on their panel but also which lenders they don't work with.
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New regulation imposed by the FMA over the last 4 years created a licensing structure, (licensed Financial Advice Provider or FAP’s) basically no adviser can give financial advice without
a. having a FAP license or
b. operating under someone else’s FAP license.
Sounds simple? No not really.
Lenders in NZ will not deal with individual Mortgage advisers FAP’s directly and will only deal with “Dealer Groups “ ( essential middle men ) of which advisers are forced to belong to get access to loan produces , the dealer groups or ( now called Master FAPs) control what lenders and lending produces advisers have assess too and the lenders control what commissions are being paid via these groups /Master FAP’s.
These Master FAP” s/groups have a monopoly over what membership fees they charge advisers and basically if these fees are not paid the adviser cannot access the lenders, the also impose “mandatory training “cost on members so the Master FAP can comply with its license.
Smaller FAP’s have to not only comply with their own license requirements for training and regulation costs but also for the Master FAP license as well, essentially being regulated twice.
This gives dealers groups absolute control over membership fees, regulation training costs, their own internal lending and insurance product deals they negotiate behind closed doors and clip the ticket on all of it!
Monopoly? Maybe
Banks of course love this as its easier for them to pay all commissions to one dealer group and have them sort any claw backs for them. (yes, that’s right commission can be clawed back up to 27 months after loan settles).
This is over regulation in its craziest form and will be the cause of many advisers leaving the industry all together so the consumers access to independent financial advice diminishes and more are force to go direct to one bank and get no independent advice, if anything the ( in the respect of fair outcomes ,and championing for freedom of choice for consumers ) ComCom and the FMA should be investigating Dealer groups /Master FAPS instead of promoting fund raising for its favorite one bank ,epically the groups that are owned by real estate agents which in my opinion are not arm’s length and share client data platforms.
Advisers confirm to customers how they get paid and from whom they get paid as the majority of their income is commission based with commissions varying from lender to lender.
The majority of mortgage advisers operate with integrity and are focused on the needs of their customers first as individual customer circumstances will be more suited to one bank than another, trying to standardize applications didn’t work in Australia and it won’t work here.
Banks are very competitive as every aspect of banking and borrowing is negotiable.