Garpal Gumnut
Ross Island Hotel
- Joined
- 2 January 2006
- Posts
- 13,845
- Reactions
- 10,683
Do you really think some words in a bit of legislation will prevent such disasters in the future?
What complete and utter bull.
It's about planners not being paid commission to provide dodgy products.
Its about planners not being able to charge management fees without communicating with the customer.
What switched Ricky Muir was his sitting on the Timbercorp debacle.
The main guy made 7mil sales hid his commissions and promptly went bankrupt so he couldn't be sued.
ANZ were in it up to their necks and will get away with it.
Don't believe the dross. We shouldn't have laws like this, and though the banks have pumped millions into the Libs to try to get them repealed, the people (ie democracy) has won.
If you go to an advisor now, you pay a fee for his advice, just like doctors, engineers, architects, accountants and any other professional. They will have to be properly trained and not allowed to cheat on an exam based on a sort of vege course. Whistleblowers will be protected.
I can't believe how easily some people let vested interests pull the wool over their eyes just so they can back their party of preference.
I think what Vix is getting at is, the ability to recommend anything other than 'safe as a bank' investments, will become too risky.
Therefore everyone will offer the same, which will end up with the Banks and AMP, being the only ones left.
The super funds will still charge you for advice, but will hand the responsibility to the Banks or AMP etc to invest it.
It will be interesting to see if the result is a drop in returns, my guess is it will be.
The main guy made 7mil sales hid his commissions and promptly went bankrupt so he couldn't be sued.
Hodgie
The smaller advisors and the organisation that reflects their views are for these changes.
The larger advisors including AMP and the bank owned companies are against.
The large advisors do not want people to get financial advice based on ability. They would rather sell them a range of white good style products through a barely trained and cheap functionary where they can skim profits in a myriad of ways.
Hodgie
The smaller advisors and the organisation that reflects their views are for these changes.
The larger advisors including AMP and the bank owned companies are against.
The large advisors do not want people to get financial advice based on ability. They would rather sell them a range of white good style products through a barely trained and cheap functionary where they can skim profits in a myriad of ways.
Hodgie
The smaller advisors and the organisation that reflects their views are for these changes.
The larger advisors including AMP and the bank owned companies are against.
The large advisors do not want people to get financial advice based on ability. They would rather sell them a range of white good style products through a barely trained and cheap functionary where they can skim profits in a myriad of ways.
When I was at work, a few of the guys got involved in lemon myrtle, strawberries and I think tee treas.
They said this is brilliant you put in a wad of money, the tax return pays off the loan, then you get an income stream from it.
I said, no thanks, sounds shonky, it wasn't being pushed by the banks and they did get burned.
They are still screaming it was unfair that the ATO had to be paid back.
How do you make laws to protect people from their own greed? They will just look for something else to make easy money on.
The next thing will be suing financial planners, for any losses incurred, I can see liability insurance going through the roof.
Thing is the advice most people require isn't very complicated and isn't likely to pay particuarly well. I'm convinced the reason they have all these trailing commissions etc. is that if it was a fee for service industry most financial planners wouldn't make over 6 figures. You don't need to be financial genius to advise a couple with a vanilla SMSF, an investment property and a PPOR.
Agree.How do you make laws to protect people from their own greed? They will just look for something else to make easy money on.
Hodgie has responded to this which I was going to ask about also:The next thing will be suing financial planners, for any losses incurred, I can see liability insurance going through the roof.
Professional Indemnity insurance is already extremely expensive, a lot of smaller Australian Financial Services License holders only have PI insurance purely for the fact that its the law. The insurance is so insignificant that it won't cover the potential claims that come in anyway, they have insane excesses of hundreds of thousands of dollars per claim. It's too expensive to get anything better for a lot of these companies.
Yep, I've been pondering this a bit also. Previously we've had planners offer a potential price of between $5000 and $10,000 to prepare a full financial plan. Does the average couple, with only about $100,000, say, to invest, and a low risk profile, really need a complicated analysis before whacking the funds into an ETF or similar?Thing is the advice most people require isn't very complicated and isn't likely to pay particuarly well. I'm convinced the reason they have all these trailing commissions etc. is that if it was a fee for service industry most financial planners wouldn't make over 6 figures. You don't need to be financial genius to advise a couple with a vanilla SMSF, an investment property and a PPOR.
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