

Really?
âLowering standards to lower feesâ is the proposed approach to reforming financial advice?
Thatâs a strong âHell to the noâ from me.
See, thereâs a review underway, covering financial advice.
And boy⦠as you can tell, I have some thoughts.
Strap yourselves in.
Apparently, if reports in the Australian Financial Review are to be believed (and thereâs no reason not to), the review is going to recommend that financial advisors no longer have to apply the âbest interestâ test when giving financial advice.
Whoa! What the actual?
If these changes go through, financial advisors would no longer have to ensure their advice was in the client’s best interest?
Think about that for a minute.
Imagine being a doctor, and not having your patientsâ best interest as your number one obligation.
Or a lawyer, and not having to act in the best interest of your client.
And yet this review is (apparently) about to let financial advisors act in some other way?
Apparently, âgoodâ advice will now be enough.
Bloody hell.
Maybe, after a decade or so, the industry is about to win, putting itself ahead of its clients again?
Oh, they donât actually say that.
They say theyâre worried that advice isnât affordable enough.
See, having to act in clientsâ best interest is apparently too expensive.
And if they donât have to do that anymore, they can make advice cheaper.
Sure, it may not be in our best interest anymore, but at least itâs affordable.
If that sentence doesnât strike you as completely absurd, you need to read it again.
Apparently, the options are:
— Weâll do whatâs in your best interest, but itâll be expensive; or
— You can pay less, but we canât promise the advice is in your best interest
Frankly, Iâm not sure I have the words.
Some people will say the administrative burden of the âbest interests testâ excludes those who canât afford the fee.
Iâm sure thatâs right. After all, most financial advisors are driving 15-year-old Toyota Camrys, right?
A cheap shot? Maybe.
And they’re not bad guys and girls. Frankly, they’re right — the admin burden is a debacle.
They’re not wrong about the problem.
But it’s the proposed solution that stinks.
See, there IS a problem.
But itâs not the one you think.
Itâs not the âbest interestsâ duty thatâs the problem.
Itâs the fact our system is so bloody complex that so many of us need, or could possibly benefit from, financial advice in the first place.
Which, if youâre a financial planner, youâre not really going to complain about, are you?
Because itâs that very patchwork of tax complexity that is your meal ticket.
I donât blame those advisors for helping us navigate it, by the way.
But if they were honest with themselves, Iâm pretty sure theyâd admit that the complexity isnât actually necessary for our society to function.
And many of their clients, if they were being honest, would suggest the same.
(Donât believe me? Compare the number of people who want less red tape for business with the number of people who love it, when it helps them get one over the taxman. Ideology is kinda Swiss-cheesy like that â it gets very holey when you might benefit.)
So theyâre right â much of the financial advice regulation requires lots of overheads to make sure it’s in the clientâs best interest⦠which is as it should be.
Who honestly thinks âAh, close enoughâ is okay?
Financial advice should always be in the client’s best interest.
So the answer isnât to give advice which is okay-ish, to save a few bob.
Itâs to change the law so that the financial advice isnât needed.
Seriously, when I can pay a financial advisor a few thousand dollars, and still make more than that based on the advice she gives me, the system is broken.
Super, family trusts, company structures, negative gearing, estate planning, work deductions⦠the list goes on.
Why?
Because the politicians and regulators have been captured by the industry and its wealthiest clients.
How many people got formal financial advice (other than an accountant helping them lodge their tax) a few decades ago?
Probably a small fraction of the adult population.
These days?
The dogâs breakfast of loopholes and (legal) tax dodges gets bigger by the year.
And itâs no wonder the industry keeps growing.
If the government is serious, and Treasury is fair dinkum, they wonât repeal the best interests test.
Theyâll change the law so that my financial advisor says, “Sorry, mate. I canât justify taking you on as a client. Thereâs nothing I can do for you”.
Or, “taking you on as a client is expensive, because my advice needs to be in your best interests, and I can save you enough to offset my fee”.
The middle ground â slightly less expensive advice that isnât in my best interest â is something only a government (or a financial advice industry looking for a payday) could love.
I guess weâll see who has the ear of those in power, and whether theyâre truly trying to improve things.
Over to you, Prime Minister.
Fool on!
The post ‘Sorry, you can’t afford advice that’s in your best interest’ appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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