Has FMA picked the wrong target?
Strictly Business owner Tony Vidler told Good Returns the FMA's strict monitoring of AFAs could be better directed elsewhere.
"Logically you would have to say that if you were going to zero in on an area of concern RFAs would be the logical area to look at.
"They are the least regulated group of advisers and there are highly variable standards in some respects; you've got some of the best practitioners in the business and some people who shouldn't even be in the business."
Vidler questioned why AFAs were being monitored so closely when they had just completed a process that included having to prove they were trustworthy as well as qualified.
"AFAs have had to go through some sort of fit and proper person test... that's a point well worth making: the continued focus on monitoring of the AFAs raises questions about how much faith they have in the own processes [for determining if advisers are fit and proper].
"I haven't heard a word on the streets about the FMA rocking up and making it hard for RFAs."
However, an RFA Good Returns spoke to said closer monitoring of RFAs wasn't an "urgent" issue.
"I've got mixed feelings on that: on the one hand it would be good to catch the baddies but on the other hand it [the new regulatory regime] does seem to be working quite well."
If RFAs were put through the same sort of compliance costs as AFAs "that would defeat the purpose of being an RFA," the source said.
"They should go to the insurance companies and see what comes in and look for business that has been twisted."