Churn debate: Don't follow Australia Jennings warns
Jennings says there is a churn problem in the life insurance industry but it is only a small group, maybe 10%, who are actually churning business.
He says it is not the advisers who are causing the problem it is the life insurance companies themselves with things like high upfront commission and write backs.
"The two-year write back doesn't help," he says. "We need to stop these incentives of moving (business) over after two years."
He also says when commission levels should be coming back they keep going up.
"It's not the advisers (that are causing the problem) it is the insurance companies," he says. "Some of the behaviour is terrible. The only way you're going to fix it is regulation."
He says the industry's got "no show" of fixing the problem, and regulation maybe the way to go.
Jennings isn't keen to follow the Trowbridge approach suggested in Australia. Actuary John Trowbridge has suggested an overhaul of commissions for Australia’s adviser that would limit them to $1200 in upfront commissions for life insurance advice, per client, no more than once every five years. Advisers dealing with clients with premiums below $2000 a year would be limited to commission of no more than 60% of the first year’s premiums.
"We want to protect advisers," Jennings says. "We don't want to kill advice off for the sake of $1200. That would just favour the banks."
“If we go to the level Trowbridge is talking about, we could lose a third to a half of all advisers, we need to make sure that doesn’t happen.”
While a lot of the blame for the problem lies with life companies there are some bad advisers out there too. “There’s been some pretty bad behaviour by a small number of advisers. They ruin it for the good ones.”
If there is change it has to make sure that the good advisers aren't disadvantaged too much.
Otherwise "there will be many good advisers who are going to pay the price for the rogues that churn from one company to another."