Let's get these adviser rules right
The bad news is most of the agreement is about the key things which are wrong with the changes proposed in the
While MBIE have generally being given credit for the amount and depth of consultation they have done about the Financial Advisers Act and what needs changing, it seems some of this was lost in translation when the legal people came to drafting the new bill.
Two areas which are creating angst are the need for better differentiation between advice and sales. This has been a number one issue from day one and indeed the way the current regime works, especially with the QFE option. There are two playing fields. One for independent advisers who give true advice. The other for vertically integrated organisations to sell their own products sans objectivity.
Consumers need to clearly be able to differentiate when they are being sold something.
If you really look at what the Government has been saying about providing consumer confidence and trust in the area of financial advice then what is proposed is a failure on its own score card.
The second issue which is likely to gain more traction this week is around the the definition of client duty first. We've already run one story which suggests the Code Committee think what is being proposed in s431H is much narrower than what the Code Committee intend CS1 to mean. On the other hand the Code Committee has never, to my knowledge, explained what duty means.
This is an important thing to get right. It is up to the profession to make sure what is in the final legislation is workable and fair.
That brings me to the third point. Will this bill progress before the September general election? My gut feel is no. The odds have to be against it progressing too far. There are a number of reasons including the election being two months earlier than what was expected. That means the timeline expressed last year was further compressed as the Exposure Draft was also late coming out.
Added to that there is a new minister, Jacqui Dean, overseeing the passage of this legislation.
When the original FAA was developed Labour's Commerce Minister Lianne Dalziell had a clear hand on the tiller. When National won the election its minister Simon Power steered the bill through Parliament. (Later he left politics and joined Westpac). This time around it appears Ministerial touch is relatively light.
Thirdly, I've for sometime argued that National governments are pretty poor at introducing changes in the financial services area. Look back over recent history and all the big stuff has been done by Labour. KiwiSaver, PIE tax, NZ Super Fund and so the list goes on. Indeed the original FAA was, from memory, started by Labour.
This argument gets weakened a little with Prime Minister Bill English's NZ Super announcement last week, but hey that's only talk at the moment and the change is 20 years away!
But most importantly MBIE has to get this Exposure Draft right. It isn't at the moment and it is up to everyone, including all advisers, to make sure they have their say before the submission deadline expires at the end of this month.
We don't want to see a repeat of the FAA where the bill is shoved through Parliament at the last minute and a clause for a five-year review is thrown in so any problems can be fixed later.