FMA finds room for improvement
The Financial Markets Authority has released the results of its first annual survey of consumers' experience of financial markets conduct.
It follows the release of the FMA's conduct guide, which set out how it wanted providers to behave and what investors should expect.
This year, the report does not name individual providers but FMA director of external communications and investor capability Paul Gregory said it had been made clear to the industry that they would be identified in future.
Overall more than two-thirds of customers said their provider was knowledgeable and the information they provided was easy to understand.
For questions around fairness and professionalism the providers also scored well. However, only half of investors agreed their provider had explained the fees. Just 52% of respondents agreed their provider had helped them to understand why the product was appropriate for them.
One in five investors disagreed with the statement their provider “explained the fees.” These scores were even lower when focusing exclusively on KiwiSaver providers. Among KiwiSaver customers only 46% agreed that fees had been properly explained, and one in four disagreed with that statement.
People with an investment portfolio were significantly more likely to have received a communication from their financial provider in the last 12 months than all other investment types. People with life insurance or another type of investment were least likely to have heard from their providers.
Gregory said there were still concerns around whether providers were satisfactorily explaining why a product was suitable.
He said the conduct guide made it clear the FMA expected providers to help consumers understand.
In cases where providers were limited, either when they were a provider dealing only with their own products or an adviser with limited scope, they should determine first whether they had something that would be suitable for the clients' needs, and make clear that they had restrictions, he said.
Gregory said it seemed that some investors were responding to questions about "investment portfolios" based on their dealings with advisers, rather than product providers.
The responses were good, he said,. Just over 70% were happy with fees explanations and 79% understood why their portfolios were appropriate.