Scrap designations and replace with advisers and sales people
Read, who runs consultancy firm IDS, says advisers would give advice and have a fiduciary responsibility to clients, while the distributors would be product sellers.
There would be an element of buyer-beware with the distributors, he says.
“Some people are happy to be sold a product,” he says.
The advisers could be licenced in any category, such as wealth management, investment, life insurance and mortgages, and they would be monitored.
He said establishing a group of advisers is similar to the way the Financial Markets Conduct Act requires licensing of class DIMS providers and managed investment schemes.
“You could divide it so there are those that want to do advice and planning and they could be licence-holders. Others would represent a product provider, whether that is one or multiple.”
That would mean consumers going to a product provider representative would know that they could get help but the advice they would get would not be as full or non-conflicted as that of a licensed adviser.
Read said that was sensible because many QFE advisers, such as bank staff, were already in a situation where they were unlikely to recommend that a customer did not move to their own products.
“They should be able to have an adviser in there giving good advice but consumers should know that it is conflicted in some way and take it with a grain of salt. The licensed ones would be ones who aren’t with a product provider.”
He said once that split was tidied up it would be easier to make decisions around standards and regulations.
“If consumer confidence is the most important thing you want to easily state to them ‘if you’re making the decision yourself and you just want help, go to a product provider’. If they want advice, and recommendations that are in your best interests, you need to know who [the licensed advisers are] quite clearly from the others.”
It would be a benefit to the entire industry when they could just “get on with it” and focus on their businesses, not regulation, he said.
He said many of the problems identified, such as churning of insurance products and conflicts of interest, would disappear with such a structure.