Target on advisers outside associations
It is to run a summit this month with the Financial Markets Authority and the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment to help financial advisers navigate the coming change.
“This wave of regulatory change is designed to drive better outcomes for consumers.”, said Richard Klipin, chief executive of the Financial Services Council.
“It means though that big changes are coming for the sector that will impact on all."
The Financial Services Legislation Amendment Bill is expected to become law next year, beginning a period of transition that will run until 2021.
Klipin said the summit was designed particularly to capture advisers who were not part of a professional body that would advise them on what was required.
More are not members of an association than are.
There was the possibility that some were hanging back to wait until someone told them what they had to do, he said.
"There is a whole marketplace of advisers who are not members of the IFA or PAA but who do have agency agreements with members of the FSC. Those are the people we're trying to engage with the FMA and MBIE to bring them on a journey of change."
Klipin said some advisers were frustrated that much of the detail was yet to be determined, such as the code of conduct that will set out what competence and qualification standards are required. More detail is still yet to come on the disclosure requirements, too.
But he said there were "known unknowns" and areas where changes could be mapped out, even if the finer points could not yet be filled in. "Not everything is known but there is a lot that is. The more people we have engaged the better."
Klipin said it was important for the industry that it planned for change now, "rather than waiting until the starter gun goes off and a flood of people want to get through a narrow door".
“The FMA is very conscious that the level and rate of regulatory change can be challenging for the industry, but we hope that the expertise on offer at this summit will help all players come to grips with the new landscape," said John Botica, director of market engagement at the Financial Markets Authority and keynote speaker at the summit.