Professional bodies 'will have to push harder' on CPD
The Code Committee has stuck with the change that requires AFAs to complete 30 hours of structured CPD over two years, instead of 10 hours each year, remains. But it has removed the reference to that training being delivered by a DAO or professional body, and struck out the definition of both.
“It doesn’t help professional bodies promote themselves,” Financial Focus adviser Murray Weatherston said.
Structured CPD will have to be provided by a qualified educator or relevant expert, provide an opportunity for feedback and interaction, and be verifiable by documentation.
Training that is provided purely for the purpose of promoting a particular financial product will be excluded.
Committee chairman David Ireland said if professional bodies were offering good CPD programmes, it shoud not be a problem. But he said they would have to be able to justify the training they offered as structured credits, and potentially push harder.
"Simply because a professional body is delivering the training, that's not enough in itself. It doesn't get an automatic tick. There's no bar or block to them doing it."
IFA president Nigel Tate said he would be looking at the code closely over the weekend. PAA president Bruce Cortesi said he was looking at it overnight.
Other changes have gone through largely as expected, such as the simplification of code standard five, which relates to conflicts of interest. The revised code also makes clear that advisers must place the interests of clients first and act with integrity, irrespective of any other code standard.
Being a chartered accountant or CFP will no longer be a recognised alternative for having completed standard set c, and the NZX diploma will no longer be an alternative to standard set D.
The committee has also backed away from its plan to offer a pathway to non-authorised advisers to offer advice on KiwiSaver.
Instead, the code offers a provision for AFAs to advise on KiwiSaver first-home withdrawals without sitting investment qualifications.
Weatherston said the committee likely had its hands tied when it came to KiwiSaver. “It seems crazy that financial advisers who are not authorised are not able to talk to their clients about using the KiwiSaver withdrawal for part funding of a first house purchase… but that needs to be a wider legislation change. If mortgage brokers are capable of talking to someone about what mortgage they should have, it seems strange they can’t talk about taking money out of their KiwiSaver account.”
He said the committee could not solve that problem. The move away from a pathway had been clearly signalled because of huge adviser opposition to advisers who were not authorised offering full KiwiSaver investment advice, he said.
“From an initial skim read, I’d give the code committee a gold medal.”
Final comments on the draft can still be made, until October 24.