CSLR warns adviser levy will balloonBY KARREN VERGARA | FRIDAY, 25 OCT 2024 12:42PMThe CSLR warned the advice sector should brace for an even bigger levy in the 2026 financial year. Related News |
Editor's Choice
Scarcity Partners enlists former Ophir Asset Management chief
|GP staking specialist Scarcity Partners has appointed former Ophir Asset Management chief executive George Chirakis as a partner.
Financial services deregulation boosts economy by $2bn: FSC
|Reforms in funds management, financial advice, and superannuation will usher in an extra $1.7 billion per year to the economy and can make Australia a serious financial services hub, the Financial Services Council (FSC) says.
Natixis, Generali merger creates $3.2tn fund manager
|Natixis Investment Managers will combine with Generali Investments Holdings (GIH) to create a behemoth with €1.9 trillion ($3.2tn) in assets under management (AUM).
RBA is 'overachieving' on inflation target: GSFM
|GSFM investment specialist Stephen Miller is predicting the RBA will deliver an interest rate cut in February.
Products
Featured Profile
Kellie Wood
HEAD OF FIXED INCOME
SCHRODER INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AUSTRALIA LIMITED
SCHRODER INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT AUSTRALIA LIMITED
Schroders Australia's Kellie Wood talks about winning a lot, so much so that it's become a well-intentioned joke with her co-workers - but it's this ambitious attitude that spurs her on every day. Eliza Bavin writes.
I have been warning advisers for 2 years that AFCA and ASIC will treat advisers like a piggy bank to cover for failures if oversight. The FAAA have been asleep at the wheel when this should have been fought with only the AIOFP taking the matter on. If Anderson and Abood had worried more about their constituents rather than jockeying for positions we may have fought this with some success. As it stands the good advisers in the industry will pay an exorbitant cost incurred by an AFCA with no oversight when advisers recommending the failed fund ands the fund itself have been allowed to move to another of the parent licences with no oversight.
ASIC are hugely accountable at all levels for this disaster and simply drive good advisers into the ground to cover their own incompetence.
Wouldn't mind seeing E&P kick the tin given they've snaffled a few advisers and a stack of FUM from the ashes... They've directly benefitted financially yet face a proportionately smaller burden.