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Former super fund adviser receives permanent ban
|A financial adviser, who worked at several major superannuation funds, has been permanently banned after he tried to persuade clients to transfer their retirement savings into a bank account he controlled.
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Australian Food Super closes failed investment option
|Australian Food Super, previously known as the Australian Meat Industry Superannuation Trust, is closing its Shares product, which failed last year's Your Future, Your Super test.
Pacific Current sells stake in investment firm to Goldman Sachs
|Pacific Current Group has sold a portion of its interest in a US-based investment firm for US$35.2 million.
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Robert De Dominicis
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
GBST HOLDINGS LIMITED
GBST HOLDINGS LIMITED
It was during a family sojourn to the seaside town of Pescara, Italy, Rob DeDominicis first laid eyes on what would become the harbinger of his future. Andrew McKean writes.
If I was a Bank planner I'd find this very insulting. You'd have to have rocks in your head to work as a planner for a bank and put up with this. It's not the planners that need ethics training, it's the senior management of the organization that pressure more junior staff to meet sales targets, to sell so much of XYZ product. Why haven't middle and senior management had to undergo ethics training? The ethics of an organization are influenced from the top and work its way down. The sooner bank planners are segregated from the broader planning community the better.
So 500 AMP advisers and others from the 4 banks are lining up to learn about ethics
Is it thus true to say these people have been advising in an ethics-free zone all these years? Sounds like a lot of SOAs may need to be reviewed.
Ethics are a part of most peoples value system - you either have ethics or you don't. And if you don't practice it every day already, a training course is useless.
And I suppose all those bank sales managers who pressure advisers to meet quotas will be attending as well.