Separate risk advisers from other planners: SynchronBY LAURA MILLAN | THURSDAY, 29 JAN 2015 12:05PMA life insurance policy has more in common with car insurance policies than with an investment portfolio and therefore risk advisers should be kept separate from other financial planners, Synchron director Don Trapnell argued. Related News |
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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.
Don Trapnell is one of the most respected people in our industry. I'm not part of Synchron but I have always admired Don's work from a distance. When he speaks I listen and I think a good percentage of advisers may agree.
Don's comments in the article are indeed important and I agree wholeheartedly with him. I truly can't understand why we haven't seen this separation of licences already. It is probably because it is simple common sense and we all know how much that means in the pluto-world of politicians, ASIC and other wanna-be's.
We are part of Synchron, unlike Brian above. Yes, it's true that we risk advisers aren't financial planners per se.
Still, the public has a perception which doesn't (or can't) sometimes differentiate, so we do need a working knowledge of financial planning and tax knowledge as it applies to life-risk insurance and superannuation.
And yes, we do on occasion have to deal with perceptions - like it or not. To illustrate: cabinet makers and carpenters are very similar disciplines, but they're two different trades.Similarly, planners are different from life-risk writers, therefore it makes sense to license them separately.
I am perplexed as to why a qualified adviser should not have the lot (Risk and financial planning) in order to competently meter clients circumstances, sufficiently weigh different options before framing meaningful solutions/ strategies/ advice.
In line with FOFA's desire to streamline and simplify advice for Australians, the majority of whom are yet to seek advice, splitting advice areas concerns me.
Given many Australians harbour considerable mistrust about advisers and the advice industry for a variety of reasons including many not knowing what advice to seek, inability to distinguish what constitutes good advice or adviser. Fragmenting advice into risk or financial planning instead of unifying it under one mandatory competency guideline for all advisers, could further entrench the public's fear. Many risk insurance only clients I have spoken to thought they received financial advice! But Which financial advice?
A client recently told me she was terrified of seeking advice because it is such a mine field of variables: who to trust, what advice to seek, appropriateness of advice, at what cost, would the adviser actually care for her beyond what's driving the adviser.
I see no contradiction between risk and financial planning with the exception of client directed advice or execution only advice. Every risk client should have a financial planning discussion and financial planning clients aught to entertain a risk discussion where applicable.
One uniform competency guideline for advisers will help repair the public's trust, just like a dentist is a dentist and not just for a particular set of teeth or a full mechanic and not one specialising in just one part of a car engine.
Advice recipients could end up with insufficient advice from risk-only advisers or financial planners who might fear referring clients to other advice specialist for fear of losing clients. If we are serious about repairing the intractable perceptions that prevail about the industry we have to fix this.