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Home News

‘High risk, low return’: Has financial advice become a liability?

EXCLUSIVE Mortgages and financial advice seemed the perfect match on paper. But the economic reality has proved to be very different.

by James Mitchell
October 19, 2022
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Long before the royal commission, a handful of mortgage broking groups saw an opportunity in financial advice. Loan Market, Mortgage Choice and Yellow Brick Road (YBR) all offered, until recently, mortgage broking and wealth management services.

Last year, Mortgage Choice made a business decision to exit financial planning as part of a program of work to focus and streamline the business ahead of its acquisition by REA Group.

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“From the middle of last year, Mortgage Choice Financial Planning (FinChoice) franchisees and financial advisers began migrating off the Mortgage Choice Financial Planning licence,” said Anthony Waldron, chief executive of financial services and Mortgage Choice, REA Group.

Mortgage Choice Financial Planning has not had any financial advisers on its licence since March 2022.

“Mortgage Choice supports both the mortgage broking and financial advice industries, understands the value each adds to consumers, and agrees both should be widely available. We continue to support the needs of customers seeking financial advice under a referral arrangement framework,” Mr Waldron said.

This is a common message — one of support for financial advice and advisers while simultaneously backing out of the industry.

Loan Market, the mortgage broking arm of real estate giant, Ray White, wound up the Wealth Market business in March. Chairman Sam White said he believes in financial advice for all Australians — “not just the wealthy”. Yet like Mortgage Choice, the group couldn’t see a viable business case for keeping Wealth Market going.

YBR got out of financial advice before Loan Market and Mortgage Choice. The group sold its advice business in early 2020.

YBR’s executive chairman, Mark Bouris, told ifa that in financial advice businesses, there are more people and cost in compliance than there is in marketing.

“At one time, it was around the other way,” he said. “Someone has to exit the Conga line. And lots of people have, such as consumers who don’t have over a million dollars in investable assets. They can no longer afford the price that a good planner will charge.”

Mr Bouris said he is not surprised that mortgage groups have joined the banks in exiting advice. He expects to see more AFSLs exit the sector.

“There’s just not enough money in it for them,” he said. “It’s what I call profitless prosperity. It’s not only not viable, it’s a liability. Financial advice is a high-risk, low-return business.”

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Comments 2

  1. Anonymous says:
    3 years ago

    “someone has to exit the conga line” – Bouris nailed the critical problem in a sentence or two. It’s fixable, but we’re at 2 minutes to midnight.

    Reply
  2. Scott O'Donnell says:
    3 years ago

    I’m not sure why this is seen as being an exclusive. Most financial planners know that the industry is currently stuffed and wouldn’t recommend it as a career for someone they liked. The number of advisers exiting shows this to be the case.

    Reply

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