Current ongoing fee disclosure provisions can be “onerous” and should be replaced, the independent chair has recommended in the final report of the Quality of Advice Review.
Under recommendation eight of the final report of the Quality of Advice Review (QAR), independent chair and author Michelle Levy has called for the simplification of ongoing fee disclosure provisions.
Providers of financial advice are currently required to give a fee disclosure statement to the client, to obtain the client’s agreement to renew an ongoing fee arrangement and obtain the client’s consent to deduct advice fees.
Ms Levy said compliance with these “important consumer protections” should not be an “onerous obligation” for financial advisers.
As such, Ms Levy — a partner at global law firm Allens Linklaters — has recommended existing provisions be replaced with a “single consent form”.
The catch-all consent form would explain the services to be provided and the fee the adviser proposes to charge over the proceeding 12-month period.
The single consent form, which “should be prescribed”, would also authorise the deduction of advice fees from the client’s financial product and “should be able to be relied on by the product issuer”.
“Multiple forms would only be required where fees are to be deducted from financial products issued by more than one product issuer,” Ms Levy noted.
Additionally, under the same recommendation, Ms Levy has called for “a single prescribed form” applicable to all product issuers, including superannuation trustees.
However, Ms Levy stressed product issuers would not be legally required to accept the form.
“This is because it is possible and should continue to be possible that different product issuers might apply different rules to the payment of ongoing fees,” she said.
“Some might apply caps on ongoing fees or permit ongoing fees to be provided in relation to some advice only.
“While it is desirable to have a single consent form, it is not desirable to dictate whether and in what circumstances a product issuer must allow a client to pay advice fees from their financial product.”
Ms Levy has also proposed “greater flexibility” be given to advisers regarding when they obtain a consent form from a client, provided consent is received on an annual basis.
The financial advice industry is still awaiting a response to the report from the Albanese government.
The SMSF Association is the latest body to push for the inclusion of managed investment schemes in the CSLR; however, ...
While the rules around the tax deductibility of advice fees were technically updated in December 2023, the profession ...
Financial adviser at Complete Wealth, Dr Ben Neilson, explains how advisers have improved their perceived value over the ...
Never miss the stories that impact the industry.
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the ifa bulletin