The corporate regulator has delivered a swathe of updated guidance documents for financial advisers in line with the first tranche of DBFO reforms.
Following a raft of updates in the months since the first Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (DBFO) bill passed Parliament in July, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) provided four new info sheets and updated two regulatory guides covering a range of topics on Thursday.
Regulatory Guide 246 Conflicted and other banned remuneration (RG 246) was updated to include new guidance in response to amendments to the conflicted remuneration requirements under the DBFO Act, while revisions to Regulatory Guide 175 AFS Licensing: Financial product advisers–Conduct and disclosure (RG 175) have been made to remove the FSG guidance in former Section C as its guidance had been replaced by INFO 291.
The new information sheets are:
INFO 291 includes references to ASIC’s recently made instrument that allows AFS licensees or their representatives dealing in a financial product for the purposes of implementing financial product advice to rely on website disclosure information in place of providing an FSG.
In October, Financial Advice Association Australia (FAAA) general manager policy, advocacy and standards Phil Anderson welcomed the relief measures, saying that it “provides certainty” for advisers.
“This relief resolves a problem that was identified in the law following the passing of the Delivering Better Financial Outcomes (DBFO) Bill, where the service of dealing was unintentionally not captured by this reform,” Anderson said.
“Dealing, which includes implementing a product that has been recommended as part of the provision of financial advice, is a critical service provided to clients. This relief now provides certainty to enable financial advice businesses to rely upon the FSG reform in the DBFO Bill.”
Cowell Clarke senior associate Richard Hopkin had previously noted that the drafting error would essentially mitigate the positive impacts of the legislation.
“The exemption is drafted so that it is connected to, specifically, the provision of financial product advice. So that’s covering general advice and personal advice. As you know, that’s one of many services, financial services, that someone can provide under an AFSL, depending on their authorisations,” Hopkin said.
“The issue is that the exemption is narrowed to, or is drafted in such a way, as it is narrowed to the provision of advice. It doesn’t include an exemption for dealing in a financial product.”
ASIC added that the guidance in INFO 286 and INFO 287 should assist financial advisers in meeting the revised advice fee obligations under the DBFO Act, which apply from 10 January 2025 for new fee arrangements.
ASIC said it would issue further guidance once the second tranche of the DBFO package is legislated and that it would “consult with industry before issuing further guidance”.
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