An Analysis of Whether Privately Owned Financial Planning Practices Are Transitioning to Fully Independent Advice Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. The Independent Financial Advice Sector
2.2. Conflicted Advice and Consumer Outcomes
2.3. Legitimacy
3. Methodology
3.1. Sample Size and Recruitment of Participants
3.2. Interview Questions
3.3. Interview Procedures
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Transition to Independence
No, not at all, they’re not going to. There’s not going to be any money in it. You know, for anyone under 35, it’s just not practical. If they just want a life insurance policy, you’re only going to make $600, or you know, $300. How could you charge them $1000 for a $300 benefit?
Yeah, so I think that is a significant challenge, but you know, and I agree that there certainly should be a limitation on how long commissions should be paid for. You know it’s just, we’re seeing crazy things. But for us, we mostly deal with, you know, professionals, so they understand that you know, particularly when we, you know commissions reduce premiums by 30% for life, there’s a significant value add. You know, let us set it up for, but yeah, we’ve decided not to do it anymore cos it’s just a pain.
4.2. Revenue Impact
If they ban commissions full stop, then I would then have to start charging fees for insurance advice; I would potentially lose. The biggest loss for me would be the ongoing revenue, so I would suggest that possibly our revenue would go down I’m thinking by 50 per cent.
4.3. The Public Impact of Non-Transition to Independence
The client is significantly advantaged by the commission payments as they get the option to consider their need for life insurance to protect themselves and their family. Without the opportunity to be paid, while I may out of obligation mention the need, but I am sure as hell not going to help them implement it.
No, but I still think at the bottom end it’s challenging. I think the fact that the adviser’s being paid in one sense for lower-end clients makes a lot of sense because I think when you couple what we talked about earlier of the undervaluing of the advice, and then that coupled up with people now being asked to pay something that they didn’t have to pay before.
4.4. Benefits of Independent Advice
4.4.1. Conflicts of Interest
I had already been operating under that independent advice fee model but had the overbearing presence of a product provider. So, it was for me, it was a natural progression from where I already was. Yeah, I mean its genuinely uncompromised advice. The adviser should be telling a client exactly what they think they should be doing, as opposed to beforehand. As I said, we were operating under that fee model, but at the end of the day you still had to work within your approved list, so there were always compromises.
I don’t know how you can give, and I don’t know how you can sit in front of a client and provide advice unless you’re independent. I mean I did it for a while, but when I did do that, I was working with very high net worth individuals and wasn’t such a thing. I don’t know, you need to sit down with somebody and know that that person is paid by you in order to do the absolute best thing by you.
4.4.2. Ethics and Honesty
I didn’t know there was such a thing called fully independent until I stumbled across it in some communication, and my ex-wife at the time and my mother, they just thought I was crazy. I go, well I don’t know, I’m just really ethical and I believe in what the Institute of Chartered Accountants said when they said not only do you do the right thing but to be seen to be doing the right thing, and that’s always stuck with me.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Sub-Themes |
---|---|
Transition to independence | Insurance commissions, fee for service |
Revenue impact | Damaging. business closure |
The public impact of non-transition to independence | No disadvantage, beneficial |
Benefits of independent advice | Conflicts of interest, ethics and honesty |
Independent financial performance | Strong performance, differentiation of service |
Category | Respondents |
---|---|
Advisers not transitioning to full independence | 39 (92.9%) |
Advisers who are possibly transitioning | 2 (4.77%) |
Advisers who are contemplating. | 1 (2.33%) |
Main reason for non-transition. | Loss of insurance commissions (85.7%) |
Category | Respondents |
---|---|
Number of advisers whose income would be reduced by a banning of insurance commissions. | 40 (95.2%) |
Number of advisers who would suffer significant damage to their revenue. | 9 (21.42%) |
Number of advisers who would close their business. | 5 (11.9%) |
Number of advisers who would stop providing life insurance advice. | 4 (9.5%) |
Category | Respondents |
---|---|
Number of advisers who stated clients are not disadvantaged by receiving advice that is not fully independent. | 42 (100%) |
Number of advisers who stated clients benefit from non-independent advice. | 11 (26.2%) |
Number of advisers who stated there is no bias in non-independent advice. | 3 (7.14%) |
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Pawski, D.; Powell, R.; Golab, A. An Analysis of Whether Privately Owned Financial Planning Practices Are Transitioning to Fully Independent Advice Providers. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2022, 15, 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15080356
Pawski D, Powell R, Golab A. An Analysis of Whether Privately Owned Financial Planning Practices Are Transitioning to Fully Independent Advice Providers. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2022; 15(8):356. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15080356
Chicago/Turabian StylePawski, Darren, Robert Powell, and Anna Golab. 2022. "An Analysis of Whether Privately Owned Financial Planning Practices Are Transitioning to Fully Independent Advice Providers" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 15, no. 8: 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15080356
APA StylePawski, D., Powell, R., & Golab, A. (2022). An Analysis of Whether Privately Owned Financial Planning Practices Are Transitioning to Fully Independent Advice Providers. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 15(8), 356. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15080356