Financial advisers in dark on advice provision cost

26 April 2012
| By Staff |
image
image
expand image

As the industry moves towards a fee-for-service model, financial advisers need to better understand their service costs per client and adopt scaled advice solutions to service lower-end customers, according to Provisio Technologies director Cameron O'Sullivan.

O'Sullivan said retaining C and D clients would continue to be a challenge for advisers unless the cost of advice could be lowered.

"Cost of advice is becoming more important as planners and dealer groups consider new models for remaining profitable in a fee-for-service era," O'Sullivan said.

Investment Trends 2011 Planner Business Model report found that 54 per cent of the 1396 financial planners surveyed said the biggest challenge they faced under the Future of Financial Advice legislation was providing advice affordable to lower-balance clients.

O'Sullivan said most planning practices had likely supported their lower-balance clients with their higher-balance individuals and "would become only marginally profitable" if they suddenly lost those clients.

He added that it was crucial for practices to adopt better solutions to service low- to -mid value clients, most of whom prefer receiving basic advice rather than traditional high-cost and time-consuming statements of advice.

"Advisers who embrace newer scaled advice solutions will be able to generate these basic plans in as little as a few minutes, dramatically lowering the cost of advice," O'Sullivan said.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

 

Recommended for you

 

MARKET INSIGHTS

sub-bg sidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

JOHN GILLIES

Might be a bit different to i the past where at most there was one man from the industry on the loaded enquiry boards a...

1 day 7 hours ago
Simon

Who get's the $10M? Where does the money go?? Might it end up in the CSLR to financially assist duped investors??? ...

6 days 3 hours ago
Squeaky'21

My view is that after 2026 there will be quite a bit less than 10,000 'advisers' (investment advisers) and less than 100...

1 week 6 days ago

AustralianSuper and Australian Retirement Trust have posted the financial results for the 2022–23 financial year for their combined 5.3 million members....

9 months 2 weeks ago

A $34 billion fund has come out on top with a 13.3 per cent return in the last 12 months, beating out mega funds like Australian Retirement Trust and Aware Super. ...

9 months 1 week ago

The verdict in the class action case against AMP Financial Planning has been delivered in the Federal Court by Justice Moshinsky....

9 months 2 weeks ago

TOP PERFORMING FUNDS

ACS FIXED INT - AUSTRALIA/GLOBAL BOND