Life insurers partly responsible for poor insurance report

13 October 2014
| By Jason |
image
image
expand image

Life insurance manufacturers need to take responsibility for last week’s report into life insurance and supply products that meet consumer needs and not research house ratings processes.

The comments were made by Asteron Life executive general manager for adviser distribution Jordan Hawke and were part of the opening plenary session at the Association of Financial Advisers (AFA) 2014 National Advisers Conference in Cairns.

Hawke was asked by AFA chief executive Brad Fox to comment on the report into life insurance advice released by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) last week.

Hawke stated that life insurance companies had spent “a lot of time focused on how to move business amongst each other” instead of focusing on consumers.

“The way we develop products and the cycle we have, leap frogging each other for best definitions and cheapest premiums to satisfy research house ratings rather than thinking about end consumer, has driven a lot of this,” said Hawke.

He also said that report had a subtext that implied the manufacturers should “get on and deal with these issues or if you don’t we will step in and start to take control”.

He said the life insurance sector had not responded to changing consumer behaviour, which included lower tolerances to price increases but continued to offer insurance with stepped premiums, and this was challenging the model and economics behind life insurance providers.

Hawke stated the ASIC report was “quite balanced but called out issues in industry” and applauded ASIC’s release of an advice checklist while expressing surprise that it was the regulator that had taken that step.

He said the report did overlook the 85,000 claims and $5 billion in benefits paid out to life insurance clients “which was never covered in mainstream press because it was not popular”.

Read more about:

AUTHOR

 

Recommended for you

 

MARKET INSIGHTS

sub-bg sidebar subscription

Never miss the latest news and developments in wealth management industry

Simon

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

4 days 2 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 4 days ago
Jason Warlond

Dugald makes a great point that not everyone's definition of green is the same and gives a good example. Funds have bee...

1 week 4 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 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