Download - RDR: Simplified Advice - May 2010
RDR: simplified adviceRDR: simplified adviceRDR: simplified adviceRDR: simplified advice
May 2010May 2010May 2010May 2010
RDR & simplified advice:RDR & simplified advice:RDR & simplified advice:RDR & simplified advice:
19 months and counting19 months and counting19 months and counting19 months and counting
No nearer a solution?
� Advisers and providers have complained that a lack of guidance from the FSA has held back attempts to develop simplified advice services.
� The lack of input from the FSA was a ‘dereliction of duty’, said Skandia chief executive Peter Mann.
� There is widespread industry complaint that the lack of clarity means it is near impossible to start developing a simplified advice process.
� The ABI has developed a proposal for a technology-based simplified advice service, which could serve the protection, ISA, annuity and group personal pension needs of the masses.
� Scottish Widows is one of four providers running an ABI simplified advice pilot but a big barrier to simplified advice is the level four qualifications requirement, which is making it an un-commercial venture.
So with 18 months and counting, how much closer to a solution are we to a 30m (potential un-advised) problem?
RDR
No turning back
After three and a half years of discussion and
consultation, we are finally nearing the end of the Retail
Distribution Review journey.
“ “� Following the publication of the advisers have until 31 December
2012 to implement these new rules in their businesses.
� The new RDR rules have been developed by the FSA to
increase consumer confidence in financial advice by removing the
potential for commission bias and increasing the professionalism
of financial advisers.
RDR
But not, yet, quite hitting the mark
� However, the new rules are widely
predicted to reduce the number of financial
advisers and increase the cost of advice.
� Evidence of advisers shifting their
business models further up market, where
advice is valued and affordable, can
already be seen.
� This will increase and prevent a large
number of consumers from accessing
advice.
Consumers prefer to access advice through a variety of channels rather
than relying solely on one source.
� Half of respondents who had sought
financial advice used the internet.
� Fifty-two percent used a financial
adviser, with an independent adviser
more popular than an adviser linked
to a product provider.
� Consumers who sought professional
financial advice often supplemented
this with their own research -
consumers prefer to access
information from sources which they
believe are independent and
impartial, like media and internet
‘best-buy’ tables, rather than using
public sources like the Citizen’s
Advice Bureau.
Accessing advice
Consumer preference
Source: Q3 2009 ABI savings and protection survey
© Teamspirit 2009
� Consumers generally prefer
financial advice to undertake a
comprehensive analysis of their
financial circumstances and to
recommend a product from a
wide range.
� These features are likely to
be associated with full advice
delivered by a financial adviser.
� Characteristics associated
with simplified advice were also
popular with consumers, as a
more economical and quicker
alternative to full advice.
Accessing advice
Important featuresProduct features
Consistent with full /
simple advice
General Population
(mean score)
Source: ABI & NOP , 2008
Cost of advice
By product� Given the comprehensive nature of full advice,
it is unsurprising that the time taken to deliver
this is typically nearly eight hours.
� This is therefore reflected in the cost.
� On average, full advice typically costs £670 in
total. Following the implementation of the RDR,
this cost is widely expected to increase.
The time taken to deliver advice does vary by
channel, with banks and building societies
typically taking less time to provide advice than
independent financial advisers, primarily due to
the nature of their service.
The time taken also varies
depending on whether the client
is a new or an existing customer
of the firm and by the type of
product recommended.
“
““
“
Source: CRA calculations May 2010
© Teamspirit 2009
Cost of advice
Calculated risk
Based on the cost of providing full advice, the research
has calculated the minimum case size which is
profitable. On average, consumers with less than £257
per month to save or £13,730 to invest as a lump sum
cannot be economically served by full advice.
� According to the research, over 30 million UK adults are beyond the target market of
full advice.
� While not all of these people need full financial advice, a significant proportion could
benefit from more economical financial advice which could help them protect their
family and better save for the future.
© Teamspirit 2009
Simplified advice
Guiding principles
Principle Stage of process Guiding principle The ABI has
developed guiding
principles for a
simplified advice
process. These are
based around the key
stages as shown in
Table opposite. As
part of this guidance,
we have identified the
Treating Customers
Fairly outcomes and
key requirements
firms should meet to
fulfil each principle.
Source: ABI’s guiding principles for simplified advice
© Teamspirit 2009
� To meet the advice needs of a
growing number of consumers
unable to access existing full advice,
the ABI have been developing
proposals for a new financial advice
process, known as simplified advice.
� This simplified advice process is
designed to meet straightforward
consumer needs through a limited
assessment of their financial
circumstances to deliver a suitable
recommendation.
� It is not designed to meet the full
range of consumers’ needs, but to
provide advice on specific
circumstances.
Any consumer who is beyond the scope of
simplified advice would be filtered out of the process
and recommended to seek a more appropriate form of
advice (full advice or a Money Made Clear service)
Simplified advice
The scope
“ “
� Consumers who are
currently served by
existing advice services,
but who will be unable to
afford or will be unwilling
to pay for this following
the introduction of the
RDR.
� Consumers who
recognise the need to
save and invest after
using Money Made Clear,
but require further
advice to determine
which product meets their
needs.
The ABI has identified three groups of consumers who could
benefit from a simplified advice process:
� Consumers who are
already unable to access
existing advice services.
Simplified advice
Consumer targets
1 2 3
Tenets of simplified advice
� Central to offering simplified advice at a price which
more consumers can afford, is the process driven
nature of the service.
� A simplified advice process is automated and IT
driven which the consumer can access via the
internet unaided, over the phone or face-to-face
where a facilitator guides the consumer through the
pre-determined questions.
� The whole interaction should take no longer than
30-45 minutes, significantly less than 7 hours 40
minutes typically needed for full advice.
Charging-based remuneration for
simplified advice model
QCF 4 adviser qualification requirement
FOS Judgment uncertainty
FSA Judgment uncertainty
DetailBarrier
FSA Judgment
uncertainty
Simplified advice
Four barriersFOS Judgment
uncertaintyQCF 4
RequirementCharging-based
remuneration
Uncertainty around how this will be judged, especially by FSA
supervisors – the industry requires FSA general guidance to provide
clarity.
Uncertainty around how the Financial Ombudsman Service will judge
any complaints – industry requires clarity that any complaints would be
judged based on the limitations as explained to the consumer.
Current FSA proposals to require an individual facilitating the process to
hold a QCF 4 qualification. May be an inappropriately high qualification
level, as an individual facilitating a simplified advice process will be
restricted to guiding the consumer through the pre-determined process.
Current FSA proposals require simplified advice to operate an Adviser
Charging model. This may discourage many consumers in the target
audience and create consumer confusion.
Last year, in CP09/18, we suggested that
[QCF level four] standards should apply
equally to those giving simplified advice.
The responses to this were divided, and we
can see that there might be an argument in
terms of proportionality. There is also a
question of how the qualification
requirements might apply in a simplified
advice process that is fully automated.
� FSA director of conduct policy Sheila Nicoll said that where
simplified advice is delivered via an automated service, QCF level
four may not be required:
Simplified advice
Overcoming barriers
I have a lot of sympathy with that view, but
we have to decide what is meant by ’good’
– I have no particular objections to that
statement, however
When asked whether the FSA accepts that a
simplified advice process will deliver good, but not
necessarily the best outcomes, Nicoll saidH
© Teamspirit 2009
The simplified process
Consumer response
� The results of this research are
positive, with 83% of respondents
rating their experience as either very
good or quite good.
The research also found a significant proportion of consumers
are willing to put their trust in a simplified advice process and
believe it can help them identify and meet their financial needs.“ “
Source: ORC International
� As it stands, the FSA is in danger of
failing to fulfill one of their objectives for
the RDR – enabling more consumers to
have their needs and wants addressed.
Danger of falling short Working closer & harder
Although the advice landscape will undoubtedly
change in the run up to the introduction of the FSA’s new
RDR rules in 2012, consumer access to suitable types of
advice is an issue that is predicted to grow as commission
“
“
Source: UK Structured Products Association
� It is therefore vital that the industry works
closely with the regulator and the
Ombudsman Service to ensure
consumers can access suitable,
affordable financial advice.
So what next?
is replaced by transparent advice charges.
The better off will pay for advice but the rest
will need a value proposition. Cost reductions and
tax incentives (unlikely!) will help. Key is
consistency and greater integration across the
industry and public sector
There’s no doubt that the
economic wake-up call has opened
a window5 but how closer are we
today to stepping through with
workable solutions?.
“
““
“
The simplified market is
more likely to provide the right
solutions. But not necessarily
the best5 for which you will
always need Face-to-face.
“
“5-% are not willing to pay for advice. The 50%
that are most are only prepared to pay £50 or
less! Ongoing f2f is going to be seriously
challenges. How can we expect to deliver
anything more than remote / Ltd advice?.
“
“
There is certainly a market.
We’ve got the name of that
solution – ‘Simplified Advice’ –
but we really need to get on with
what it looks like.
“
“So what next?
Views from the market
Adam Phillips, Financial Services
Consumer Panel
Adam Phillips, Financial Services
Consumer Panel
Peter Jolly, Assistant
Director ABI
Fiona Fry, KPMG
Robert Kerr, Scottish
widows
So what next?
This is make or break
� So we seem to be gravitating to an acceptance that consumers
may not get the exact advice they need from simplified advice but
would not suffer from being told to save more through an ISA.
� ‘We focus on perfect outcomes too much when it is not always
possible’ was one of the central themes of last Tuesday’s
conference, which has some interesting TCF implicationsH
reconciling the two could be a challenge if not managed carefully!
� Simplified advice, it seems, is a process, not a person. The role is
really just a facilitator.
� So whether providers and advisers adopt the ABI’s decision tree
model en masse or go their own route remains to be seen.
� All will be key in determining whether this helps achieve RDR aims
of increasing access to advice or just further taints the industry!