X
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Get the latest news! Subscribe to the SMSF Adviser bulletin
  • News
    • Money
    • Education
    • Strategy
  • Webcasts
  • Features
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Promoted Content
No Results
View All Results
  • News
    • Money
    • Education
    • Strategy
  • Webcasts
  • Features
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Promoted Content
No Results
View All Results
Home News

FSC plans major reforms to overhaul compliance and cost burdens for advice

The Financial Services Council has released its new blueprint for a simplified regulatory framework that could reduce the time and cost of providing financial advice and set the foundational frameworks of advice as a profession.

by Tony Zhang
October 13, 2021
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Financial Services Council (FSC) has released the White Paper on Financial Advice, a blueprint for a simplified regulatory framework that could reduce the cost of providing financial advice by almost $2,000, or up to 37 per cent.

“The financial advice industry has reached an important milestone; it has become a profession. It is time the government modernised the current complex and costly regulatory framework to recognise and respect the professional judgment of advisers,” FSC CEO Sally Loane said.

X

“Current regulations prescribe compliance obligations at every step of the advice process. They are an unprecedented driver of cost for financial advisers and consumers, and are past their use-by date.”

The FSC White Paper recommends raising the threshold under which consumers are identified as “retail clients” to those with assets of less than $5 million (up from $2.5 million) and index the threshold to CPI (currently not indexed), abolish the Safe Harbour steps for complying with the Best Interests Duty, and abolish complex Statements of Advice for a simpler, consumer-focused “Letter of Advice”.

It also recommends breaking the nexus between financial product and advice, with the need to remove complex labels for different categories of advice that can transition to sustainable self-regulation by 2030 in which prior learning and pathways and individual registration are supported by the Australian Financial Services Licensing Regime.

The FSC’s proposals would also increase protection for up to 275,300 consumers who could be reclassified as retail clients and, therefore, brought into the consumer protection framework for financial advice, a change long sought by consumer advocates.

The FSC commissioned KPMG to undertake analysis of the FSC’s three key White Paper recommendations – abolishing the safe harbour steps, introducing Letters of Advice, and simplifying the categories of advice. KPMG’s modelling shows that not only will the cost of providing advice be reduced, but advisers will also have more time to spend with new and existing clients.

KPMG’s analysis shows the FSC’s key recommendations will reduce the cost of providing financial advice per client from $5,334 to $3,466 and would save financial advisers up to 32 per cent of time when providing advice to clients.

It would also allow advisers to provide advice to up to an additional 44 new clients each year and enable advisers to produce 2.2 Letters of Advice as opposed to 1.5 Statements of Advice per adviser per week.

Furthermore, it can reduce the time required to complete the advice process from 23.9 hours to under 16.8 hours per client.

“Long-term, the FSC’s reforms could generate cost savings for the advice industry of $91 billion over 20 years,” Ms Loane added.

“The FSC has welcomed the strong support and constructive feedback we received from the advice industry, consumer advocates, and FSC members. Having led this debate with our Green Paper in April, we now want to see the past few years of significant reform and professionalisation of the sector rewarded with a regulatory framework that trusts advisers’ professional judgment.” 

 

Tags: AdviceNewsRegulation

Related Posts

Div 296 draft legislation released for consultation

by Keeli Cambourne
December 19, 2025

The draft landed this morning with little fanfare and a consultation period that closes on 16 January 2026. The government...

Unit trusts a concern regarding compliance breaches

by Keeli Cambourne
December 19, 2025

Tim Miller, head of technical and education for Smarter SMSF, said on a recent webinar for SuperGuardian that the lack...

Leigh Mansell

Opt out rules available for SG payments

by Keeli Cambourne
December 19, 2025

Leigh Mansell, director SMSF technical and education services for Heffron, said in a recent technical update, that the opt out...

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.
SMSF Adviser is the authoritative source of news, opinions and market intelligence for Australia’s SMSF sector. The SMSF sector now represents more than one million members and approximately one third of Australia's superannuation savings. Over the past five years the number of SMSF members has increased by close to 30 per cent, highlighting the opportunity for engaged, informed and driven professionals to build successful SMSF advice business.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Privacy Policy

Popular Topics

  • News
  • Strategy
  • Money
  • Podcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • Feature Articles
  • Education
  • Video

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
  • News
  • Money
  • Education
  • Strategy
  • Webcasts
  • Features
  • Events
  • Podcasts
  • Promoted Content
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited