Last week, ASIC announced that Interprac â a financial planning group aligned to the National Tax and Accountants Association (NTAA) â had agreed to âundertake a number of measuresâ in response to concerns raised following an investigation into its provision of SMSF advice.
Speaking to SMSF Adviser following the announcement, Interprac national compliance manager Michael Butler â who joined the group in April under the terms of the agreement with ASIC and is a former professional standards manager at the FPA â said the surveillance and subsequent changes are not being âseen as a negativeâ.
âWe were happy to engage with the regulator: they have a job to do to restore public confidence and we support that wholeheartedly,â Mr Butler said.
âWould I prefer not to have had the press release issued? Of course. But in the scheme of things itâs not negative because anything that goes to improve the overall integrity of the business and the industry is a good thing.
âYou either take these things as a negative or use them as an opportunity for valuable training and development and continuous self-improvement, and thatâs what we have done.â
At the same time, Mr Butler rejected the suggestion that ASICâs finding of âadvice not being sufficiently tailored to the needs of each clientâ could be seen as evidence of âcookie-cutter adviceâ, explaining that Interpracâs advisers âoperate a number of strategies rather than a âone size fits allâ approachâ.
ASICâs surveillance covered âaround 20â of Interpracâs 100-odd authorised representatives, with the concerns raised by ASIC limited to just five of those 20 advisers.
âWhen you look at some of the other enforcement actions in this space at the moment, ours is fairly mild,â Mr Butler said. âThere was no enforceable undertaking.â


