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Home News

Majority of accountants still unlicensed, survey reveals

While there has been further movement by unlicensed accountants into the limited licensing regime since July last year, the bulk of SMSF accountants continue to remain outside the regime, a survey has shown.

by Miranda Brownlee
February 28, 2017
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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SMSF compliance provider ASAP Advice conducted a survey of more than 300 SMSF accounting firms that revealed that at 1 July 2016, 66 per cent of firms did not have an accountant with either their own licence or an authorised representative status.

A second survey conducted more recently shows that since then, 90 per cent of these unlicensed firms still remain unlicensed, according to ASAP Advice chief executive Jim Hennington.

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Mr Hennington said there were two main reasons why accounting firms chose not to become licensed. They either did not believe their firm provided financial advice or they preferred to refer their SMSF clients to external financial planners.

“On average, the firms we surveyed looked after 63 SMSFs each and they believed their client bank only required 14 statements of advice per year,” he said.

“If you’re only going to need 14 statements of advice throughout the year, then the overhead of having an AFSL doesn’t seem to make sense.”

The most common way these unlicensed accountants planned to deal with the issue of licensing is by referring clients to external planners or using a digital advice provider.

Mr Hennington said the survey results indicate that accountants have a good understanding of when they need to have statements of advice for transactions. 

“On average they get involved with about 14 of these types of transactions per year and they believe they need 14 statements of advice per year. So what that tells me is that they know that it can’t be avoided,”he said. 

 

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Comments 2

  1. Gregory says:
    9 years ago

    The article is not in error – as your handle suggests, you seem to be confused!
    The sentence states: “at 1 July 2016, 66 per cent of firms did NOT have an accountant with either their own licence or an authorised representative status”.
    Now, when this reduces by 10% to presumably 60% – it remains a majority. While not as big a majority as 66%, it’s still a pretty big one nonetheless. Perhaps some people should leave ‘attention to detail’ to…the accountants!

    Reply
  2. Confused says:
    9 years ago

    So on 1July 2016, only 33 per cent of firms did not have either their own licence or were an authorised representative. Since then the number has reduced by a further 10 per cent to presumably 30 per cent.
    How is 30 per cent a majority?
    Perhaps some people should leave the numbers to accountants:)

    Reply

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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.

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