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Home News

Accountants compromised by FASEA standards

The incoming FASEA reforms will seriously compromise the ability of accountants to service clients with current and unmet financial advice needs and has many considering dropping the offering altogether, according to new survey figures.

by Jotham Lian
October 24, 2018
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Speaking to ifa sister publication Accountants Daily, Investment Trends senior analyst King Loong Choi said 51 per cent of Australians had indicated that they had unmet advice needs, with 33 per cent indicating that they would turn to their tax accountant, and a further 23 per cent who would turn to a licensed accountant to meet those needs.

However, a survey by Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand (CA ANZ) last month revealed that 60 per cent of accountants providing financial advice will drop the offering if the federal government’s incoming education regulations pass in their current form.

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The host of new education requirements, set by the Financial Adviser Standards and Ethics Authority (FASEA), will be imposed on existing and new accountants and advisers who provide financial advice by 2024.

Many accounting-related degrees are listed as related degrees, not approved degrees, under the new standards. This means accountants eligible for the transitional arrangements will need to complete a bridging course of up to three units of study to meet the new standards. For some, including those with postgraduate qualifications, this will mean spending thousands on extra training.

Mr Choi said, “There’s an interesting dynamic in that there are a lot of people out there who will turn to an accountant for advice but the really interesting question that starts to raise is that if these accountants decide not go down the path of getting a full AFSL then what are these clients going to do next?

“What you may find is that these clients may take two different routes, they may either turn to a financial planner or two, if they can’t turn to an accountant then perhaps they may not turn to anyone at all for their advice.”

CA ANZ group executive Simon Grant highlighted the rising mismatch in client expectations versus the market the new standards are creating, noting that clients were set to lose out in the long run.

“We have a royal commission showing Australians that much of the advice provided by a vertically integrated system has been poor, to say the least,” said Mr Grant.

“Yet we have a body of professionals … who are some of the most trusted advisers in Australia, being forced out of the industry due to additional proposed new study requirements. There seems to be a mismatch.”

Where do the clients go?

Verante Financial Planning director and chair of the SMSF Association’s NSW chapter Liam Shorte fears that if accountants exit the advice space, complex matters like superannuation will go un-advised.

“Because of the complex nature of superannuation, if accountants choose not give advice then clients may or may not choose not to seek advice elsewhere,” said Mr Shorte.

“Where this involves issues with Total Super Balance or TBAR reporting then the accountant will have to insist trustees make a decision or seek advice.

“However, for other issues like starting or stopping a pension, consolidating accounts, reviewing insurances, rebalancing investments then clients may be left without advice. While the clients may feel OK with doing nothing, it is their beneficiaries later who may be the ones who question why advice was not offered or recommended by the accountant who was the trusted adviser. So in these cases it is always important for the accountant to document in a file note that they did recommend the client seek advice.”

Further, Mr Shorte encouraged accountants choosing to leave the advice space to consider partnering with a financial planner to ensure clients remain appropriately advised.

“Going forward, if accountants choose not to be active in the advice space then they really need to decide if they will partner with a financial planner to provide an advice service or totally exclude this service. The danger is that if the clients are left to find an adviser on their own that they may end up with an adviser tied to another administration offer and you risk losing the client,” said Mr Shorte.

“I would recommend that by 2021 you have a solution in place so that your clients have access to an advice option whether delivered personally by someone licensed in your firm or through a chosen financial planning partner with SMSF specialised accreditation.

“You need to choose carefully as with the changing landscape of advice, the financial planner will need to not only understand SMSFs but also discretionary and unit trusts as clients look for alternative wealth creation opportunities. Done well this could deliver significant work back to the accounting partner.”

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Comments 7

  1. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    As they say every Accountant & Financial Planner is a crook except mine!! This could apply to the legal and multiple other professionals, dare I say including Career politicians.

    Reply
  2. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    “who cares” The ordinary public Accountant in surburbia will do whatever they like,… when ever they like,… so whether it’s against the law or within the law they’ll do whatever they want and trying to regulate this space it useless. Who regulates Accountants now? Accountants paying the benchmark or average tax rate is not regulation.

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    Accountants have been providing inappropriate, undocumented, conflicted financial advice for years. Why would FASEA suddenly stop them?

    Accountants know they have ASIC immunity. Or at least they did under Medcraft. Shipton needs to let his underlings know that Medcraft’s accountant immunity no longer applies and they need to stop the appalling advice that Australians are getting from that source. Negatively geared investment properties and SMSFs full of bank shares are going to destroy a lot of wealth in the coming years. And accountants are largely to blame.

    Reply
  4. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    Ahhh yeah… As it should.

    My financial planning degree doesn’t allow me to be a registered Accountant… Why should it work the opposite way?

    Reply
  5. John Z says:
    7 years ago

    Let me share a secret known by accountants for years – the smartest and most efficient way to provide advice is to make sure you do it outside of the AFSL regime.

    Reply
    • Zero AFSL compliance says:
      7 years ago

      Exactly how Accountants have always and continue to operate, regardless of the Accountnats exemption stopping.
      The bucket loads of AFSL advice that was way beyond the accountants exemption in the past, continues.
      And ASIC/ ATO/ SMSFA / ICA have never busted 1 accountant for it.
      Accountants simply thumb their noses at AFSL compliance and are allowed to get away with it.

      Reply
  6. Anonymous says:
    7 years ago

    A survey of my dog revealed that Accountants are only interested in superannuation as far as how many SMSF’s they can set up for the annual accountants and tax returns.

    Further if the population have unmet needs then it is their responsibility as adults to seek out the correct path to take not unlicensed biased advice from an accountant that is not qualified because it is convenient.

    Reply

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