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Home News

FSC says wider scope of conflicts guidance ‘creates further uncertainty’

The stream of industry bodies highlighting the disconnect between regulatory guidance and the adviser code of ethics continues, with the FSC making a range of recommendations for ASIC’s RG 181 update.

by Keith Ford
September 24, 2025
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Responding to the Australian Securities and Investments Commission’s (ASIC) consultation on Regulatory Guide 181 Licensing: Managing conflicts of interest, which has sat unaltered for two decades, the Financial Services Council (FSC) said it was supporting the updates “in principle”.

“However, it should be noted that in widening the explicit scope of the RG, this creates further uncertainty, for which further guidance is required,” the submission said.

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The FSC acknowledged that in some areas, this has been provided, but others still require “further clarity”.

One of these areas requiring greater clarity is around documentation, it said, arguing that it is currently unclear what the regulator’s expectations are “specifically in relation to what artefacts should be produced and if ASIC expects that one artefact is to be produced that covers all expectations”.

“Typically, organisations will have multiple documents that may cover various matters including insider trading policies, compliance plans, gift and entertainment policies, and a general code of ethics/conduct,” the FSC said.

“Furthermore, the FSC notes that requiring the same level of documentation for all conflicts regardless of materiality creates unnecessary compliance burden. Clear materiality thresholds would enable organisations to apply proportionate documentation based on the significance and risk of specific conflicts.”

Similarly, the industry body argued that the regulator taking a singular approach to supervision regardless of organisational structures is not fit for purpose.

“The proposed Table 2 framework requires comprehensive monitoring at every stage without acknowledging the practical challenges this presents across diverse business models,” the FSC said.

“The one-size-fits-all approach to supervision fails to recognise that different supervision approaches are necessary and appropriate for different business models – from directly employed advisers to self-employed authorised representatives, from institutional trading desks to small advice practices.

“ASIC should provide explicitly scaled supervision requirements that recognise diverse business models.”

According to the FSC, this should include different supervision standards for employed versus self-employed representatives, risk-based supervision approaches that allow licensees to allocate resources based on assessed risk, utilisation of technology-enabled supervision, and flexibility in how outcomes are achieved rather than prescriptive methods.

Much of the concern from other industry groups, most notably the Financial Advice Association Australia (FAAA) and the Stockbrokers and Investment Advisers Association (SIAA), was around the discrepancy between the Financial Planners and Advisers Code of Ethics 2019 and the Corporations Act concerning the management of conflicts of interest.

“Standard 3 of the code of ethics requires advisers to avoid advising, referring or acting for a client where there is a conflict of interest or duty. This makes the code impossible to comply with in practice,” SIAA said.

The FAAA’s Phil Anderson said that while advisers are legally required to prioritise clients’ interests when conflicts arise under the Corporations Act and the code of ethics, the code’s current rules, in place since 2020, are widely seen as impractical, and a promised 2023 review has not yet occurred.

Similarly, the FSC said the proposed guidance remains “at odds” with the code of ethics and the Corporations Act.

“Standard 3 of the code of ethics requires that advisers avoid all conflicts of interest while the ASIC guidance talks of managing conflicts,” it said.

“Avoiding all conflicts of interest is an unworkable expectation and the FSC supports the code of ethics being similarly reviewed to be more suitable.”

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Comments 4

  1. Anonymous says:
    2 months ago

    Ideally I’d like this to be fixed, but I’d actually prefer they left it alone.

    Everything the city of Canberra touches in this space turns into an absolute joke 

    Reply
    • Red tape maniacs says:
      2 months ago

      So true, any and every change to supposedly reduce red tape just adds to it

      Reply
  2. Anonymous says:
    2 months ago

    Uncertainty around conflicts of interest, and Standard 3, has been a godsend for the vertically integrated members of FSC. It allows them to keep on using advisers to sell inhouse product, even though that’s often not in the best interests of consumers.

    The big problem with Standard 3 is that ALL forms of remuneration are conflicted, including fees for service. It can therefore never work in practice. Extremist zealots like Robert MC Brown have played right into the hands of vertically integrated product companies, by pushing for something that is so unworkable it creates an easy out.

    If the intention of Standard 3 is to avoid all conflicts of interest other than flat fees for service, then it needs to say that. At the moment everyone has a different view on what the real intention is, and the so called “guidance” provided by FASEA created more confusion than clarity.

    Reply
  3. Corrupt ASIC says:
    2 months ago

    ASIC paid for comments “so called research” from unreal world Academics to the Code of Ethics made the thing an Academics and ASIC disaster. 
    ASIC paying “for so called research” on the Code of Ethics was totally Unethical. 
    And the result is totally UnReal World usable. 

    Are ASIC ever held to Account ?  

    Reply

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