Money Management | Vol. 34 No 11 | July 2, 2020

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MAGAZINE OF CHOICE FOR AUSTRALIA’S WEALTH INDUSTRY

www.moneymanagement.com.au

Vol. 34 No 11 | July 2, 2020

CONSTRUCTING A PORTFOLIO

Building a durable portfolio

20

EQUITIES

24

Value investing

28

TOOLBOX

EOFY super contributions

ASIC reinforces ‘know your client’ with mortgage broker best interests

ETFs

BY MIKE TAYLOR

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How does the Aussie ETF landscape compare to the US? THE highly-regulated nature of Australia’s exchange traded funds (ETFs) market means it is unlikely to develop into the ‘exotic’ landscape seen in the US. In the US, where ETFs have been available since the 1990s, there are calls for tighter classifications of the wide range of products available to aide transparency. However, industry experts said the environment in Australia was very different to the US for several factors which meant similar classification would be unnecessary here. This included the range of products available, demands from clients and ease and costs of trading. While numerous free trading platforms have sprung up in the US such as Robinhood, which has been criticised for encouraging speculative trading, particularly among younger investors, Australian investors tend to go via a financial adviser or pay a fee on a platform such as CommSec. There was also a lack of ‘exotic’ products with most investors tending to invest in Australian or global equities products and the latest growth area being in fixed income ETFs, hardly a niche area. This was exacerbated by the strict regulation by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) with firms saying that any ETF launches were scrutinised and closely-watched by the regulator. Sam Morris, senior investment specialist at Fidante, said: “We won’t get the same level of speculative ETFs as they have offshore as the regulator is very aware of them and scrutinising them. Any [speculative products] would be heavily scrutinised by the regulator in order to be approved, we have a bias for simple, transparent products”.

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Full feature on page 17

MORTGAGE brokers have been placed on notice by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) that they will need to understand the individual circumstances of clients as part of their new best interest duties, almost in the same sense as the financial adviser ‘know you client’ regime. ASIC has issued a new regulatory guide covering mortgage broker best interests duty and has made clear that best interests not only applies to the mortgage product itself, but the circumstances of the client. “The broker’s consideration of the individual circumstances of the consumer and their needs, goals and financial situation is particularly relevant to complying with the obligations,” it said. “The risk of non-compliance is substantially increased if a broker’s processes typically lead to a ‘one-size-fits-all’ outcome for consumers.” “Brokers will need to exercise their judgment when determining

what is in the consumer’s best interests. In some situations, this will include challenging the consumer’s perception of their best interests,” the regulatory guide said. “Although it is the consumer’s decision whether to accept or decline the recommendation and proceed with an application, it is the sole responsibility of the broker to ensure the recommendation is in the consumer’s best interests.” The guide said a variety of factors could be relevant in determining whether recommending a credit product was in the consumer’s best interests. “In our view, this determination involves considering the product holistically and weighing up the relevant factors based on the value and benefits they offer that consumer. In most instances, you should present consumers with more than one option. Where there are multiple options for a consumer to consider, these are to be presented in a manner consistent with the consumer’s best interests.”

Advisers warned of more market bumps to come FINANCIAL advisers and their clients should brace themselves for an elongated U-shaped recovery from recession and position themselves accordingly. That is the consensus of a panel of portfolio managers and analysts put together by Money Management in Sydney and Melbourne with financial planners being advised to keep their clients patient, well-diversified and focused on the long game. The panel was made up Magellan’s head of macro, Arvid Streimann, chief executive of Jamieson Coote Bonds, Charlie Jamieson, Fiducian’s head of investments, Conrad Burge and Continued on page 3

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