Hot Issues
spacer
Royal Commission report makes super fee recommendations
spacer
Four tips for boosting your super balance
spacer
New Year resolutions, New Year strategies
spacer
Part 4 - The major benefit of ‘behavioural coaching'
spacer
3 tips for weathering the market's bumpy ride
spacer
Common BDBN ‘pitfalls’ flagged in wake of ASIC action
spacer
Case law points to ‘growing importance’ of SMSF document chain
spacer
How Australia is performing.
spacer
Global outlook summary: Down but not out
spacer
Australia - a comprehensive run-down of our vital statistics.
spacer
Your guide to smarter holiday reading
spacer
Verifying asset values in a SMSF.
spacer
Admin, BDBN errors flagged for SMSFs this year
spacer
ATO targets non-arm's length income - NALI
spacer
Retiring in their 30s or 40s?
spacer
Ranking of the world's best: Taking it personally
spacer
The value of advice - Behavioural Coaching
spacer
Our Advent calendar for 2018
spacer
Compliance, tax advice in strongest demand from SMSFs
spacer
Stop!! Don't do a paper Budget, use our online budgeting tools instead.
spacer
Franking credit policy to dent retirement savings by 15 per cent
spacer
Information needed to be the BBQ expert.
spacer
Hungry for income? Choose carefully.
spacer
Retiree self-protection: A volatility-and-downturn 'bucket'
Article archive
spacer
Quarter 1 January - March 2011
spacer
Quarter 4 October - December 2010
spacer
Quarter 3 July - September 2010
spacer
Quarter 2 April - June 2010
Royal Commission report makes super fee recommendations

You can access the final report here.

       

 

The final Royal Commission report has recommended banning advice fees from MySuper accounts, limiting fees for choice accounts and prohibiting the unsolicited sale or offer of super products.

In his final report for the Royal Commission, Commissioner Kenneth Hayne has recommended an outright ban on the deduction of advice fees from MySuper accounts and limitations on the deduction of advice fees from choice accounts. You can access the final report here also. 

“Deduction of any advice fee, other than for intra-fund advice, from superannuation accounts other than MySuper accounts should be prohibited unless the requirements about annual renewal, prior written identification of service and provision of the client’s express written authority in connection with ongoing fee arrangements are met,” the report stated.

Grandfathering provisions for conflicted remuneration, it said, should be repealed as soon as is reasonably practicable.

The report has also called for the hawking of superannuation products to be prohibited.

“That is, the unsolicited offer or sale of superannuation should be prohibited except to those who are not retail clients and except for offers made under an eligible employee share scheme,” it said.

“The law should be amended to make clear that contact with a person during which one kind of product is offered is unsolicited unless the person attended the meeting, made or received the telephone call, or initiated the contact for the express purpose of inquiring about, discussing or entering into negotiations in relation to the offer of that kind of product.”

The report said that a person to whom an unsolicited offer is made will “very often not be in a position to judge the merit of what is offered”.

“In particular, that person will seldom if ever be in a position to compare what he or she is offered with what he or she already has under some existing superannuation arrangement,” it said.

“That is why the attempts by ANZ and CBA to sell superannuation in bank branches under a ‘general advice’ model may have contravened the law.”

The report also recommended stapling a person to a single default account in order to eliminate multiple accounts.

It also called for tougher penalties for breach of covenants and obligations from trustees of APRA-regulated funds.

“Breach of the trustee’s covenants set out in section 52 or obligations set out in section 29VN, or the director’s covenants set out in section 52A or obligations set out in section 29VO of the SIS Act should be enforceable by action for civil penalty,” it said.

It also said that the roles of ASIC and APRA in relation to superannuation should be adjusted.

 

Miranda Brownlee
04 February 2019
smsfadviser.com

 

Gippsland Office : 35 Hotham St, Traralgon, Vic, 3844 | Melbourne Office : Mooroolbark (PO Box 276, Chirnside Park VIC 3116) | Telephone : 03 5174 1233
Brent Van Der Wel (348-148) is an authorised representative of AIW Dealer Services Pty Ltd Australian Financial Services Licence No 414256.