The New Zealand Herald

AMP calls halt on adviser trips

Decision comes after life insurance crackdown

- Tamsyn Parker

AMP says it will stop sending high-selling life insurance advisers on overseas trips in the wake of an industry-wide investigat­ion by the regulator which pointed to links between incentives and bad behaviour.

Last month, the Financial Markets Authority sanctioned 11 life insurance advisers and said it was investigat­ing a further three after a closer look at 24 advisers found half lacked care and diligence in their advice, and most failed to recognise conflicts of interest.

The FMA zeroed in on the 24 advisers after an investigat­ion into the sector in 2016 raised concerns that some advisers were likely to be acting in their own best interests by replacing insurance policies to boost commission­s or get free overseas trips.

Insurance firms can pay up to 230 per cent of the first year’s premium upfront to advisers who switch a customer to them, a figure which makes New Zealand an outlier globally.

Advisers who sell a certain number of policies within a timeframe can also qualify for overseas trips.

But AMP managing director Blair Vernon said it would stop offering overseas trips to advisers as it no longer believed they were appropriat­e.

“AMP is committed to promoting and supporting appropriat­e and transparen­t practices across our industry and as part of this we recognise that it is vital for providers to continue to review and evolve their sales and advice practices, including the provision of incentives like overseas programmes.”

Vernon said AMP had offered profession­al developmen­t as part of its overseas trips since 2012 which included access to training from Wharton Business School, Said Business School at Oxford and the Mel- bourne Business School.

“While there has been significan­t value in offering this programme given its principal focus on profession­al developmen­t, we believe programmes of this type, where qualificat­ion is still influenced in part by volume performanc­e, are no longer appropriat­e.

“We will continue to offer quality profession­al developmen­t opportunit­ies to complement our focus on building adviser and practice capability as we face into a changing advice and regulatory landscape,” Vernon said.

Its last trip will be this year as it plans to take 12 advisers to Hawaii.

A spokesman said the trip would include sessions with global experts from Stanford and Harvard with a focus on the world economy, economic trends, artificial intelligen­ce and technology changes.

The move is in contrast to that of insurer Partners Life which last week claimed it was bad individual morals rather than industry incentives that were to blame for poor behaviour in the industry.

Naomi Ballantyne, chief executive of Partners Life, said given that a small group had been singled out it appeared that commission­s and incentives were not the cause of poor practices, rather individual morals were.

“We are interested to note that in the small group singled out for closer scrutiny, RFA [registered financial advisers] were not disproport­ionately represente­d compared with AFAs [ authorised financial advisers] suggesting it is individual morals, rather than any regulatory standard or level of qualificat­ion, which drives poor customer behaviours.

“As virtually all RFAs and AFAs receive commission­s and can qualify for incentives for the sale of riskprotec­tion products following their advice process, and only a small number have been identified as having poor practices in respect of replacemen­t business, it is also clear to Partners Life that commission­s and incentives are not the cause of poor practices, rather individual morals are.”

Partners Life hit the headlines in 2014 when it offered insurance advisers who sold more than $80,000 worth of premiums a luxury trip to Los Angeles, which included a dinner party at the Playboy Mansion and a seat in a corporate box at a major league baseball game.

We believe programmes of this type . . . are no longer appropriat­e. AMP managing director Blair Vernon

 ??  ?? AMP’s last trip will be this year as it plans to take 12 advisers to Hawaii.
AMP’s last trip will be this year as it plans to take 12 advisers to Hawaii.

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