The Citizen (Gauteng)

Is your advisor financiall­y compliant?

QUESTIONS TO ASK: A FINANCIAL SERVICES PROVIDER MUST BE REGISTERED WITH FSCA

- Nicola Langridge

Treating Customers Fairly legislatio­n designed to ensure specific, clear and fair outcomes for financial services consumers are delivered by financial firms.

An avalanche of regulation­s governing the wealth management arena in South Africa means that wealth managers have had to adapt their business models to remain compliant.

With all the new rules and regulation­s in place, it is important to ask a financial advisor certain questions to ensure they are compliant.

Here’s what you should be checking with a financial advisor:

It is important to make sure that your financial advisor is a registered representa­tive under the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) and that their company is a registered financial services provider (FSP). An FSP must be registered with FSCA; Ask your advisor for a letter of compliance introducti­on, or explanatio­n, that contains details of their FSCA and FSP membership­s, as well as the service providers that they make use of, with their contact details.

The document should also list what categories the company, and the individual, is registered to give advice on, explains Langridge;

It is also important to enquire about your financial advisors’ Treating Customers Fairly (TCF) policies. They should have a clear policy as to how they meet TCF requiremen­ts and should follow the guidance provided by the FSCA.

TCF is designed to ensure that specific, clear and fair outcomes for financial services consumers are delivered by regulated financial firms. The main aim of TCF is to ensure that fair treatment of customers is embedded within the culture of wealth management firms; and

Although the Protection of Personal Informatio­n (PoPI) Act is not yet in full force, it is a good idea for clients to ask their financial advisor how their company is taking steps to comply with the new regulation­s once promulgate­d, and ask how their personal informatio­n will be treated.

The PoPI Act has a great deal of importance for the financial and wealth management industry, explains Langridge.

Financial advisors process a great deal of personal informatio­n – such as the financial history and affairs of their clients, personal informatio­n regarding their beneficiar­ies and informatio­n regarding their medical health.

While securing the integrity and confidenti­ality of clients’ informatio­n has always been “best industry practice”, PoPI Act has now made this a legal obligation and financial advisors need to safeguard their clients’ privacy.

As a client, you should be confident that your selected financial advisor and their firm has a compliance programme which not only protects you, your family and your assets, but also your informatio­n and privacy, says Langridge.

Ask the right questions to ensure that you are working with the right wealth manager.

Nicola Langridge is a certified financial planner from Private Client Holdings

 ?? Reuters Picture: Bloomberg ?? Nigeria’s central bank expects the economy to pick up in 2019, forecastin­g a gross domestic product growth of 3%, up from 1.9% recorded in 2018, reports.
Reuters Picture: Bloomberg Nigeria’s central bank expects the economy to pick up in 2019, forecastin­g a gross domestic product growth of 3%, up from 1.9% recorded in 2018, reports.

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