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Industry veteran backs best interests duty

7 minute read
The Adviser

A leading broker has praised Commissioner Hayne’s recommendation to introduce a best interests duty for brokers, saying he will support it “til the cows come home”.

Speaking on an episode of The Smart Property Investment Show  the podcast of The Adviser’s sister title, Smart Property Investment  Ben Kingsley, broker and director at Empower Wealth and chair of the board of directors at the Property Investors Council of Australia, said he is in favour of the introduction of a best interests duty and test for brokers, as recommended by Commissioner Kenneth Hayne in his final report for the banking royal commission.

“I could show a customer through careful money management – and we go deep into cash flow movements every month for the next 40 or 50 years – that that borrower can safely borrow another $100,000. And let’s say instead of buying a $400,000 property, they bought a $500,000; they could be, if we have the same type of return, about $300,000 better off,” he explained.

“So, if I have a best interest test, [then] that says to me that I can’t advise my client – based on the analysis of the cashflow that I’ve done – that they shouldn’t push the envelope a little bit harder to borrow a little bit more.

 
 

“Whereas, if I went to [a] branch and they’ve got one servicing calculator, that one servicing calculator maxes them out at a certain point.”

The Empower Wealth director also warned of the adverse consequences of introducing a fee-for-service model – where the borrower pays a mortgage arrangement fee to brokers and lenders  saying that it will lead to “contraction in terms of the choices you have”.

This model was proposed by Commissioner Hayne as an alternative to the current lender-paid upfront and trail commission structure, which has been intensely scrutinised for being “conflicted”.

The idea, which was presented in the final royal commission report, sparked fears over the longevity of the mortgage broking industry and the impact on consumers, should such a drastic change be legislated.

Consumers might not be able to afford the fees attached to mortgage advice, resulting in the reduced ability to access the right loan products (including products from the smaller lenders), and those who are able to afford the fees could inherit significant costs that the banking sector previously absorbed.

For this reason, as Mr Kingsley suggested, the fee-for-service model may be a contradictory recommendation to the best interests duty.

Despite the government stating it would implement all of Commissioner Hayne’s recommendations, Prime Minister Scott Morrison showed hesitance towards the recommendation to eliminate lender-paid broker commissions, saying that he doesn’t want the broking sector to “wither on the vine and be strangled by regulation that would throw them out of business… [and] deny choice and competition in the banking system”.

“If there is one thing that we have learned through this process, it is that we need more competition. We need more options. We need more choices. Not fewer. And that is what the Treasurer and I are concerned about in terms of how we would go forward on that one recommendation [on broker remuneration],” the Prime Minister said.

Regarding the major political parties, Mr Kingsley said that the government’s initial response to adopt every recommendation is slowly trickling back.

He continued: “I suspect they are a little bit surprised by the groundswell of support for people in terms of using brokers because they came out before the royal commission.”

“Now, everyone’s been sort of backed into a corner, both Liberal and Labor.”

Listen to the full episode of The Smart Property Investment Show here.

[Related: Banking royal commission calls for best interests duty]

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Comments (7)

  • I look forward to implementing the Best Interest Duty because I can tell my clients:

    In your Best Interests, I cannot recommend the Big 4 Banks because they have all been found guilty to be misleading, deceptive, profit gouge, have broken one or all NCCP, Responsible Lending, Anti Money Laundering laws and have constantly lied to the regulators.
    If I did what they have done, I would be in jail...

    Pro Broker
    2
  • I'm not in favour of a best interests duty.

    I don't know why a standard applies to me (a tiny micro business) that the biggest companies in the country don't have to abide by.

    I think it is only fair for all brokers/lenders to be held to the same duty of care for their customers.

    This "best interest duty" is a potential legal minefield that us tiny businesses are having thrust on us by the big end of town. One ambulance chasing solicitor is all it will take to bankrupt an honest hard working broker that hasn't perfected dotted all our i's or crossed all our t's.

    Our gutless industry leaders are just simply giving in on this matter.

    Hayne got it wrong on upfront commission - both major political parties now admit this.
    Hayne got it wrong on trail commission - we need to convince everyone of this
    Hayne got it wrong on a separate higher interest duty for brokers over banks (if anything, banks should have a higher interest duty applied to them) - we need industry leaders willing to fight and advocate and argue our case.

    I say fight or shut up to our industry leaders.

    Spartacus
    0
    • The Best Interest Duty would also apply to banks.
      0
      • & where did you get that impression?????

        Everything I'm reading says the Best interest duty is only being applied to brokers. Banks are excluded from this duty.
        0
        • Banks cannot possibly have a "Best Interest" duty. If applied to the same threshold as brokers, they would never write another loan.
          0
          • correct!!!!

            So I am going to be held to a standard way higher than the mega banks who deal with 1000's of times more customers than I do.

            This standard is going to force on my micro-business additional significant compliance costs and long term litigation risk that the mega banks are not going to have to worry about.

            Forcing this standard on me is intentionally slanting the playing field to the advantage of the big mega banks. It is anti-competitive. Which is why I said, I'll happily accept any customer care duty that is also required of the banks.

            Spartacus
            0
  • I think you'll find that most brokers don't have a problem with the best interests duty, it's just a question of defining what best interests means. The CIF has put something something together that is probably workable, but it's still open to interpretation which means it eventually ends up in court. Not a good outcome for anyone at that point.
    0
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