Whilst the Capital Intelligence Australian Financial Services
licence does not permit HomeTrader to give investment advice (personal
financial product advice), it is something we are frequently asked to
provide.
HomeTrader provides an alternative to investment advice (also
known as personal advice). Instead we teach you how to develop your own
trading system, to make your own decisions, with your own money and be
free of investing advice from others. This is called the provision of
general advice.
What follows is an explanation of personal advice and where you can go to obtain it if required.
A financial adviser is one who provides personal advice and
manages and provides investing advice, for a fee. The fee is typically
calculated as a percentage of assets under management annually or a fee
for each individual transaction.
In Australia, personal advice can only be given by companies
(and their representatives) appropriately licensed by the Australian
Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC).
Common examples of financial advisers include financial planners and stockbrokers.
The vast majority of stockbrokers provide investment advice and
take orders for the sale and purchase of shares and other financial
products.
The most comprehensive study to date has come from an
ASIC/Australian Consumers Associations (ACA) shadow shop survey of
financial planners. The results of the last national survey, released
in early 2003, exposed woeful standards of advice in the firms
surveyed. It followed an earlier joint survey in 1998 that also
reported standards were poor.
In the last survey, only two financial plans out of a total of 124 were considered "very good". Sixty-three plans (51 per cent) were graded "borderline" to "very poor". The report found that "The advice given often seemed like thinly disguised product selling."
John Collett October 6 2004 The Sydney Morning Herald & The Age
ASX Warns Brokers On Independence
The Australian Stock Exchange has criticised the stockbroking
industry for not adopting a tougher approach on the controversial issue
of independent analyst research citing concerns that some share
recommendations seemed biased.
The Australian Financial Review 16/04/05
HomeTrader suggests that as part of your research on investment
advisers, you investigate all avenues and that you consider getting
stock market education to take control of your own future.
If you do want to take advice from a financial adviser we
suggest you read the 7 tips provided from ASIC’s Financial Tips and
Safety Checks (www.fido.asic.gov.au)
- Deal only with a licensed financial services business
- Pick the adviser with the strongest qualifications, experience and integrity
- Ask questions until you really understand
- If you feel uneasy, it's OK to walk away
- Make sure your financial plan suits your needs and personality
- When you get a good plan, stick to it
- Keep all your paperwork
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