It’s financial product advice, not property, that worries ASIC

Ex-ASIC commissioner Greg Tanzer

ASIC commissioner Greg Tanzer says ASIC has “no particular problem” with SMSFs investing in real property but it is concerned that advice to invest in property is being improperly provided to trustees.

“People provide a financial service if they provide financial product advice,” Tanzer told the 2014 SPAA SMSF National Conference in Brisbane. Financial product advice requires the provider to be properly licensed, and therefore regulated by ASIC.

“Providing financial product advice includes making a recommendation or a statement of opinion to a person to set up an SMSF, or to use an existing SMSF, to purchase a property through that SMSF,” Tanzer said.

“That is because the vehicle through which the investment is being made is a superannuation product, and a superannuation product is a financial product.

“It doesn’t matter that the underlying investment

is real property. It doesn’t matter that the underlying investment is diamonds or artwork or foreign wine or anything else. It’s the fact that the advice is about using your superannuation in a particular way, or establishing an SMSF to invest in a particular way, that makes it financial product advice.

“We’re particularly concerned here that the SMSF sector does not become the target for property spruiking. We’ve got no particular problem with SMSFs making informed decisions to invest in real property. That’s not the issue. But we do not want the SMSF sector to become the target of property spruikers.”

, , ,

One response to “It’s financial product advice, not property, that worries ASIC”

  1. Neil Salkow

    “But we do not want the SMSF sector to become the target of property spruikers.”

    Too late I fear

Leave a Comment

InterPrac delays paying out Shield, First Guardian investors amid AFCA dispute

InterPrac delays paying out Shield, First Guardian investors amid AFCA dispute

InterPrac Financial Planning has stalled on paying AFCA determinations as First Guardian investor advocate Melinda Kee has been dragged into the court action between the licensee and complaints authority. But it comes as InterPrac parent company Sequoia Financial Group faces fresh scrutiny over the failed sale of the licensee and not disclosing the departure of former ASIC commissioner Danielle Press from its governance oversight committee.

Sort content by