The new shadow minister on the Shield, First Guardian collapse, advice reform and education 

Kevin Hogan (right). Photo: Jack Smith.

Only weeks into the portfolio, shadow Minister for Financial Services Kevin Hogan has no shortage of pressing issues to contend with: the regulatory fallout from the Shield and First Guardian collapse, the future of the Compensation Scheme of Last Resort, and the push to reform the APRA performance test. 

He is sympathetic to concerns about the CSLR levy becoming prohibitive for practising advisers, and he flags phoenixing – parent companies collapsing and reopening under new structures – as a genuine area of bipartisan focus. Hogan is not sold on the idea that a three-year university degree is the right gateway into financial planning. 

Hogan comes to the portfolio with industry experience – before entering parliament 12 years ago, he spent a decade as a bond trader in Sydney and has worked for Colonial First State and as an investment officer for the Catholic Superannuation and Retirement Fund. 

One response to “The new shadow minister on the Shield, First Guardian collapse, advice reform and education ”

  1. Pete Spencer-Franks

    It seems that the Labor Government Condone sentencing thousands of Australian Retirees who trusted Government accreditation to “WORK UNTIL THEY DIE” a real vote winner that one is

    OH -and ignoring thousands of emails really shows that the Labour Government simply does not listen to the Australian people should you feel this needs discussing feel free to contact me Peter Spencer-Franks saveoursupers@gmail.com, I won’t hold my breath!

Leave a Comment

The value of keeping an adviser voice in policy conversations

The value of keeping an adviser voice in policy conversations

The Conexus Institute executive director David Bell along with financial adviser and former Financial Planning Association chair Marisa Broome discuss advocating for policy solutions in financial advice and superannuation.

Sort content by