SEBI's Proposals
on investment advisors Rules : Are it
very practical?
The Securities and Exchange
Board of India's SEBI's latest proposals on selling of investment products has
drawn mixed responses.
Last week, the markets
regulator suggested that selling' and 'advising' would be kept at arm's length,
besides asking the banks & other financial institutions to separate their
advisory and distribution divisions.
To address any conflict of
interest, SEBI has suggested that an investment adviser should only perform
those functions for which he / she is entitled to a fee and not sell any mutual
fund (MF) product. Those in the segment say such a move could impact big MF
distributors.
"No large distributor
would like to be called an adviser, given the hardships associated with getting
an investor to pay advisory fees," said a Mumbai-based independent expert
of the MF sector.
SEBI also has proposed to
scrap the practice of usage of 'independent financial advisers' by
distributors. Instead, such entities will solely be called 'mutual fund
distributors' (MFDs). They will have to make disclosures in a prescribed form
to clients, which should include the disclaimer that the distributor may not be
acting in the best interest of the investor'.
Sector players say such a
disclaimer might hurt investor confidence.
Mr. Dhirendra Kumar, Chief
Executive, Value Research, says the proposed rules are not very practical, as
they try to micro-regulate. "One of the proposals is that distributors
will be forbidden from offering advice. They can describe material facts about
MFs but cannot give advice. Instead, Sebi should create well-defined topics on
which distributors and investors cannot have a conversation," he
recommends.
Those in the segment say
big players such as banks can get away by simply creating separate divisions to
sell and advise but smaller players might face issues.
On a positive note, some
fund managers have hailed Sebi's proposal to continue with a model which will
involve both distributors and advisors, instead of moving to an advice-only
model.
"With this paper, SEBI
appears to have sent a message that it wants existence of both advisers and
distributors. Else, there was an impression that the regulatory was thrusting
the advisory model and the sector would have to do away with distributors in
due course, which could have been bad for it," said a chief executive
officer for a fund house.
What the MF sector has
welcomed?
1. To continue with MF
distributors
2. Relaxation of
educational qualifications for investment advisers
3. Reduction in fees and
net worth for body corporates
What MF sector has opposed?
1. Distributors being
barred from giving advice
2. Disclosure of
commissions to investors
3. Disclaimer that distributors
might not be acting in the best interest of investors
Src: Chandan Kishore Kant,
Business Standard
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