Almost half of advisers have modified the way in which they service shoppers following the introduction of Consumer Duty steerage a 12 months in the past this month, knowledge from Royal London reveals.
The pensions and funding mutual discovered that 43% of brokers have modified their strategy to consumer servicing, with the identical proportion additionally adjusting the way in which they cope with susceptible clients, in its biannual ballot of 528 intermediaries.
It added that 27% of advisers stated they’ve elevated the frequency of consumer suggestions requests, 15% have diminished the variety of shoppers on their books, whereas 13% have modified their funding strategy.
The Financial Conduct Authority’s wide-ranging consumer-focused tips got here into drive on 31 July final 12 months. It covers the UK’s 60,000 regulated monetary companies, together with the mortgage trade’s roughly 100 lenders and 18,000 brokers and dealer companies.
The City watchdog stated the steerage goals to “basically enhance how companies serve customers” by setting out “increased and clearer requirements of client safety throughout monetary providers”.
The guidelines are designed to finish “rip-off expenses” and make it simpler for patrons to modify merchandise.
The physique additionally desires companies to extra clearly clarify their merchandise “moderately than burying key info in prolonged phrases and situations”, and provide extra assist to susceptible clients, akin to pensioners or these underneath monetary stress.
Brokers have been optimistic in regards to the impact of the brand new guidelines, in line with the ballot.
It discovered that 52% of advisers stated Consumer Duty has met or exceeded its goals.
However, 23% don’t suppose the steerage has met its targets, whereas 1 / 4 of respondents weren’t certain.
Only 13% of intermediaries stated their agency had modified nothing because of Consumer Duty.
Royal London director of coverage Jamie Jenkins says: “Generally, the change feels optimistic amongst most respondents although we are able to’t ignore the 23% of advisers who don’t suppose it has met its goals.
“It’s a tough one to invest on, however we do know of adviser companies who felt they have been already assembly the necessities so maybe some don’t suppose the change in regulation is related to them.”
Jenkins provides: “The Consumer Duty is arguably probably the most vital piece of regulation now we have seen for practically 20 years, looking for to make a cultural shift for the entire trade from merely treating clients pretty, to treating them nicely.
“It has undoubtedly led to adjustments out there already, and if it hits its mark, it can considerably enhance belief in monetary providers.”