Tuesday 4th August 2009 |
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The Capital Markets Development Taskforce fears the new Financial Advisers Act will fail unless it is accompanied by additional stringent measures to govern the ethical conduct and description of financial advisers.
"If incorrectly implemented, it could produce an occupational licensing regime which ultimately benefits service providers rather than retail investors," says the taskforce, headed by Wellington-based merchant banker Rob Cameron, in its second report, issued today.
The new report makes a slew of new recommendations aimed at numerous big capital markets issues besides the perceived integrity of the New Zealand managed funds and financial advisory industry, but dwells on the D-minus showing in the Morningstar report published in May that ranked 16 countries' fund management industries.
"In at least some parts of our market, we have a long way to go to come into line with international best practice and thus cultivate preferable outcomes for investors," the report says, recommending "more principle-based regulation focussed on ethical standards for issuers and advisers".
Among major recommendations in the report:
Perhaps most radically, the report recommends five principles be applied to investment advisers:
The report says better functioning capital markets are especially important for New Zealand since banks are deleveraging, pushing traditionally bank-dependent local businesses to private equity markets for capital, the report says.
As well as the usual litany of weaknesses and thinness in the New Zealand capital markets, the report identifies the lack of a New Zealand-based derivatives market as a serious hole in the national offering for investors, although the NZX's planned milk powder futures derivative is a big step towards fixing that.
"Derivatives play an important role ... by providing mechanisms to buy and sell risk," notwithstanding the bad name given to the whole concept by the link between the global credit crisis and the growth of excessively complex derivative products that did not hedge risk effectively.
The report identifies "agriculture, utilities and banking" as three key areas under-represented in the suite of investment opportunities for New Zealanders, in an observation clearly favouring partial privatisations and "Mum and Dad" opportunities to take a stake in cooperatives, such as Fonterra.
The taskforce will also recommend in its final report in December that both public and private equity markets have simple, transparent performance indicators.
Public markets would be measured on indicators such as number of capital raisings, total capitalisation, liquidity and transaction costs.
For private markets, key measures would include "capital commitments, investments, and exits, ... particularly for the institutional part of private markets".
The Cameron group also has overlapping membership of the tax reform group led by Victoria University tax professor Bob Buckle and ensuring both groups' agendas are aligned.
Download full report here
Businesswire.co.nz
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