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Cuffelinks Newsletter Edition 260

  •   29 June 2018
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CBA waves the white flag on wealth management

In 2000, when CBA bought Colonial State Bank and its wealth manager, Colonial First State (CFS), CBA hired me as a consultant on the deal. One of my roles was to determine how much funding CBA could source from CFS portfolios. CBA expected CFS fund managers to invest more into CBA deposits.

It showed a fundamental misunderstanding of the responsibility of a fund manager to act in the best interest of its investors, not the bank's shareholders. The CFS fundies explained their fiduciary duty and told me where to stick my bank balance sheet. Ouch!

The confusion arises because a banker is not a fiduciary in its customer relationships. A bank is entitled to prefer its own interests above those of its customers, and the bank generally has no duty to advise customers of a more advantageous deal. Banks offer lower deposit rates and higher lending rates to existing customers than new customers without any compunction.

There is therefore inherent conflict when banks own wealth management businesses. To some extent, it can be managed by strict rules about conflicts of interest, but there are cultural differences. In 2011 when CBA paid $373 million for Count Financial, it was driven by the assumption that Count clients would go into CFS funds and platforms. It never happened, and now CBA has run up the white flag and given up on wealth management. CEO Matt Comyn explained:

"(CFS Group) will benefit from independence and the capacity to focus on new growth options without the constraints of being part of a large banking group ... It also responds to continuing shifts in the external environment and community expectations, and addresses the concerns regarding banks owning wealth management businesses."

In fact, it does not address the main vertical integration concerns about funds management and advice in the same corporate structure, and it passes that problem to the next management team. In commenting on the word 'independent', ASIC said that under s923A of the Corporations Act, a licensee can only describe itself as independent if it is operating without any conflicts of interest. 

CBA had a harder decision than ANZ and NAB, as its wealth business is more substantial and successful. As the following chart shows, CBA entities not only have a much larger market share of funds, but they are doing well on new flows. The chart also shows why Hub24, netwealth, OneVue and Praemium are sharemarket darlings, gaining more flows than their market share.



Matt Comyn wants to go back to banking basics, and he threw Aussie Home Loans and Mortgage Choice into the demerged entity to avoid further Royal Commission fallout. But nobody is asking why he kept broker CommSec in CBA. Probably because he once ran CommSec and feels he understands it, but it barely qualifies in the "focus on its core banking businesses". The separation ends the 'bancassurance' and 'allfinanz' models that bankers loved in the 1990s. 

How to watch the World Cup

The World Cup rolls on without Australia, but with favourites Spain, Brazil and Germany all struggling to hit form, it's wide open. We have some hints to demonstrate you know what you're watching. According to Roy Morgan Research, viewing of 'soccer' spikes significantly every four years and 4.2 million or 22% of Australians watched Brazil 2014.

Time to review your portfolio for 2018/2019

Also this week, Christopher Joye identifies investment opportunities across the capital spectrum, especially hybrids, James Bloom believes it's time to check your Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA), and the White Paper from Colonial First State Global Asset Management provides the background to markets and investment planning for next financial year.

Industry veteran Don Ezra has some great advice on bringing your family into your financial world as you age, and Michael Blake gives five simple checks for long-term investing.

With the news yesterday that ASIC is taking AMP financial planning to court, Claire Wivell Platerprovides a guide to who faces more ASIC scrutiny, while Vinay Kolhatkar summarises the new legislation aimed at what Minister Kelly O'Dwyer calls 'rorts and ripoffs' in super and insurance.

I recently recorded a podcast with Gemma Dale of nabtrade, including how the equity markets ignored the GFC warnings and how to plan for the next fallout.

We have a new feature this week where our readers can learn more about the opinions and insights of our sponsors. All their articles and White Papers, mostly exclusive to Cuffelinks, are now grouped by sponsor to allow readers to find out more about them before investing. 

And a final reminder for the EOFY to those who need Continuing Professional Development (CPD) points or hours that we include an accredited test on each edition, linked here.

Graham Hand, Managing Editor

Edition 260 | 29 Jun 2018 | Editorial | Newsletter

 

  •   29 June 2018
  •      
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