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Home News

Licensee scale not always critical factor

Costs to support a financial adviser are similar for a dealer group regardless of size.

by Victoria Papandrea
November 30, 2009
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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The average yearly cost to support a financial adviser is relatively similar for a dealer group regardless of its size, a number of licensees have said.

For a large licensee it cost around $30,000-$35,000 to support an individual financial planner each year, MLC advice general manager Greg Miller said.

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“But it also depends on the quality of services and so on that you supply,” Miller said.

“For a large licensee there’s also reputational risk that we have to think about.”

However, he said being a large dealer group allowed for economies of scale to lessen the cost of supporting a planner.

“That figure would certainly fall into the $20,000s once they got three or four advisers inside the one business,” he said.

For Wealthsure Financial Services, a licensee with more than 300 planners, the figure is around $20,000 with the maximum cost edging towards $25,000 due to fluctuating professional indemnity (PI) insurance costs.

“For a financial planner who is giving holistic advice it’s about $20,000, give or take a few thousand either way,” Wealthsure chief executive Darren Pawski said.

Pawski said scale did play a large part in providing cost efficiencies in areas such as compliance, software, administration systems, research and training.

Meanwhile, for a small dealer group such as Risk and Investment Advisors Australia (RIAA), it costs around $22,000 a year to support an adviser.   

“I think you can do it cheaper but you’re going to have less frontline support. We deliberately have a reasonably expensive model at the moment while we’re ramping up the business,” RIAA chief executive Les Mace said.

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