The reason why so many people receive poor financial advice is the same reason why so many of us overpay for car repairs. Simply put, we lack the basic knowledge to distinguish good advice from bad.
A phrase we keep reading is the “advice gap”. And I get it. It’s a big problem I’ve written about many times. Only a tiny fraction of the UK population receives financial advice. The Retail Distribution Review, for all the good it has done, has only widened the gap further, as has the growing cost of compliance. Sadly, advice has largely become the preserve of the already very wealthy.
Thankfully, there’s a growing consensus that the advice gap needs fixing. Indeed the FCA appears to be on the case. Yet while I would love to see a wider range of people have access to advice, there is surely a far more crucial and fundamental issue that is in danger of being overlooked. I call it the consumer sophistication gap.
When I started writing about investing after the global financial crisis, it struck me that the biggest obstacle to better investment outcomes was an asymmetry of knowledge between the industry and the consumer. Most people lacked a basic understanding of how investing worked, which meant they were easy prey for product peddlers and other financial professionals who didn’t have their customers’ interests at heart. True, things have improved in the meantime, but this knowledge gap is still, in my view, the elephant in the room.
The problem is not just that too few people are receiving financial advice; it’s also that, even of those who do, a sizeable proportion are getting it from advisers with questionable technical competence or whose ethical and professional standards leave much to be desired.
Financial advice is a “credence good”
That authors of a new paper on the quality of financial advice in the latest edition of the Journal of Economic Perspectives agree. Although it focuses primarily on the US, the paper equally applies to the UK. Financial advice, the authors note, is an example, along with healthcare and car repairs, of what academics call a “credence good”. In other words, consumers struggle to evaluate quality even after purchase.
The reason why people have difficulty assessing the quality of advice, the paper suggests, is that they simply don’t know enough about investing or the financial markets to make an informed judgement. For example, they’re often persuaded by advisers to buy expensive funds without knowing there are better and cheaper options available, or to take concentrated active bets when they should be diversifying. In other words, the authors write, “the same lack of sophistication that drives the demand for financial advice also makes it difficult for households to differentiate between competent and incompetent advisers.”
Greater consumer sophistication has huge benefits
Narrowing this consumer sophistication gap delivers huge benefits, both for consumers and society as a whole. Better informed consumers would have a clearer understanding of what financial advisers actually do and how they add value. That knowledge would help them to choose what sort of adviser to talk to and what questions to ask them. It would also help them to spot the warning signs and to walk away if they’re unconvinced by the quality of the advice on offer.
Another significant benefit of having better-informed consumers would be a greater awareness of the different options they now have available. For me, fixed-fee financial planning, including ongoing, evidence-based investment management, is the gold standard; I myself pay an annual fixed fee to a financial planner. But what’s right for me is not right for everyone.
Not everyone needs, or can afford, to pay for ongoing financial advice. Many people are perfectly capable of managing their own investments. Some platforms now offer automatic rebalancing, so all you need to do is to open an account and start investing.
Increasingly, too, you can pay for financial advice as and when you need it, and the same with financial planning. No, it’s not the same, or indeed as good, as having an ongoing relationship with the same adviser or panner, but it’s considerably cheaper, which makes advice and planning more affordable to those on average incomes and without substantial assets to their name.
Financial education is key
How then can we narrow the consumer sophistication gap? As the US paper says, financial education is key. Websites like TEBI and Monevator, and financial educators like Claer Barrett, Iona Bain and Peter Komolafe, have an important part to play.
I also see a major role in the future for financial coaching. I do still have reservations about it, particularly around redress should things go wrong. However, as my friend Steve Conley has explained many times, you don’t need to pay for regulated financial advice if you’re willing to manage your own investments.
Yes, of course, let’s do what we can to address the advice gap: the more people receiving financial advice the better. But we mustn’t forget the consumer sophistication gap. That’s the one we need to narrow most of all.
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