Advisers can often fall into the trap of advising in isolation. Notwithstanding the fact that some clients may want advice limited to a specific area, generally this is not the case. We often see suitability reports which state advice has been ‘limited’ or ‘restricted’ to a specific requirement. There is a misunderstanding here; what is more likely is, by example, the client has some money to invest, but that does not mean advice can be restricted to investment planning. Full, holistic fact finding and advising may identify the funds could be used more appropriately to say, make a pension contribution or pay off debt.
Use the Executive Summary section of ATEB suitability to position the specific recommendation in the context of the holistic position.



Consumer Duty: It’s a matter of Principle
Huw Reynolds Compliance Conduct, FCA, PI, protection
Apologies for the Consumer Duty overload but unless you’re taking a regulatory sabbatical, this is very much a hot topic. There are in excess of 50 FCA Handbooks (rules and guidance). You cannot be expected to be conversant with all of them, but you should have a good handle on the key ones, such […]