Steven Barrett
Registered User
- Messages
- 5,333
If you can pick up a copy of the pensions manual (about 350 pages) from the institute of banking that is used for the QFA/APA exams then you will have the same minimum of information that brokers use. It would be a help (maybe ask your broker for a loan of theirs as you would like to learn more about pensions, because the IoB will only give it to you if you pay the 300bucks for the module).
I want to emphasise that the APA/QFA are the minimum competency standards and CFPs have a fuller curriculum. That said, it's truly shocking how low the minimum standards are set, and, in my experience, how those who are selling/advising on products are, in some cases, not at that standard in terms of their actual performance once they pass the exams.
The QFA and the Continuous Professional Development (CPD) requirements that go with it are pretty low, although it has improved in recent years. I remember an hour CPD being given to a presentation on the new commission structures for life cover!
When talking to an advisor, you have to assess them by what their level of professionalism. Do they put the time and effort into advising you or do you feel they are putting you into something that you feel every other client of theirs is in? Are you getting fund diversification and will they work for you?
Steven
www.bluewaterfp.ie