Financial Planning for 'Middle England'
Talking about tax
Engaging with the RDR
The fossilisation of value
The RRR is much more important
You couldn't make it up
Why are we in business?
A question of priorities
UK plc's uneasy relationship with debt
The art of reinvention
Life, Intelligent Life and...Insurance Companies
What price independence?
The smokescreen of complaint management
A contract you don't want
The clients you don't want
Upfront about reviews?
The inequities of long-term care - in microcosm
IFAs and the latest buzzword
Who ya gonna call?
The UK Complaint Culture
Another Sorry Saga
Fiddling...
Worth getting angry about?
Are we missing a trick?
Negative inflation - doesn't apply to us!
When governments default
The limited benefits of regulation
What happens if we don't market ourselves?
Lessons from Pension-Switching
Is small the new big?
The Banks and our clients
What if?
The death of indemnity commission
From the sublime to the ridiculous
Shooting ourselves in the foot
Careful Complaint Management
Friday afternoon irritations
Ruminating about Risk
Wales Fast Growth 50
Fiat Money Magic!
New regulatory horizons beckon...
Mourning old friends
Lame man banking
'Wall Street indices predicted nine out of the last five rec
Somebody...please regulate this sector!
Think and grow rich
If it's not about integrity, then...
Bearish works for me
Having the right impact
Enforcement is the new Big Thing
Well thank goodness that's over...
A demon of our own design?
A new national religion?
In a typical week...
The shrill cries of anguish
It's simpler, but will it be better?
Health warnings: reading the financial press
Unsustainable?
It's a crazy world
What's it worth?
CGT Changes and Simplistic Arguments
Waste...and more waste
Bank of England: Armageddon Scenarios?
With-Profits...again
Financial Risk Outlook 2008
CAR (Customer Agreed Remuneration)
Service is optional
Customers not consumers
Business tough in 2008?
Getting Tough on TCF
What is 'Primary Advice'?
RDR - Feedback Submission
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From the sublime to the ridiculous

The fact that this is my first KevBlog entry for a month is the indication of the sheer intensity of work over the last few weeks, as we seek to help Member firms develop their business proposition, during the 'Credit Crunch'.  During this time, Gordon Brown has announced yet another £100Bn of funding (from UK taxpayers) to help out those poor, beleaguered banks, and the FTSE has subsequently plumbed new depths.  One has the distinct sense that our leaders are making it up as they go along, and conspicuously failing to read their history books.

 

Inevitably, all this 'stuff' has a profound impact on IFAs seeking to (a) do the right thing for their clients, and (b) continue to maintain a viable business proposition.  Now is not a good time to be learning that the FSA appear to wish to embark upon yet another retrospective pensions review.  One almost expects emotions and attitudes to rise and fall on a daily basis, as more bad news comes out - and we went through that stark cycle within one day, talking to two IFA firms in quick succession.

 

The first bemoaned the current environment for financial advice, saying that clients did not want to buy financial products, that nobody was interested in investing, that business (read compliance) pressures were preventing the firm from being profitable.  This was true apocalyptic stuff.

 

The second talked of the opportunities that were arising due to precisely the same market conditions:  the restructuring of cash balances; better risk-profiling of existing investments; cashflow planning for individuals and businesses; early-retirement planning due to clients selling their businesses; mandates to manage pension fund monies; rebroking of protection policies.

 

It occurred to me, firstly, that success or failure in these kinds of markets has more to do with our outlook and business philosophy than anything else.  And secondly, the 'Armageddon IFA' underscored the fact that a business model based solely on transactions is always going to suffer at times like this.

 

Focus on the opportunity...

 FTSE100230109

 


Kevin Moss, 23/01/2009