Working party publishes broad consultancy charging guidelines, but detail left to advisers

The Consultancy Charging Working Group has set out guidelines and best practice directions for post-RDR renumeration of workplace pensions, but has not made any detailed recommendations on how much advisers should charge for advice.

The group, set up by the FSA and overseen by the Society of Pension Consultants, has identified four key principles for consultancy charges – simplicity, transparency, value and flexibility/adaptability.

It says initial or one-off charges can be taken immediately, in the shortest possible time, or over a specified period, suggesting 12 to 60 months as an acceptable range.

The paper says consultancy charges can be fixed or tiered, whether through a single monetary sum, a percentage of employer and/or employee contributions or of funds under management. The group says its conclusions around consultancy charging should have equal application to defined contribution occupational pension schemes.

It says cross-subisidies between members are acceptable provided they are identified and either agreed with the employer or mitigated. Examples of acceptable cross-subsidies are where advice and/or services to the employer are recovered in part, or in whole, from the scheme members, where scheme set up costs are borne by initial joiners only, where scheme members with larger funds/contributions pay more (in simple monetary terms) than those with lower funds/contributions), and between active and deferred members.

The paper sets out examples of good and bad practice and sample consultancy charging contracts.

Sir James Hodge, chairman of the Consultancy Charging Working Group says: “As the original FSA consultation showed, the issues involved in consultancy charging are complex, and discussion within the Working Group was lively. I am grateful, however, for the positive and constructive spirit in which all members participated in the Working Group.”

Consultancy Charging Working Group Guidelines

Good Practice

Poor Practice

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