(1) Towards the end of the tax year, a firm sends a communication to all of its customers who hold investments in their ISA with the firm and who have not used their entire ISA allowance for the year.
The firm informs each customer of the amount of unused allowance that they have remaining and when they must transact by to use this allowance. The communication also describes the general tax benefits of the ISA wrapper.
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No
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Not likely to be regulated advice.
The first reason is that, as long as the information is presented neutrally, the information is factual (the amount of the unused ISA allowance and the tax benefits of ISAs).
The same answer would apply whether the firm has a single ISA product or several. As long as the information is presented neutrally, the communication does not implicitly recommend that the customer buy an ISA from the firm.
There may also be a second reason. If the customer can choose what investments go into the ISA wrapper, the firm will not be advising about a particular investment. Therefore the firm will be giving generic advice rather than regulated advice (see PERG 8.26 (The investment must be a particular investment)).
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(2) A firm sends a communication to all of its existing customers who hold a self-invested personal pension scheme with the firm and who have not increased their monthly contributions over the previous five years.
The communication alerts the customers to this fact and includes generic information about the benefits of pension investment and recommends that they contact an adviser to discuss their contribution rate.
The firm does not highlight any particular product or pressure the customer into any course of action.
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No
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Not likely to be regulated advice, as long as this information is presented neutrally.
The information is factual or generic (the benefits of pensions generally).
A factor that would normally point towards this being regulated advice for someone who is not appropriately authorised is that the communication is made in the context of a possible purchase of a particular investment (e.g. a new payment into the customer’s existing pension fund). However, in this example:
● The customer was not asking for advice. Instead the firm has contacted the customer on its own initiative.
● The information is presented neutrally.
● The firm tells the customer to get advice elsewhere and that the firm is not advising the customer.
● The information is general and not detailed.
● The information is about the benefits of pensions generally not the benefit of this particular personal pension scheme.
This general context means that a reasonable customer would not think that this was an implicit recommendation.
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(3) A firm sends a general communication to its customer base suggesting that they review the products that they hold on a regular basis.
This communication explains the general risks of poor diversification and of underperforming products in a way that is not linked to any particular product.
The communication also explains certain criteria that customers can look out for e.g. how a fund has performed against its benchmark.
It suggests that if customers do have any concerns then they should speak to an adviser.
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No
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Not likely to be regulated advice, as long as this information is presented neutrally.
The information does not identify any particular investment to be bought or sold.
The risk of poor diversification is generic advice about investment strategy and is not linked to particular investments. It does not recommend anyone to buy or sell particular investments.
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(4) A firm has a number of its customers that it believes are invested in products that do not align with their needs.
The firm contacts those customers to inform them that based on a review of the customers’ holdings, the firm believes that the products that they hold may not be suitable for their needs. It explains that:
● the products the customer holds are poorly diversified;
● the portfolio of products has underperformed compared to the products’ benchmarks; and
● the portfolio of products is not suitable for what the firm understands the customer’s investment purpose to be (e.g. a high proportion of cash funds in a pension wrapper).
The firm invites the customers to contact an adviser with whom the customer may discuss alternative options.
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If this does involve regulated advice under column (3) of this example it will also involve a personal recommendation.
This is because the communication refers to the customer’s individual portfolio and investment purposes.
The fact that the communication may in fact be standardised across a large number of customers does not mean that it is not a personal recommendation.
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If the firm does not identify either what part of the customer’s portfolio should be sold or how the customer should reinvest the proceeds, the firm is giving advice but as that advice does not relate to particular investments it is not regulated advice.
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(5) A firm sends a ‘markets outlook and investment information’ communication to its customers. This includes a summary of the firm’s views of markets outlooks together with an appendix setting out high level ‘house views’ on specific investment products.
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Publishing ‘house views’ would not, in itself, normally be regarded as a personal recommendation.
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The markets outlook part of the communication is not likely to be regulated advice taken on its own.
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This information is sent to customers on a general basis. It is not targeted on the basis that the customers hold specific products which are covered in the appendix.
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The communication is not addressed to a person as such but rather to the firm’s entire customer base. It is not therefore presented as suitable for a particular person and is not based on a consideration of the circumstances of a particular person.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, the house view appendix is likely to be regulated advice, as it is about the merits of specific identified products. All the elements in PERG 8.24.2G are met.
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(6) A firm makes the communication in example (F5) available to a customer and later goes on to make a personal recommendation to that customer, basing that recommendation in part on the communication.
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The firm has incorporated that communication into its personal recommendation so it forms part of that personal recommendation.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this will be regulated advice, as all the elements in PERG 8.24.2G are met.
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(7) A firm advises on personal pension schemes. It has a list of ‘Best Buy’ funds for investors with different risk appetites in which its pension customers can invest. It takes a fund off that list because of persistent underperformance and then replaces the fund on its list with an alternative fund. It writes to each of its customers who have invested in that fund telling them that it has done this.
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This is a personal recommendation, for the reason in PERG 8.30B.9G(2).
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this is regulated advice for the reasons in example (B5).
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(8) A firm regularly publishes a newsletter on its website which among other things contains its most recent ‘Best Buy’ list of funds, including details of which funds have come on and off the list. It sends the list to its customers, who may include customers who have invested in those funds.
In contrast to example (F7), the firm does not send the newsletter under cover of an email or letter that links the revised ‘Best Buy’ list to the customer’s circumstances.
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This is not a personal recommendation. A recommendation included in a newsletter available to the general public does not become a personal recommendation just because some of the people who read it are existing customers affected by its recommendation. A customer reading it would not think that it addresses their personal circumstances.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this is regulated advice for the reasons in example (B5).
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(9)(a) A firm (firm F) increases the annual management charge for a fund it manages. It informs investors in the fund that it has done so.
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No
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Neither firm F nor firm G gives regulated advice by telling the customers of the change in management charges. They are giving information about the terms of the fund of the type described in PERG 8.28.3G.
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A distributor (firm G) also sends a letter to its customers who hold this fund to inform them of the change.
No other information is included in either communication.
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(b) Firm G decides to remove the fund from its ‘Best Buy’ list. It tells its customers it has done so in the letter informing them of the increase in the charge.
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If this does involve regulated advice under column (3) of this example it is likely also to involve a personal recommendation.
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Firm G does not necessarily give regulated advice. Whether or not there is a suggestion that the customer should sell any part of their holding in the fund would depend on the wording of the letter and the basis on which the ‘Best Buy’ products are selected by the firm.
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(10) A customer is speaking with a firm. The customer tells the firm that they have a number of small personal pension scheme pots with a range of providers that they would like to consolidate into a single personal pension scheme with the firm.
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No
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Consolidating personal pension scheme pots involves buying and sellinginvestments.
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The firm informs the customer that it is possible to consolidate pensions and that this can be done through the firm or another provider. The firm tells the customer that this might make it easier for the customer to consider their pension holistically. However the firm also tells the customer that they should take advice from a financial adviser beforehand as the adviser will be able to consider whether any existing pensions have valuable benefits that could be lost if transferred.
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This is similar to example (F2) as the information is factual or generic (the benefits of consolidating pensions generally). It is different as the communication is made in the context of an individual discussion with a single customer.
However although the context of the communication is not quite the same, the answer is the same as it is for the example in (F2) as long as it is clear to the customer that they are not getting advice about whether to consolidate.
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(11) A customer contacts a firm to purchase a specific investment fund from the firm on an execution- only basis. Over the course of their discussions with the firm, the customer mentions that they are purchasing the product because they would like to receive an income from it. However the fund in question has been designed for growth and all income is reinvested.
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No
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This will normally not be regulated advice.
As explained in PERG 8.28.3G, an explanation of the terms of an investment need not be regulated advice.
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The firm informs the customer that the fund is an accumulation fund and does not provide any income. The firm further informs the customer that the customer can proceed with the transaction if the customer wishes or the firm can provide the customer with information about the income funds that the firm offers.
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The fact that the firm gives the information pre-emptively should not change this.
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(12) A customer over the age of 55 contacts a firm because they would like to take out an annuity with the firm. However they only have a very small personal pension scheme fund which will only generate an annuity income of a few pounds a month. In the firm’s opinion this means that the transaction would not be a worthwhile thing to do.
The firm tells the customer how much income an annuity bought with the customer’s fund is likely to generate. The firm leaves it to the customer to decide whether or not to take out the annuity.
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No
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The firm does not identify any particular investment that the customer should buy. This aspect of what the firm says should not be regulated advice.
The next question is whether the firm is giving the customer regulated advice not to buy the annuity.
It is likely that this will not be regulated advice if the firm tells the customer that they should not buy the annuity but makes it clear that this is not because this particular annuity is unsuitable but because it is likely that it will not be worthwhile for the customer to buy any annuity issued by any issuer. It is not regulated advice because it is generic advice rather than advice about a specific investment, as described in PERG 8.29 (Advice must relate to the merits (of buying or selling a particular investment)).
The firm will also not give regulated advice in these circumstances if it tells the customer that it will not sell an annuity to the customer. The FCA thinks that the definition of advising on investments (except P2P agreements) should not be interpreted in such a way that would require a firm to apply to include this regulated activity in its permission in order to turn down business it does not want to carry out. Refusing to do business with someone is not consistent with an advisory relationship with them.
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(13) The firm in example (F12) also gives the customer alternative options, such as taking the whole amount in cash. The firm explains the effect of each option and signposts sources of information on them. The firm includes taking advice as one of the options. The firm does not highlight any particular option or pressure the customer into any course of action.
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No
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The answer in example (F12) applies. Presenting the range of alternative options in a neutral way should not involve regulated advice.
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The firm may give a personal recommendation if it recommends an alternative option.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, it may give regulated advice if it recommends an alternative option.
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(14) A customer with a short life expectancy (due to ill health) is seeking to buy from a firm a single life one-year guaranteed annuity with their personal pension scheme fund monies which is likely to provide very poor value for money.
The firm tells the customer how much income their pension policy is likely to pay and that the customer may be able to take out a tax-free sum from the pension fund. The firm explains the other options and signposts sources of information on them, including an option to take advice. The firm explains the effect of each option. The firm leaves it to the customer to decide whether or not to take out the annuity. The firm does not highlight any particular option or pressure the customer into any course of action.
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The answers in examples (F12) and (F13) apply.
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The answers in examples (F12) and (F13) apply.
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(15) A customer has a personal pension scheme with a firm. The customer approaches the firm to draw out some money from that personal pension scheme. The firm wishes to draw the customer’s attention to the tax consequences of what the customer wants to do. For example:
(a) The customer wants to cash in their pension fund in one go, facing a significant tax bill when a more tax-effective option is available.
(b) The customer wants to withdraw some of their uncrystallised funds pension as a lump sum (UFPLS). Doing that reduces their ‘Money Purchase Annual Allowance’. On the other hand a single lump sum payment will not reduce that allowance.
(c) The customer wants to take a full lump sum from an ‘old style’ pension which does not allow for tax-free redemptions. The more tax-efficient option would be to transfer to a scheme that allows such redemptions.
In each case, the firm explains the other options and signposts sources of information on them, including an option to take advice. The firm explains the effect of each option and leaves the customer to decide what to do. The firm does not highlight any particular option or pressure the customer into any course of action.
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No
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An explanation of the tax consequences of a proposed transaction need not be regulated advice, in the same way that, as explained in PERG 8.29.5G, advice on how to structure a transaction to comply with taxation requirements need not be.
A firm does not necessarily give advice by bringing an obviously relevant fact to the attention of a customer who wants to buy an investment, even if that fact shows that the purchase would be a poor investment, as long as this information is presented neutrally and the firm also mentions any other relevant facts.
This is the case even if the customer chooses to go ahead with one of the options described by the firm and the firm carries out the transaction with the customer.
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The firm may give a personal recommendation if it recommends an alternative option.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, it may give regulated advice if it recommends an alternative option.
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(16) A customer has a personal pension scheme with a firm. The customer tells the firm that they wish to draw down part of that personal pension scheme as a lump sum and then set up the rest as income.
The customer does not specify the amount that they wish to draw down. The customer’s current personal pension scheme product also does not offer the facility to set up an income.
The firm informs the customer that the customer is able to draw down up to 25% of their pension pot tax free. The firm further informs the customer that if they wish to set up a regular income they will need to transfer to a different personal pension scheme product which allows this. The firm tells the customer that this can either be done through the firm or with another provider. The firm does not highlight any particular product or pressure the customer into any course of action.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice.
As explained in PERG 8.29.5G, an explanation of the terms of an investment or of how to meet tax requirements need not be regulated advice.
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(17) A firm offers an online affordability calculator that helps a customer determine what their surplus income is once all their outgoings are taken into consideration. The website suggests a list of possible outgoings but allows the customer to add figures for others.
There is a link to material that gives guidance on what a prudent size of someone’s surplus income could be, taking into account both outgoings and payments for investments. The website suggests that the consumer takes this into account when deciding whether the investment is affordable for them.
The calculator has its own page on the website which can be linked to using a ribbon at the top of the page from which the firm sells its products.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice because:
● the advice about a prudent level of surplus income is not regulated advice on its own;
● the customer makes up their own mind what they can afford;
● the information that the customer inputs is purely factual;
● the calculator is straightforward as it just adds up the outgoings; and
● the calculator is in effect a method of organising information that the customer already has.
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(18) A firm operates a platform through which customers can purchase a range of funds from different providers.
Its website includes a ‘Best Buys’ list of products which the firm believes to be of particularly high quality. The list appears on a side bar.
This information appears in a consistent way to all users of the website.
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Publishing a list of ‘best products’ or ‘funds of the month’ would not, in itself, normally be regarded as a personal recommendation:
● As with example (F5), the communication is not personalised.
● As the information is provided on a public page of a website and appears in a consistent way to all users of the website, it can be seen as issued exclusively to the public.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, the ‘Best Buys’ list is likely to be regulated advice, for the same reason as in example (B5).
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(19) A firm operates a platform through which customers can purchase a range of funds from different providers.
The website includes a banner at the top which includes details of sponsored products and other offers where the firm has managed to negotiate a discount to product charges.
This information appears in a consistent way to all users of the website.
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No
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Providing a list of products for which the firm has negotiated a discount is not, by itself, regulated advice, in the same way that an explanation of the terms of an investment is not (as explained in PERG 8.28.3G).
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(20) Firm F is a personal pension scheme provider. It provides a number of products into which pensioners can invest pension monies on retirement.
It has a product specially designed for investors who cannot or will not take advice on what to do with their pension monies. The sales literature specifically explains this.
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No
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Firm F will generally not be giving regulated advice, for the same reason as in PERG 8.30A.12G.
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A distributor (Firm G) sets out this information alongside these products on its platform.
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Firm G will generally not be giving regulated advice, for the reasons in PERG 8.30A.13G.
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(21) A product provider (Firm F) designs its products for a particular target market, which may be the same for each product or different.
The target market is defined by reference to high level characteristics such as investment duration, risk profile and investment objectives.
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No
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Firm F will generally not be giving regulated advice, for similar reasons to the ones in examples (D4) and (F20).
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A distributor (Firm G) sets out this information alongside these products on its platform.
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No
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Firm G will generally not be giving regulated advice, for the reasons in example (F20).
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(22)(a) A firm runs a personal pension scheme. The firm has a range of lifestyling options for investors with different intentions at retirement. For example, those options could be ones designed for investors who want to buy an annuity, draw down income and take the sum in cash. The firm has a website through which a customer can invest in the scheme and choose which of these options they wish to be applied.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice, for the same reasons as in example (F21).
If the firm uses sales material of the kind described in paragraphs (b) or (c) of example (F23) there will generally not be regulated advice for the reasons described in those paragraphs.
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(b) The firm currently runs the scheme based on a single lifestyle investment strategy, based on moving customer into cash over time in advance of an expected retirement date. The firm writes to investors in the scheme informing them of the new options in (a).
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No
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This example is different from the one in paragraph (a) of this example as the information is sent to customers who already hold investments in the scheme and the customers may be prompted to consider whether they should adjust their investment.
However this need not be regulated advice, for the reasons in paragraph (a) of this example. A description of investment objectives does not become regulated advice just because the description is given to customers for whom the information is particularly relevant.
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(23) A firm runs a personal pension scheme. It has a number of funds within that scheme designed to run different levels of risk. A customer has been in one of the higher risk funds but is now coming up to retirement. This means that the customer may be in an unsuitable fund: a lower risk fund could be more appropriate in these circumstances.
In all the scenarios in this example (F23) the firm does not pressure the customer into any course of action.
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(a) The firm reminds the customer that they need to keep their funds under review and points the customer to literature that explains what factors an investor should think about at different stages of their working life leading up to retirement. For example it might say:
● During the first part of an investor’s working life an investor will generally look for capital growth and as a result invest in higher risk funds.
● When moving towards retirement an investor generally looks for capital protection and as a result will generally invest in lower risk funds.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice, for the first of the reasons in example (F1).
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(b) The firm combines the information in (a) with information about the investment strategy of the different funds in its scheme and how they are designed to work through a typical lifecycle of a customer. This information is contained in standardised written information, either in hard copy or online.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice, because describing the investment objectives of a fund is not itself regulated advice (see PERG 8.30A.12G).
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(c) The firm has case studies to help their investors decide the funds into which they are to invest and the amount of their contribution. The examples are based on age, salary, attitude to risk and intentions about what they will do with the pension fund on retirement.
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No
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This will generally not be regulated advice. It involves presentation of the information in (b) and the contribution calculator in example (D8) in a different format and so the same answer should apply.
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(d) The firm gives the information in (a) to (c) to the customer on a one-to-one basis.
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See the answer to example (F24)
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See the answer to example (F24)
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(e) The firm tells the customer that it thinks that their present fund is unsuitable given how near to retirement they are and that they should get out of it and go into another fund.
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This is a personal recommendation to sell.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this is regulated advice to sell.
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(24) A firm sells investments using the processes described in examples (D2) to (D8) except that the filtering process takes place face-to-face or over the telephone and is carried out by the firm’s representative asking questions.
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Where examples (D2) to (D8) say that there is regulated advice under the definition in PERG 8.24.1G (definition of advice that does not refer to a personal recommendation) but no personal recommendation, there may be a personal recommendation in this example (F24).
For the reasons in column (3) of this example, it is more likely that a customer will think that an investment identified by the process is being presented as suitable for them or based on a consideration of their circumstances.
Also, an online filtering process of the type in PERG 8.30B.28G is different from the filtering process in this example as the customer can:
• stop and start the online process at any time;
• repeat it when and as often as they like; and
• put in different figures or answers either to check the result of different scenarios or just out of curiosity.
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The one-to-one format is more likely to lead a customer to think that they have received advice on the merits of investing in a particular investment, both because of the more personal nature of the interaction between the firm and customer and because what happens during the conversation cannot always be as tightly controlled as an online process.
The factors in PERG 8.30A.8G are relevant to what impression the customer is given.
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(25) A firm operates funds. It classifies its funds on the basis of riskiness as described in example (D4). A customer completes an online questionnaire on their attitude to risk. The firm follows this up with a telephone call to provide details of funds matching the customer’s risk tolerance as established by the questionnaire.
The only subject discussed during the telephone call is the terms and conditions of the fund. The customer can agree to buy the fund during the conversation although the formal subscription document will be sent by post later. The firm does not discuss the personal circumstances of the customer. The firm does pressure the customer into any course of action.
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No
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In principle (as with example (D4)), if the scope of the conversation is narrowly restricted in the way described in the example, the firm should not be giving regulated advice as long as it is made clear to the customer that no advice is being given.
However, the answer in example (F24) applies. The answer in a particular case depends on exactly what is said and the surrounding circumstances, as described in PERG 8.30A.8G.
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(26) A customer has a personal pension scheme with a firm. The customer takes tax-free cash from that personal pension scheme at 55 and enters into drawdown with the remainder of their pot in cash. The firm has provided them with additional material about options available but the money remains in cash. The firm prompts the customer to consider basic questions about what they want to do upon eventual retirement, and describes the different options the customer can take with their pension pot. The firm does not highlight any particular option, does not pressure the customer into any course of action and does not repeatedly contact the customer.
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No
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A firm that is not appropriately authorised is not likely to give regulated advice merely by prompting a customer to think about options, for the first reason in example (F1).
Describing the different options need not be regulated advice, because describing the investment objectives of a fund is not itself regulated advice (see PERG 8.30A.12G).
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(27) The firm in example (F26) tells the customer that it has selected the options presented to the customer by selecting those relevant to people with a similar age and risk profile as the customer.
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If there is regulated advice it is likely that the firm will be giving a personal recommendation.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this may involve regulated advice.
It may be reasonable for a customer to take the material as implicit advice that the identified products are suitable for them.
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(28) An unauthorised person that is a professional services business (F) has a customer approaching retirement. The customer wants to decide whether to use their personal pension scheme fund to buy an annuity. F advises the customer whether or not this is a good idea. This advice is given about annuities generally and not a particular annuity.
If F advises that buying an annuity is a good idea, it does not advise on what annuity to buy.
If F advises that buying one would be a bad idea it does not advise on the alternative options and in particular does not recommend whether the customer should do nothing or should crystallise or realise their benefits in some other way.
F does not itself sell investments and the customer will go to another adviser if they decide to buy an annuity or an alternative product.
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No
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This is not likely to be regulated advice. It is generic advice of the type described in PERG 8.26.4G.
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(29) A firm advises a customer whether to exercise an option under their personal pension scheme to take a lump sum or whether they should leave their personal pension scheme pot untouched for the moment.
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This is a personal recommendation.
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this is regulated advice (see Q16 and Q17 in PERG 12.3 (Rights under a personal pension scheme scheme)).
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(30) A firm makes available an online questionnaire to potential customers. It contains questions on their:
• personal circumstances;
• investment knowledge;
• personal investment objectives;
• trading experience; and
• financial circumstances, with a view to establishing what level of losses they can bear.
On the basis of the information provided, an algorithm creates a suggested model portfolio.
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If the firm gives regulated advice under column (3) of this example, this is a personal recommendation (see PERG 8.30B.35G).
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If the firm is not appropriately authorised, this is regulated advice (see PERG 8.30A.15G).
If however the customer just receives a suggestion which lists different asset classes or industries, given in percentages, without naming any specific investments, the firm is giving unregulated generic advice.
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