Compliance
Singapore Regulator Acts Against Financial Advisors For Pressuring Firm To Scrap Commission Rebate

The Competition Commission of Singapore is acting against 10 firms for what it says is anti-competitive pressure against the pricing policy of a financial advisor firm.
A Singapore regulator has issued a “proposed infringement
decision” against 10 financial advisors for attempts to pressure
iFAST Financial Pte to scrap its offer of a 50 per cent
commission rebate on life insurance products as sold on the
Fundsupermart website.
The Competition Commission of Singapore has issued the
infringement decision against the firms, all of which of are
members of the Association of Financial Advisers (Singapore).
The firms are Cornerstone Planners Pte; Financial Alliance Pte;
First Principal Financial Pte; Frontier Wealth Management Pte;
IPP Financial Advisers Pte; JPARA Solutions Pte; Professional
Investment Advisory Services Pte; Promiseland Independent Pte;
RAY Alliance Financial Advisers Pte and WYNNES Financial Advisers
Pte.
iFAST is both a securities dealer and a financial advisor but it
wasn’t a member of the AFA at the time of the Fundsupermart
offer, the regulator said in a statement. iFAST distributes
investment products such as unit trusts through its
Fundsupermart.com platform to investors. It also offers
investment products through a business-to-business distribution
platform that provides administration and transactional services
to financial institutions such as financial advisors. The
parties’ use of iFAST’s distribution platform collectively
contributed significantly to iFAST’s revenues in Singapore, it
said.
On 30 April 2013, iFAST launched its Fundsupermart offer, which
provided an opportunity for purchasers of life insurance policies
to enjoy cost savings from the 50 per cent commission rebate. It
withdrew this offer as soon as 3 May of that year, the regulator
continued.
The regulator said it has noted media reports about the offer’s
withdrawal and had received complaints about the matter. After an
investigation, the regulator said it “provisionally finds that
there was an agreement during an AFA meeting on 2 May 2013 as
well as further coordination among the 10 financial advisory
companies to apply pressure on iFAST to withdraw its
Fundsupermart offer”.
Under the Competition Act of the Asian jurisdiction, business
entities are banned from restricting or preventing
competition.
The regulator said its proposed infringement decision is a
written notice setting out the facts on which CCS makes its
assessment and its reasons for arriving at the proposed decision.
The parties have six weeks to make a response. When that process
is complete, the regulator makes its decision.