Transparent fee structures

Transparent fee structures

November 27, 2017

A group of people discussing colorful charts and graphs on business reports at a table, showing collaboration and analysis in a focused meeting.

Transparent fee structures are the way forward, and little by little South African financial service providers (FSPs) are moving in that direction.

BBD business analyst Ian Maas explains, “Simply put, transparency amounts to clarity around investors knowing how much they’re paying, what they’re paying for and what the impact will be on their returns. It’s clean, understandable pricing.”

Although South Africa still lags the rest of the world, transparency is being supported by the industry, who are promoting trust between the financial services industry and retail investors. A key factor in the 2008 financial crisis was people not understanding the risks of their investments.

Transparency tackles this as it enables investors to understand the products\instruments and assets they’re investing in, the risks involved and the effect fees have on their investment returns.

According to Maas, despite the overall consolidation in fee structures, a big reason FSPs are avoiding being too transparent is because it costs money to implement and often full disclosure is not required by regulation. At BBD we believe that not only do FSPs need to disclose costs transparently and correctly, they must accurately calculate these costs. That’s the development effort and it’s not easy to do.

“The biggest problem is the lack of understanding on the investors’ behalf. Even with long-term insurance and investment products often being sold together, there are discrepancies in the investors’ knowledge. Investment products are generally quite well understood, but there is a lack of knowledge around the underlying instruments and the actual cost of the total investment. While investors are comfortable with long-term insurance products, the terminology used to present the fees is not that well understood. It’s a conundrum that transparent fee structures can solve.”

Our financial services industry experience incorporates insurance, investment and banking. Due to this combined knowledge of the industry, we have in-depth experience in understanding domains and either integrating solutions into the client’s systems or creating new systems.

In this highly-regulated sector, Maas says the requirements for financial stability are crucial and need to be implemented. Our best value offering lies in knowing how to unpack what is required, with the right skills to develop and maintain a solution that facilitates the necessary regulations.

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