• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Subscribe
  • Twitter
  • RSS Feed

Investment News NZ

Investment News provides financial advisers news stories from the financial industry in New Zealand. Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter.

  • Home
  • News
  • Kiwisaver
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Investment News / Listen up: why the FMA went full-noise on Simplicity ad breach

Listen up: why the FMA went full-noise on Simplicity ad breach

March 13, 2022

Paul Gregory: FMA director of investments

The Financial Markets Authority (FMA) had clearly done enough talking.

In a damning seven-page direction order issued to Simplicity last week, the regulator suggests earlier efforts to persuade the largely passive investment provider to tone down unsubstantiated marketing claims had fallen on deaf ears.

“Prior formal and informal engagement on related matters does not appear to have had the desired effect from the FMA’s perspective,” the public direction order says.

Paul Gregory, FMA director investments, said the escalation to publishing a direction order – the first issued to a named licensed provider in the wake of new advertising guidance last year – followed a number of previous conversations with Simplicity.

Gregory said most regulatory clashes with licensed firms are usually resolved behind the scenes via quiet updates to product disclosure statements, for example.

But if Simplicity didn’t get the hints, the regulatory upgrade to a public shaming over the firm’s ‘All Greys’ advertising campaign triggered a response.

Simplicity dropped the multi-channel ads, which claimed KiwiSaver members could see long-term returns up to 20 per cent above competitors, but also fought a rear-guard action against the direction order.

“It was submitted that Simplicity has already complied with some of the directions and indicated that it will do so going forward – and because of this there is no need to issue a direction at this time. We do not accept this submission,” the order says. “By issuing the direction the FMA will have greater enforcement options should Simplicity breach the direction.”

The $4.5 billion investment scheme also argued that as the campaign “resulted in a non-material increase in new members for Simplicity”, there was no need for a public direction order.

“We note that even if this is true, the impact of the campaign on the general perception of Simplicity’s brand is likely to give it an unfair competitive advantage and so it is important to send the message to Simplicity and others that the FMA will take meaningful action in these types of circumstances,” the regulator says.

The FMA estimates the All Greys campaign likely lured more than 250 members into the Simplicity KiwiSaver scheme.

As part of the wide-sweeping direction order, Simplicity will have to write to all members that joined the scheme between August 20 and November 30 last year advising that the ad claims were “misleading, deceptive and unsubstantiated”.

Furthermore, the ruling puts the Simplicity marketing department on enhanced compliance watch for the next two years while also requiring the provider to pull down its so-called ‘Difference Calculator’.

Gregory said the Simplicity did not disclose the underlying assumptions used in its calculator, which compares long-term returns after fees among providers.

The order also requires Simplicity to “conduct a compliance review of the Difference Calculator and report in writing to the FMA, within 20 working days of receiving this Direction, confirming compliance with the applicable fair dealing provisions of the FMC Act”.

Licensed investment providers are required to use standardised assumptions (following the Sorted website lead) in publicly available calculators, or adequately justify any deviation from the norm.

Simplicity might have the dubious honour as the first licensed investment scheme to cop a public lashing from the FMA over advertising claims but the regulator has fired a few warning shots.

Last year, for instance, the FMA effectively banned providers from using “phenomenal” 12-month return figures garnered in the usual post-COVID crash period: the move followed complaints about NZ Funds KiwiSaver ads but was positioned as an industry-wide guidance.

And late last year, the regulator also forced property investment group, Du Val, to drop a potentially misleading ad campaign. However, as a wholesale operator Du Val falls outside the more strictly regulated full licensed regime, a particularly important factor in light of Simplicity’s recent appointment as a default KiwiSaver provider, according to the FMA.

“Simplicity’s standard of conduct should reflect its status as a default KiwiSaver provider,” the direction order says.

Gregory says the FMA weighs up any potential commercial damage against the public interest when issuing such orders.

“It’s important for businesses to consider [the potential consequences] before they advertise,” he said.

Simplicity chief, Sam Stubbs, declined to comment.

Read More » Investment News

Recent articles

  • ACC fund names new CIO May 8, 2025
  • Mercer NZ chief to step down May 6, 2025
  • Travels in FAP-land: study breaks fresh ground in licensee territory May 6, 2025
  • ASB usurps ANZ as retail king as fund survey restates $9bn May 4, 2025
  • KiwiSaver stays balanced in volatile March quarter, Morningstar May 4, 2025
  • Nikko loses senior sales manager to rival; Simplicity locks in Everett as chair May 4, 2025
  • FMA downsizes climate, DIMS compliance May 4, 2025
  • Tech-centred Kernel takes to trading by Alpaca May 4, 2025
  • Salt finds investors blasé as Trump blasts through 100 days of ‘volatility and confusion’ May 4, 2025
Finished reading? Why not subscribe? To receive a weekly email enter your email address here.

Primary Sidebar

WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

Sign up here to receive our weekly newsletter.
Learn More »

Most Recent Investment News

ACC fund names new CIO

May 8, 2025

Mercer NZ chief to step down

May 6, 2025

Travels in FAP-land: study breaks fresh ground in licensee territory

May 6, 2025

ASB usurps ANZ as retail king as fund survey restates $9bn

May 4, 2025

KiwiSaver stays balanced in volatile March quarter, Morningstar

May 4, 2025

Search by Keyword

INVESTMENT NEWS

  • ACC fund names new CIO May 8, 2025
  • Mercer NZ chief to step down May 6, 2025
  • Travels in FAP-land: study breaks fresh ground in licensee territory May 6, 2025
  • ASB usurps ANZ as retail king as fund survey restates $9bn May 4, 2025
  • KiwiSaver stays balanced in volatile March quarter, Morningstar May 4, 2025
  • Nikko loses senior sales manager to rival; Simplicity locks in Everett as chair May 4, 2025
  • FMA downsizes climate, DIMS compliance May 4, 2025

Quick-links to Popular News

  • FAP Compliance
  • Coronavirus
  • New Appointments
  • Financial Markets Authority (FMA)
  • Kiwisaver
  • Climate Change
  • Crypto Currency
  • Blockchain
  • Insurance

Sponsored Content

Building a smarter portfolio: strategies for diversified growth 

Five strategies for dealing with market volatility

Unlocking the potential of smarter portfolio management for New Zealand’s largest investors

Bullish on bullion? Discover gold’s role as a diversifier

Climate disclosures and transition finance: APAC’s path forward

Sheep sheds and credit spreads

More Sponsored Posts >>>

Secondary Sidebar

Recent News

  • ACC fund names new CIO May 8, 2025
  • Mercer NZ chief to step down May 6, 2025
  • Travels in FAP-land: study breaks fresh ground in licensee territory May 6, 2025
  • ASB usurps ANZ as retail king as fund survey restates $9bn May 4, 2025
  • KiwiSaver stays balanced in volatile March quarter, Morningstar May 4, 2025
  • Nikko loses senior sales manager to rival; Simplicity locks in Everett as chair May 4, 2025
  • FMA downsizes climate, DIMS compliance May 4, 2025
  • Tech-centred Kernel takes to trading by Alpaca May 4, 2025
  • Salt finds investors blasé as Trump blasts through 100 days of ‘volatility and confusion’ May 4, 2025
  • Generate goes for (extra-strong) growth May 4, 2025

Footer

Copyright ©2025 InvestmentNews.co.nz — All Rights Reserved — Terms & Conditions