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Gov't must regulate property investment spruikers

By Staff Reporter
15 November 2012 | 10 minute read

Staff Reporter

The Property Investment Professionals of Australia (PIPA) is calling on ASIC and the federal government to regulate property investment advice following a raft of news reports highlighting questionable property spruiking practices.

Reports that investors are losing millions of dollars after being cheated by property marketeers selling dubious properties under the guise of ‘independent financial advice’ have dominated headlines in recent weeks.

In particular, concerns are mounting for investors who are being encouraged to set up self-managed super funds (SMSFs) as vehicles for investing in property.

Earlier this week ASIC signalled that it will undertake surveillance of financial advisers and accountants regarding these SMSF concerns.

PIPA chairman Ben Kingsley said concerns surrounding SMSFs, and poor or underhanded property investment advice, has once again highlighted the need to regulate the provision of property investment advice.

“We are going to see an ongoing repeat of events such as Storm Financial and WestPoint – as well as a host of property spruikers like ‘Henry Kaye’ appearing – if nothing continues to be done about property investment advice regulation,” he said.

“While the federal government continues to sit idle on this, Australian investors will continue to be ripped off.”

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Unlike the areas of financial planning, real estate and mortgage broking, the provision of property investment advice – even in SMSFs – continues to be unregulated. Currently anyone can promote property as an investment option.

“It simply doesn’t make sense that you need to be formally qualified to give financial planning advice or be formally qualified to be an accountant to provide tax advice, but anybody can provide property investment advice,” Mr Kingsley said.

Despite a lack of regulatory framework around property investment advice, there are qualified property investment professionals that have both the educational and ethical standards to provide quality advice on property.

“Investors must take care that they only take property investment advice from those qualified to give it.”

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