Document ID: chunk:federal_register_of_legislation:F2019L00117:reg:5:p1
Version: federal_register_of_legislation:F2019L00117
Segment Type: reg
Provision Reference: reg 5 (pt 1/3)
Character Range: 3182–6281

5  The Values and the Standards

Introduction
  In 2017 the Commonwealth Parliament amended the Corporations Act 2001 to raise the education, training and ethical standards of financial advisers and financial planners, promote enhanced consumer trust and confidence in financial planners and financial advisers and refocus them from providing commercial services to acting as professionals.
  While the ethos of "the market" legitimises the pursuit of self-interest through the satisfaction of others' wants, the ethos of "the professions" aims to secure the public good through the subordination of self-interest in favour of serving the interests of others.
  In return for renouncing the pursuit of self-interest, society often provides members of the professions with a range of formal and informal privileges (such as a "monopoly" right to undertake certain types of work).
  Appropriate financial advice can significantly improve people's financial well-being. In a time of increasing volatility, it is in the public interest that the profession enjoy the trust and confidence of its clients and the wider community. In turn, this requires that members of the profession develop the knowledge, skills and dispositions required to earn that trust.
  Collectively, financial planners and advisers are members of Australia's newest profession. As such, while they formerly provided a commercial service, they should be committed to offering a professional service—informed by a code of ethics intended to shape every aspect of their professional conduct.
  This Code imposes ethical duties that go above the requirements in the law. It is designed to encourage higher standards of behaviour and professionalism in the financial services industry.

The Values
  You must always act in a way that demonstrates, realises and promotes the following values:
 (a) trustworthiness;
 (b) competence;
 (c) honesty;
 (d) fairness;
 (e) diligence.

Trustworthiness:
  Acting to demonstrate, realise and promote the value of trustworthiness requires that you act in good faith in your relationships with other people. Trust is earned by good conduct. It is easily broken by unethical conduct.  Trust requires you act with integrity and honesty in all your professional dealings, and these values are interrelated.
  Acting ethically, with trustworthiness, promotes trust in the profession of financial advice by consumers, enabling the community to feel confidence in accessing and utilising professional financial services

Competence:
  Acting to demonstrate, realise and promote the value of competence requires you to have regard to the knowledge, skills and experience necessary to perform your professional obligations to each of your clients. It requires you to assess the professional services required by each client with regard to their individual needs, priorities, circumstances and preferences, expressed or implicitly identified as the subject matter of the financial advisory engagement. While it may be possible to supplement your professional competence by accessing the expertise of others,