Mortgage & Protection Blog

  • Home /
  • Mortgage & Protection Blog

Lenders and regulators must be careful not to add to adviser disillusion

Bob Hunt

Bob Hunt

26 September 2024
As the news filtered through that the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) hadn’t followed the path of the US Fed in cutting rates, I couldn’t help feeling a slight sense of disappointment – albeit expected disappointment – that advisers didn’t have a further morale-boosting rate cut message to push out to clients, not least because these cuts do tend to cut through and act as a significant catalyst for borrowers, new and existing, to act.

August’s cut certainly achieved this, and with the news from the US plus the fact inflation remained the same at very close to target – 2.2% – this month, there could have been some justification for cutting the bank base rate (BBR) again. 

However, there is still an ongoing positive downward trend in terms of mortgage product rates, with multiple lenders cutting multiple times in recent weeks, and despite no further BBR cut, we might well envisage both lenders and, perhaps pre-end of year, the MPC acting again. 

Any increase in activity is going to be welcomed by the advice community, not least in terms of borrowers coming to the end of deals, and an improved ability to move them to new lenders rather than having to accept a product transfer (PT) option, which as we know comes with – for the vast majority – a seriously inferior procuration fee. 

A quieter market hitting broker incomes 
This is clearly an important time for advisory firms, not least because of the continued squeeze firms are feeling on their margins, which in a subdued market is doubly impactful, having a significant effect on profitability.

It is, of course, not just the higher share of PT business at lower proc fees that remains a real problem in this area, but the increased cost burden many advisory firms have been dealing with recently, particularly as a result of regulatory shifts and periods of constant product shifts and flux. 

The weight of mortgage regulation 
In regulatory parlance, we can all be huge supporters of Consumer Duty and, at the same time, recognise this comes with an indirect cost to firms in terms of its implementation on launch and the ongoing costs in order to keep on delivering in the areas the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) wants to see. 

We’ve been repeatedly told that Consumer Duty is not a ‘one and done’ series of measures, but an ongoing commitment that needs to be committed to, in which the ongoing changes within firms need to be outlined and evidenced.

As always, regulatory change needs resources – both human and financial – in order to meet new and/or shifting responsibilities, and that doesn’t come cheap.

To cover this while dealing with muted activity levels is clearly difficult, especially so when you add in the increased amount of work that is being generated by this Consumer Duty shift. 

Not a straightforward task 
For example, how many advisers can adopt a ‘one and done’ approach to a client recommendation these days? As we know, advisers are now having to check rates and products, and match them to clients, multiple times during the period up until completion, purely because the mortgage market shifts so repeatedly. 

We saw this in spades at the start of the year, and over the period – certainly since the August BBR cut – we have seen it again. Clearly, advisers want to ensure they are delivering the most suitable, and where possible, cheapest option to the client, but this requires numerous ‘reworkings’ of a client’s case.

Add up that extra work and we find ourselves in a position where the cost to place a piece of mortgage business has increased a great deal, all impacting on that bottom line. 

There is also a much wider issue at play here, in terms of what this means for the ability to access advice by consumers.

Retaining valuable professionals 
You’ll have seen no doubt the excellent piece in this very publication here, based off a Freedom of Information request to the FCA by Anna Sagar, which highlighted how the number of mortgage advisers has been falling steadily in the last five years.

As a starter, it’s incredibly useful to see what the current advisory community number currently stands at, and according to the FCA, it was 24,422 in 2023. Pre-pandemic, in 2019, it was up at 28,616, 27,166 a year later, down further to 23,820 in 2021, and rebounded to 25,045 in 2022 before reaching last year’s number. 

We clearly don’t know what has happened since the end of last year, but I would be surprised if numbers haven’t fallen further, based on the points discussed above, the impact they are having, and how such pressures don’t just impact on adviser numbers but the clearly related viability of advisory businesses. 

If we don’t want to see adviser numbers falling further, and really impacting on the ability of consumers to access advice, and if we want firms to be able to provide advice on mortgages and other product areas as Consumer Duty seeks, then both the regulator and lenders need to think about the costs associated with running an advice firm, and how they can make sure they a) don’t add to them, and b) they pay advisers a fair rate that is commensurate with the greater amount of work involved, particularly in a market that has been skewed the way it has for some time. 

Fairness in these areas is not visible at this time, and if it isn’t found, then the likelihood is more advisers and firms will feel the squeeze and we’ll lose advice supply at the very time when demand is growing.

21 November 2024

Better off dead? The need for critical illness cover


18 November 2024

What the OBR’s five year forecasts mean for the market


25 October 2024

Advisers should rethink their regulatory status to keep up with sector changes


16 October 2024

Your Business Matters


7 October 2024

What may impact BTL and Resi markets in 2025?


1 October 2024

Why Gen Z could be the perfect match for protection


30 September 2024

Self-employed mortgages can be easy, if you choose the right lender


26 September 2024

Lenders and regulators must be careful not to add to adviser disillusion


19 September 2024

There may be trouble ahead…


2 September 2024

Source Go: The Modern Answer to the GI Question


29 August 2024

Pre- and post-mini Budget remortgagors need guidance in transformed market


23 August 2024

Guardian's 2023 claims report: a milestone worth celebrating


14 August 2024

Rate cuts are a positive story for advisers


1 August 2024

The mortgage market is set for a teeming H2


29 July 2024

Aldermore are backing more of your clients to go for it


22 July 2024

YOU SAID, WE DID!


12 July 2024

A surge of optimism for the market


3 July 2024

Consumer Duty one year on – what might happen next?


24 June 2024

How to increase your protection business


17 June 2024

Consumer Duty will mark new era of continuously changing advice


6 June 2024

Mental Health Matters: Workplace Wellbeing


21 May 2024

Advise or refer? Ensuring the best possible outcomes for your clients


15 May 2024

Darlington Criteria Updates


14 May 2024

And The Wait Goes On


10 May 2024

Cap on broker fees sparks industry debate


1 May 2024

Expect the unexpected


15 April 2024

Ready, set, remortgage!


12 April 2024

How the mortgage market is failing new arrivals to the UK


11 April 2024

A compliance refresh will lighten unavoidable market stress


4 April 2024

What is driving the Specialist Residential and Buy-to-Let markets this year?


4 April 2024

A Government that prioritises owner occupiers at the expense of the PRS


28 March 2024

What is your website for?


19 March 2024

Exploring the value of value added benefits


4 March 2024

Artificial intelligence – friend or foe to advisers?


9 February 2024

Trust your own gut when listening to market predictions


8 January 2024

The Name's Bond...


21 December 2023

PTs remain a big part of the marketplace


21 December 2023

Not all wine and roses but outlook is better


15 December 2023

Artificial Intelligence: A vision for the future


12 December 2023

Reflecting on 2023


11 December 2023

Mental Health Matters: Menopause


8 December 2023

Looking ahead: Reasons to be cheerful about the market in 2023


17 November 2023

Why TikTok could be a winning tactic for brokers


30 October 2023

How advisers can improve the quality metrics with insurers


27 October 2023

The Aggregator Market - Friend or Foe?


25 October 2023

Don’t let Charter support remove advice from the mortgage process


3 October 2023

How to strengthen your defences against cyber threats


29 September 2023

White Dragon Communications


8 September 2023

Advisers deserve recognition for keeping borrowers on lender books


8 September 2023

Claims history of an insurance should form core part of assessing true value of insurance and advic


4 August 2023

The blasé attitude towards sudden mortgage withdrawals is not good enough


10 July 2023

The argument for higher proc fees for better quality business is undeniable


22 June 2023

Product withdrawal timescales and how brokers can adapt


1 June 2023

We're not in mini-Budget territory yet!


24 May 2023

Skipton’s 100 per cent mortgage should be replicated, not feared


30 April 2023

Protection And Mortgage Fair Value Assessments – What Is My Actual Responsibility?


6 April 2023

Lenders will compete on mortgage rates, but don’t expect a price war


27 March 2023

Vulnerable Customers and Economic Abuse


10 March 2023

Tell borrowers to stop waiting for mortgage rates to fall


7 March 2023

Mixed messages from Bank of England boss ahead of MPC meeting


6 March 2023

Take the Consumer Duty seriously when it comes to protection


17 February 2023

Mortgage Market Update


10 February 2023

Let’s not be hasty and write off this year’s property purchase appetite


6 February 2023

Implementing Consumer Duty


9 January 2023

Why it’s so important you tell us about your vulnerable customers


5 January 2023

Why advisers are so vital in the mortgage market


Paradigm

THIS SITE IS FOR PROFESSIONAL INTERMEDIARY USE ONLY AND NOT FOR USE BY THE GENERAL PUBLIC.

APCC MemberConsumer Duty Alliance

Paradigm Consulting is a Member of the Association of Professional Compliance Consultants and also the Consumer Duty Alliance.

Paradigm Consulting is a trading name of Paradigm Partners Ltd
Office address: Paradigm Partners Ltd, Paradigm House, Brooke Court, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 3ND
Paradigm Partners Ltd is registered in England and Wales. No.09902499. Registered Office: As above

Paradigm Mortgage Services LLP
Office address: 1310 Solihull Parkway, Birmingham Business Park, Birmingham B37 7YB
Registered in England and Wales. Company No: OC323403. Registered Office: Paradigm House, Brooke Court, Lower Meadow Road, Wilmslow, SK9 3ND
Paradigm Mortgage Services LLP is a Limited Liability Partnership.

Paradigm Protect is a trading name of Paradigm Mortgage Services LLP
Office address: 1310 Solihull Parkway, Birmingham Business Park, Birmingham B37 7YB
Paradigm Mortgage Services LLP is registered in England and Wales. Company No: OC323403. Registered Office: Paradigm House, Brooke Court, Lower Meadow Road, Wilmslow, SK9 3ND
Paradigm Mortgage Services LLP is a Limited Liability Partnership.