News | The Investor
23 Aug 2025 20:21
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > Business > Features > The Investor

    Performance Pay Not As Good As It Sounds

    Here’s a radical idea: pay financial advisers according to the performance of the investments they put you in. Sounds appealing, but would it work?


    The idea comes from a reader. “In the ultimate form, there would be no fees, and the agent would be rewarded by a percentage of the clients' profit (and perhaps even loss?),” he writes. “The agent shares some of or all of the clients' risk. There would be a lot more conservative investing. The idea parallels the American lawyers' ‘No win/no fee’ arrangement.”

    Not quite. Presumably the US lawyers take on only the cases they are pretty confident of winning. Even if they lost a case every now and then, I’m sure they would win others during the same year. I expect their income ranges from not bad some years to really high other years.

    On the other hand, in a year like the one ending March 31 2009, most of the clients of a typical financial adviser would have suffered losses. The adviser would end up with no income.

    What’s more, if the adviser had to pay out a percentage of losses, as the reader suggests, they could be dipping quite deeply into their savings. I doubt we would attract top people to a job with a reward structure like that. It’s one thing for clients to see their savings balance falling; it’s quite another for an adviser to receive negative income. No wonder the reader ended his letter with, “I have not put this to my adviser.”.

    I suspect if we somehow forced advisers to accept a pay-by-performance structure, they would respond in one of two ways:

    • Invest clients’ money really conservatively, as the reader suggests – probably mainly in high-quality bonds.

    • Aim to cash in on the fact that higher-risk investments bring in higher average returns over the long term, by putting all clients’ money in risky investments. To do this, the adviser would need considerable savings, in case they hit a market slump before they gained from a boom period.

    Neither of these strategies is good for clients. While it sounds as if our reader would welcome more conservative investing, many New Zealanders already invest too heavily in bank term deposits and safe bonds, missing out on higher returns. Just because conservative investment has paid off in recent times doesn’t mean it’s good for the long haul.

    Every client has different investment needs – depending on when they plan to spend the money, what other savings they have, their tolerance for volatility and so on. Advisers focussing on how they themselves will fare if they are paid by performance aren’t likely to give their clients’ needs top priority.

    That’s not to say that the current way many advisers are paid – via commissions and other rewards from companies that provide financial products – works well either. Clients can end up in unsuitable and sometimes downright dreadful products that pay the most to the adviser.

    The best system is for clients to pay advisers by the hour, in the same way accountants and lawyers are paid. This wouldn’t necessarily cost clients more. Currently they effectively pay the advisers’ commissions because that money comes out of their investment returns. It’s just less obvious.

    Under a fee system, the advisers who served their clients well – by getting good long-term returns for the appropriate level of risk and by explaining what’s happening – would be rewarded by happy clients recommending them to others.

    In Australia, the UK and the US, financial advisers are increasingly working for fees, and some New Zealand advisers operate this way. I suggest readers seek them out.

    © 2025 Mary Holm, NZCity

     Other The Investor News
     12 Sep: Fixed vs. floating rates – which is best for you?
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    All Blacks forwards coach Jason Ryan is trumpeting the return of prop Tamaiti Williams from injury ahead of test two against Argentina tomorrow in Buenos Aires in the Rugby Championship More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Fonterra farmers are being tight-lipped on how they feel about selling its largest brands - including Anchor and Mainland More...



     Today's News

    Entertainment:
    Wynonna Judd's daughter has hit out at the singer and insisted she "was never a mother" 20:12

    Entertainment:
    Hulk Hogan's daughter has claimed people are "putting their careers at risk" to help her find the truth about the wrestler's death 19:42

    Entertainment:
    Dwyane Wade's family were initially sceptical about his age gap with Gabrielle Union 19:12

    Law and Order:
    An Auckland sex worker's been sentenced after stabbing a client 18:56

    Entertainment:
    Mikey Madison has felt a need to "withdraw into herself" since winning an Academy Award 18:42

    Law and Order:
    Police have seized five weapons in Levin, while investigating a spate of gang-related shootings in the town this week 18:36

    Entertainment:
    Sydney Sweeney was fascinated by the women who criticised her bathwater soap 18:12

    Law and Order:
    Police are warning 11 Christchurch schools about a man who's been approaching female students 18:06

    Entertainment:
    The Muppets are set to make their Broadway debut later this year 17:42

    Accident and Emergency:
    One person died following a crash in Northland 17:27


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2025 New Zealand City Ltd