I must stress that I am not trying to discredit you.
You see, I just don't like seeing TKL misleading people. You may think otherwise. If you've watched BlogTV, the very first comment he made was something like MAS and FIs are fully responsible for the whole incident. This kind of statement focuses anger and hatred on the ones that are supposed to help the people solving their problems. Some were saved. But I think there are even more agonising people, who cannot face the reality of losing their monies, than before.
Morally speaking, I agree that MAS should have done more.
Alright, just like you, I am not pushing any agenda here either but speaking from the sidelines, which makes it easier for me to put my points across, since I do not carry any emotions on this subject. I had been canvassed by banks to buy structured products and it started way back in 2001, if I am not mistaken. In the beginning of the launching of such products initially, it was known as Structured
DEPOSITS. Notice I bold that word, for it is riding on the naivety and ignorance of many at that time who would consider all deposits as safe savings instruments. I outright rejected such products as I am by nature curious and like to dissect the components of anything in front of me.
When I was told it was principal protected and when these similarly ignorant investment officers were inter-changeably using "protected" with "guaranteed", it raised alarm bells for me. I did my own research and concluded that both "principal protected" and "principal guaranteed" were not the same and besides this, it made me wonder if "principal guaranteed" was really any guarantee at all if the bank collapses. Hence, the selling strategy of these investment officers had and still is by drawing you to the attention of big brother MAS as the mountain behind and of course the bank's reputation itself. Finally, they would say that the financial services sector of Sinkiepore is VERY WELL REGULATED BY MAS and if the product is risky, it would not be allowed to be sold by the bank.
This is a fallacy but it is not a lie either. MAS does regulate finely what products can be approved to be sold and what cannot. You must realize that MAS issue licenses to FIs, and so, to many, such licenses issued also come with its inherent doby-chop by MAS, for rightful reasons or otherwise, depending on the individual interpretation of each investor and each situation is different too.
Beyond the moral aspect that MAS has to grapple with, as a regulator, it has to ask itself whether it had sent the wrong signals to the financial marketplace whereby such structured products, which are so opaque in its component sub-funds, very different from unit trusts and the manner unit trusts are sold, an investor knows fully well the risks he is getting into, BUT not structured products, which are difficult to dissect its risks to the investors.
For the sake of argument, do you know that in the FAA, there is a strict difference in definition and in law for an investor who is an Expert Investor, an Institutional Investor, Retail Investor and also High-Net Worth Individuals.
So, Structured Product may be made available to other types of investors but not to Retail Investors and why not? There are products which only High-Net Worth Individuals are qualified to buy and there is a different yard-stick of measurement in the FNA if one is dealing with an Expert Investor.
Not to be long-winded about it, my belief that TKL is right to point the blame at the banks and MAS perhaps is two-prongs. One, TKL has always been against Structured Products and had warned of its risks for Retail Investors. Two, he knows what he is saying because he eat, breath and sleep financial planning all his life and as a CEO of a large FI for so many years and now that he is on his own, his comments while unkind to the bank and MAS, must be viewed in the light that he does know what he is talking about. From my own deliberations, TKL is suggesting the right approach for the aggrieved investors.
People pay thousands just to get half the advice from such a distinguished and well-informed individual like TKL in the financial sector.