You can sue your financial adviser for bad financial advice, such as:
- recommending a risky strategy that was not appropriate for someone in your circumstances
- failing to do an adequate assessment of your circumstances, needs and objectives
- failing to assess your tolerance for risk
- failing to warn you of the risks associated with the investments and investment strategy
- failing to monitor investments and respond to changing economic circumstances
- failing to explain the interest payable on loans taken out to make investments
- failing to diversify investments and spread risk across different sectors and industries
- failing to recommend investments that pay high commissions to the adviser when other investments were more appropriate
- ‘churning’: the process when too many trades are made, leading to high fees and commissions
- failing to conduct an analysis to see how you’re likely to be affected when markets fall
- failing to disclose information and provide relevant documents, including a Financial Services Guide, Product Disclosure Statement, and Statements of Advice
- advising you to take out loans which you could not afford
- progressing with the investment when the recommendations and risks have not been fully explained and understood
- recommending a strategy when you don’t have a secure source of income or sufficient resources/cash flow to fund repayments for investment loans (without relying on income from the asset that is invested)
- failing to implement the plan appropriately
- failing to review and revise the plan at regular intervals.



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