Good morning, everyone. It's my pleasure to talk you through my first results presentation as CEO of St. James's Place. We have a full agenda today, which will include how we're dealing with two historical issues. However, I want to keep in sight throughout this presentation how fundamentally sound the underlying performance of this business is. We continue to attract strong net inflows, grow our funds under management, and deliver robust underlying financial performance despite challenging market conditions. Digging into those headlines a little more: we're now trusted with a record GBP 168.2 billion in client funds.
Our partnership continues to impress, attracting new client investments amounting to GBP 15.4 billion of gross inflows in the year. Meanwhile, our client retention rates have stayed strong at 95.3%, which speaks volumes about our relationships with clients and their confidence in our expert advice. Together, these resulted in net inflows of GBP 5.1 billion.
With the strength of our investment performance driving gains of GBP 14.7 billion, our funds under management have grown by almost GBP 20 billion in 2023. To put that into context, after this business was founded in 1991, it took 18 years for funds under management to reach GBP 20 billion, and we've grown by that amount in just one year. This really highlights the journey SJP has been on and the scale we have today. In terms of underlying financial performance, our business has been robust despite difficult market conditions and regulatory change. It's clear that our reported cash result of GBP 68.7 million has been significantly impacted by the provision we've established for potential client refunds, which is linked to the historic evidencing and delivery of ongoing servicing. I will cover this point in more detail later on.
However, before moving on, it is important to note that the introduction of Salesforce provides us with robust evidence of ongoing servicing since its implementation in 2021. While our results have been impacted by this legacy matter, the board recognizes the importance of return to shareholders and has therefore proposed a final dividend of GBP 8 per share. The board has also decided to revise future dividend guidance, and Craig will touch on this shortly. Now, for the rest of my presentation, I want to focus on three key areas. Firstly, my initial observations since joining SJP. Secondly, I'll talk about the two challenges we're addressing. Finally, thirdly, I'll look ahead and explain my priorities for the business. This final part I'll cover after Craig has taken you through the financials in more detail.
When I joined SJP last year, I knew I had to get under the skin of the business, so I started my listening and learning tour within the first week. This highlighted some interesting observations for me, things such as the sheer size of the structural opportunity for financial advice in the U.K. marketplace today and its capacity to develop and grow over time. One simple way to look at it is through the number of people in today's mass affluent demographic. This stands at 13.5 million individuals who control approximately GBP 2.7 trillion in liquid assets. This segment is forecast to grow to 14.3 million people controlling more than GBP 3 trillion of liquid assets by 2026. And we have around 1 million clients and manage funds of GBP 168.2 billion on their behalf. So the opportunity here is undeniable.
So I believe we're operating in a market that has structural growth opportunities and where society is becoming more aware of the benefits and necessity of long-term investing. In terms of scale, SJP is a much bigger business than many people realize, with more than 4,800 financial advisers operating in almost 2,700 partner businesses. We have a huge market presence, and the pace of growth has been really impressive, more than doubling the number of clients over the last 10 years. Our community of advisers and partners has an average age which is 10 years younger than the industry, showing that we're building advice capability for future generations and providing a great pool of talent among our profession. Ultimately, SJP is the best place for our clients, for partner businesses to grow, and for great careers to thrive.
We're confident that our growth will continue because we have several advantages that we work hard to sustain. We have a proven track record of retaining and growing the partnership. The SJP Academy has brought in more than 1,300 partners and advisers since it began. We have a market-leading succession support scheme that we call BSP, or Business Sale and Purchase, which means longevity and continuity of advice for clients by ensuring we have succession planned in. This scheme continues to work well for clients in the partnership. These things really set us apart from the competition. Most importantly, we are all committed to delivering great client outcomes that foster long-term client retention, advocacy, and new business. Another compelling aspect of our business I'm beginning to know better is our investment proposition. This has, at times, faced some external criticism around performance.
Over the last 12 months, we've seen strong performance across all 12 of our portfolios. Our newest range, Polaris, has been particularly impressive, delivering returns that outpace benchmarks by between 2.5% and 4.5%. This contributed to Polaris being the fastest-growing multi-asset fund range in U.K. financial services. Unsurprisingly, it's been hugely popular with clients, attracting GBP 25 billion in just over one year. We're also looking to expand our product range into low-cost passive investing space. This will ensure we continue to have a real breadth to our investment proposition, providing more choice for clients. Taking a step back, what I see is a fundamentally strong and growing business with a great distribution and asset-gathering capability and an attractive investment proposition that helps deliver good outcomes for our clients.
In what's been a challenging year for the industry, SJP is a business that has shown its resilience both through inflows and in its underlying financial performance. So onto my second key topic for today, which pertains to two challenges we're really addressing. The first is the restructuring of our charges we announced last year. The second relates to the historic evidencing and delivery of ongoing servicing, for which we've created the provision I mentioned earlier. Let's start with the charge structure, which has too often been seen as complex and has therefore been open for external commentators to challenge. In October, we announced the structural changes of unbundling our charges to ensure sustainability for the long term. This gives us confidence that we can grow the business without the need for any further changes to charges that would impact the guidance that was communicated to the market in October.
These developments will be good for clients, appropriate for our marketplace, and are designed for a Consumer Duty world. By extension, they'll be good for our long-term business health and give us the opportunity to consider new propositions and also give us real agility in how we grow the business. Turning now to the second key challenge we're addressing, linked to the historic evidencing and delivery of ongoing servicing. Throughout late 2023 and early 2024, we saw a significant increase in the number of complaints, largely relating to whether clients had received ongoing servicing historically. Given the scale of complaints, we needed to explore this issue by assessing client experience. The crux of the matter is that the completeness of our evidence around ongoing service being delivered is particularly challenging for those years before we implemented Salesforce as our CRM.
In some instances, the frequency of services being delivered was below what clients should have received. This means that we may need to provide refunds for clients where we cannot find evidence that ongoing servicing has been provided. This is clearly a disappointing outcome for everyone. So to wrap up this section, we are dealing decisively with these two key historic challenges. We're moving away from a fee structure open to criticism and moving to one that puts simplicity and comparability at its core, future-proofing our model. We've identified shortcomings in the evidence of ongoing servicing in the past and are dealing with this. The implementation of Salesforce in 2021 now provides evidence of ongoing servicing, giving us confidence for the future.
At this point, I'll hand over to Craig to give you a deeper insight into our financials before I come back to talk about my focus on future priorities. Thank you.
Thanks, Mark. Good morning, everyone. As Mark mentioned, the underlying business has performed well, but it's clear that some important developments have impacted on the financial results for the year. I'll begin by providing some colour around these. Firstly, as Mark has said, we made important announcements in 2023 related to our charging structures, ensuring both compliance with an evolving regulatory environment and a sustainable charging platform that will see the business thrive over the long term. In July, we announced the introduction of a fee cap on long-term bond and pension investments, which came into effect in August. The impact of this in the second half of the year was to reduce net income from funds under management by some GBP 12 million.
Later in the year, we announced that we would be simplifying our charging structure to provide comparability across the marketplace and enable a clearer articulation of the value that we provide to clients across all elements of our proposition. As we explained back in October, this new charging structure will impact the shape of our financial results over time. We provided guidance on how our net income margin range would be affected, and we do not expect any future changes which will require revision to this guidance. Investment in systems and processes will be required to deliver these changes. Much of the cost to change will fall in 2024 and 2025, but we've started work, and the post-tax cost in 2023 was GBP 7.2 million, which is in line with guidance.
These changes will result in a series of timing differences that will impact negatively in the short term but positively in the longer term. Importantly, though, they'll result in long-term simplicity and comparability, which can only strengthen our proposition, our brand, and our reputation. During the first half of 2023, we began to experience elevated levels of complaints in connection with claims that ongoing servicing had been charged for but not delivered. These complaints accelerated towards the end of the year, and our experience was that producing sufficient evidence of delivery was challenging, particularly for the period preceding the rollout of Salesforce in 2021. This resulted in a large volume of upheld complaints followed by refunds for charges, which contributed significantly to the complaints cost within miscellaneous expenses.
Given the volume of complaints received together with the higher uphold rate, a Skilled Person was appointed to perform an assessment of the extent to which issues raised by complaints are replicated across the wider client base. Based on the results of this assessment, the board yesterday agreed a programme to address those cases where evidence of delivery falls below an acceptable standard. The period of review will be from the start of 2018, and this is based on an assessment of the regulatory regime in place during this period, together with the requirement to retain evidence of delivery for this period of time. Having made this decision, we've booked a provision of GBP 426 million gross of tax, which amounts to GBP 324 million net of tax in the cash result.
This charge is our best estimate of the total cost, and it includes an estimated refund of historic ongoing servicing charges together with interest and the administrative costs associated with completing the work. It's clear that addressing the financial risk of a lack of evidence of delivery has had a material effect on the results. It's important to note that this is a historic issue and one which we've addressed for the future using the CRM capabilities within Salesforce. Indeed, the assessment itself shows us that servicing records improved markedly from 2021 onwards when Salesforce was introduced, to the extent that for 2023, we were able to ensure that we have evidence that all clients have received the ongoing service that they have paid for.
As part of this exercise, we're able to isolate those instances where, for whatever reason, there was no evidence of delivery and proactively trigger refund activity. Contextually, these instances represented approximately 2% of clients and 1% of funds under management. This is a process that's been operationalized for 2023 onwards, and the cost of the refund for the year was largely offset against ongoing remuneration paid to advisors. The challenge we have is looking backwards, where the evidence is not as strong. We have more than sufficient funding capacity to deal with the financial impact of the decision we've made. You'll appreciate that in a regulated environment, it's important to have the necessary capital backed up with appropriate liquidity, all in place at the point at which a provision like this is booked. And that's what we've done.
We're confident that the provision we've booked is sufficient, and we've also arranged access to an additional GBP 250 million of credit, which we do not anticipate utilizing but which provides additional contingency funding capacity. As Mark has said, this matter is disappointing for everyone, and we're committed to putting things right, which is what we will do. From a financial perspective, we have the strength to do so and a financial business model that remains in good shape, which is a good point at which to move on to our underlying performance. Before I get into the detail, I'll comment on the underlying cash result, which is broadly flat year-on-year on a pre-tax basis and 4% lower post-tax due to the increased rate of corporation tax.
Given the challenging backdrop for our industry during the year, this is a strong outcome that highlights the fundamental resilience of our business model. Moving on to the key components of underlying cash, I'll start with the all-important net income from funds under management. As a reminder, this line represents the net annual management charges retained by the group after the payment of all the directly associated costs, for example, the advice fees paid to partners, investment management fees paid to external fund managers, and the policy servicing tariff paid to our third-party administration provider. Total post-tax net income has reduced modestly year-over-year, but on a gross-of-tax basis, it grew by 4%, which reflects the increase in average mature funds and includes a contribution of over GBP 40 million of income from gestation balances that matured during the period.
This was partially offset by the impact of the fee cap that we introduced on long-term bonds and pensions investments during the second half. The margin for the second half was within the 55-57 basis points guidance that we gave back in July. As we've previously guided, this margin range will reduce by a further basis point in 2024 to a range from 54-56 basis points, purely as a result of the effective rate of 25% applying for the whole year. Encouragingly, the combined impact of net inflows and strong investment performance during the year has resulted in funds under management increasing by 13% to close the year at a record GBP 168.2 billion. This sets us up well for future growth in net income in 2024.
What also sets us up well for growth in income is the profile of gestation fund that we see maturing every year. Let me explain this for those less familiar. Under our existing charging structure, new life and pensions business does not generate annual product management charges for the first six years of its existence, but it does thereafter. This stock of funds under management that is within this initial non-fee-earning window is what we call gestation. We can see how this stock becomes revenue-earning over time, therefore providing us with strong visibility of future growth in income. For illustrative purposes, our current stock of funds in gestation stands at GBP 47.6 billion and could, in due course, contribute around GBP 270 million a year in recurring income to the cash result, free, of course, of any additional cost.
For 2024, we'll see around GBP 7 billion of fund emerging from gestation and beginning to contribute somewhere in the region of GBP 50 million to the cash result for the first time. Under the new charging structure, from the middle of 2025, there will be no gestation period for new business. Therefore, from that point, the cash result will see the twin benefit of new business contributing fee income from day one and the benefit of existing funds in gestation beginning to mature over time. I'll now move on to the margin arising on new business. As a reminder, this line represents the initial charges on new business retained after the payment of directly associated costs. These are predominantly the initial advice fees paid to partners and the incremental third-party administration costs.
The total margin arising during the year was GBP 104.5 million, representing a 15% reduction compared to the same period in 2022. The key drivers for this reduction are the lower new business volumes and the change in tax rate. Controllable expenses of GBP 283 million net of tax are up 2%, which aligns with our guidance of 8% on a pre-tax basis. The sharp rise in inflation that we've seen in recent years has begun to moderate, and we're budgeting to contain the growth in pre-tax controllable expenses in 2024 to no more than 5% for the year. Allowing for the corporation tax applicable in 2024, this is equivalent to 3% net of tax. Our business in Asia has experienced the same market and economic challenges that we've seen elsewhere.
The increase in net investment of GBP 19.4 million largely reflects some restructuring that we described last year, which has included the closure of our office in Shanghai, some partnership rationalization, and the establishment of a presence in Dubai. Given the challenging operating environment and the impact this has had on accumulated flows, we now expect Asia to break even in 2027, which is two years later than planned. We anticipate total net costs in 2024 of approximately GBP 11 million. Our DFM business has delivered a result slightly ahead of guidance, with the total investment reducing to GBP 6.4 million. We're entering the final stages of the back-office rebuild, which is charged a profit as the expenses incurred. As a result, we expect DFM to experience a reduction in costs in 2024 and to perform somewhere in line with break-even for the year.
Our FSCS levy and regulatory fees expense of GBP 23 million for the period was more than 40% lower year on year. As we've reported already, though, this is a one-off reduction, and at this point, we believe that the FSCS costs for the coming year will increase by around 50%, while other regulatory costs will remain broadly stable. We continue to earn shareholder interest on invested elements of working capital at a rate closely linked to the Bank of England base rate. The low interest rate environment over the past 10 years has meant only a modest contribution to the cash result. But for 2023, as the base rate increased to its current level of 5.25%, you can see that it's been a significant contributor.
For the purposes of modelling for 2024, if the current base rate were to hold for the whole year, we estimate that shareholder interest could be somewhere in the region of GBP 60 million-GBP 70 million. You'll need to flex this number for your own view of average interest rates over the period. Just as a reminder, this income is not client-related. It's income on shareholder assets only. Miscellaneous costs have increased to GBP 35.8 million, and the biggest single component of this was the elevated complaints experience that led to the board's provision decision that I've already covered. In normal years, the costs of complaints typically net off against internal partner PI contributions, but for 2023, this wasn't the case.
Taking all of this into account, the underlying outcome for 2024 was a strong one, but inevitably somewhat overshadowed by the exceptional provision that we've established to deal with historic issues. I'll now turn briefly to Embedded Value. This, for the less familiar, is a basis of reporting that gives a measure of the total value that might be expected to arise over the lifetime of the existing enforced business, without making any allowance for the new business that may be written in the future. The key figure here is the EV net asset value per share, which now stands at GBP 14.11. This year-on-year reduction reflects the impacts of changes to the charges that we communicated last year, as well as the impact of the ongoing service evidence provision that we announced today.
Moving on to solvency, the ratio for our life companies stood at 162% at the end of the year. This ratio has increased markedly as a result of both future changes in the charging structure, together with a change introduced as part of a wider package of Solvency II reform, which reduces the risk margin that we're required to hold. In the past, and based on our current charge structure, we've targeted 110% of the standard formula within our capital management approach. Our future charge structure will redirect income from the life companies into other parts of the group. And while we'll continue to apply the same risk modeling, the reduction in life company VIF has resulted in a change from 110% to 130%. The effect of all of this is to reduce further the capital constraint in our life companies.
This has enabled us to use surplus liquidity of some GBP 190 million to in part fund the exceptional provision that I've already covered. Finally, I'll comment on the dividend. Our financial results have been significantly impacted by the ongoing service evidence provision. But the board recognizes the importance of return to shareholders and is confident that sufficient capital and liquidity is available to deal with this legacy matter. In light of this, the board proposes a final dividend of GBP 0.08 per share to take the total dividend to GBP 23.83 per share for the full year. Looking forwards, a combination of the creation of the new provision and an expected decrease in the level of profit retention in the business over the next few years, as we transition to our new charging structure, reduce resources available to invest in long-term growth in the business.
Accordingly, the board has decided to revise our approach to shareholder distributions. Going forward, the board expects that total annual distributions will be set at 50% of the full year underlying cash result, and for the next three years will comprise GBP 0.18 per share in annual dividends declared, with the balance distributed through share repurchases. Once our new charging structure is fully embedded, we anticipate that the earnings trajectory will improve during 2027 and beyond. The board expects that distributing 50% of the underlying cash result will continue to strike the right balance between investment for growth and returns to shareholders, while seeing shareholder distributions increase over time. The upward trajectory in profits should then provide the board with options to grow the dividend element within the total return.
So all in all, a strong underlying performance for the business, which is inevitably overshadowed by an exceptional cost of addressing a historic issue, but which demonstrates a core resilience that bodes well for the longer term. For your convenience, the slide on the screen provides a single summary of all of the guidance that I've provided, which should enable you to estimate our financial results for 2024 and update those estimates as market performance evolves over the year. Now back to Mark.
Thank you for that, Craig. Among everything that Craig has covered off, it is important to note that fundamentally our underlying financial performance is robust. With the external environment likely to remain challenging in the near term, it's important that we continue to deliver on the core basics of running a great advice business.
This means all of us in the SJP community doing what we can to help clients achieve good outcomes. It means creating an environment and culture that encourages and promotes excellence. It means continually adapting and improving so that we build on our market leadership. Beyond dealing with the historic challenges I set out earlier, my 2024 priorities include setting a path for continued growth and success to 2030 and beyond, which will be supported by a business review. We will start telling our story to the market rather than having this written for us. At our annual company meeting in January, we set out how we'll have a louder voice in the market to help shape and grow our vital profession.
Finally, I commit to keep learning and broadening my understanding of the business, the broad advice profession, our clients, our partners, and exploring how we can make the SJP community even stronger together. So, to briefly touch on our business review. The work has just begun. We're just a few weeks in. I brought in a leading consulting firm to support us in developing this, bringing in fresh ideas, thoughts, and challenge. They'll help us identify, build, and tone the muscles to prepare for the future and ensure we continue to lead and evolve, plotting a sustained path for growth, focusing on good cost management, and creating leverage through our scale and operational capacity. We're working at pace to deliver this review, and I look forward to updating you on progress with our half-year results.
So, to summarize my presentation today, we have a number of key strengths that give us a real competitive advantage, and these continue to position us strongly to capture the significant market opportunities ahead. While we'll face some challenges in 2023 and into early 2024, we are dealing with them. We will not shy away from making difficult decisions, and we continue to explore how we develop SJP for the future. Thank you.
Good morning, and thank you for joining us. Mark FitzPatrick here. We'll open up for questions in a moment, but before we do anything else, on behalf of our entire SJP community, I want to share our condolences with the friends and family of Lord Jacob Rothschild, who sadly passed away. He was one of the founding fathers of this business alongside Mike Wilson and Sir Mark Weinberg, and has left an extraordinary legacy for our industry. So, onto the Q&A session. Before we open up the line, I want to just reiterate four key points from our results announcement and the presentation you will have just seen.
Firstly, 2023 was a challenging year for our industry, but our underlying performance has been robust. We continue to deliver scale, net inflows achieved through strong new client investments and high retention, and we've grown funds under management to a record level. Secondly, we're addressing a couple of important historic challenges. We're getting on with implementing these changes to the charging structure that we announced last year, which will future-proof our business. We're dealing with the historic evidencing and delivery of ongoing servicing. This has led to the significant one-off provision we've recorded, which has impacted our financial results. Thirdly, we announced this morning that the board is revising its guidance for future shareholder distributions, which we think strikes the right balance between investment for growth and returns to shareholders.
Finally, while it's clearly been a very difficult period for the business, I want to make it clear that I'm very confident for the future. We have a huge market opportunity in U.K. financial advice, great fundamentals that allow us to prosecute that opportunity, and we're working on a business review that will help sharpen us up to accelerate growth, deliver economies of scale, and improve returns. We've got plenty of work to get done, but we're in fundamentally good shape, and I've got a lot of optimism for the future given the structural need for advice and our relative position in the market. Now, I'm sure you've got a lot of questions given what we've thrown at you this morning, so let's dive into that. Operator, over to you, please. Thank you.
If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If for any reason you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by two. Again, to ask a question, please press star followed by one. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question, and please do ensure that you are unmuted locally. Our first question today comes from the line of Andrew Sinclair from Bank of America. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Thank you very much. Good morning, everyone. Three from me as usual, please. The first was just on the provision. Just really wonder if you can talk us through the process that you've gone through with the FCA, the regulator, to make sure this is just a one-and-done provision and that the regulator won't have any ongoing concerns. I realize the FCA never gives a sign-off, per se, but what processes have you gone through with the regulator to make sure they're comfortable with your ongoing advice provision and conversation? So that's the first question. Second was just on the buybacks component of capital return. Just how is that going to work on timing?
Well, buybacks we declared once a year at full year results and just run after that. So I guess first one at full year 2024 results. And I guess we'll buybacks be part of the ongoing toolkit from 2027 onwards. That's my second question. And third, Mark, you mentioned a couple of times in your intro comments there about a business review that's ongoing. Is that something that's going to be included in the existing 5% per annum cost guidance, or how should we think about costs of that business review over the next few years? Thank you very much.
Andy, thank you. I'll take one and three, and Craig, if you could take the second one in terms of the buyback timing and the like. Thank you. So this would be the provision of the process with the FCA. We've been in extensive conversations with the FCA. We have had a Skilled Person appointed to look at the elements of our book and our ability to evidence ongoing servicing. I think we saw a significant spike in complaints the back end of last year and early this year.
So they have undertaken a review of the elements of our book and actually conducted a statistically significant sample that included a large number of data points that actually, when that work finished and that work effectively looking at the sample effectively finished earlier this week, enabled us to look at the overall findings from that and determine then that we needed to make the provision that we have made. So we've taken the FCA through this. Throughout, there have been bilaterals and trilaterals, as is normal for these type of processes. I've been meeting with them regularly. We're having very open discussions with them on the findings. And so therefore, I don't think there's any surprises in terms of what we are announcing vis-à-vis the regulator.
But clearly, as you say, the regulator is not in a position and does not generally kind of bless these type of things, but this has been done with their full awareness and understanding. Onto buybacks, and then I'll come back to the business review.
Yeah. Andy, the buyback activity will be, in terms of timing, broadly consistent with the normal pattern of dividends. So you're quite right. End of 2024 is the point at which that will be described and quantified, and the timing of that will be likely spring onwards. The part B to your question was, do we see that as a longer-term feature of shareholder returns? I think at the moment, I would say quite probably yes. But of course, these things are always dependent on the feedback we get from shareholders.
Over the past few years, it's certainly been the case that we've had more shareholders with an interest in buybacks as a mechanism than perhaps we did if you go further back. At this stage, I think it is likely to remain a feature. Then,
Craig, before we move on, just one point of clarification. Sorry, it was just, you're saying that the buyback timing would be broadly in line with the dividend. I mean, clearly, the dividend historically has been part interim, part final. Will there still be potentially any interim buyback, or will it all just be a one buyback a year?
Yes, potentially there would be.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. In terms of the business review, look, we're a few weeks into the business review now, so still very, very early days. It is comprehensive, but as I think was said in the announcements, actually, I've had a good look at the element of the charging restructuring that was announced in October last year, and I'm very comfortable with where the guys have got to. And I'm comfortable that actually we'll be able to grow the business without need for any further changes to charges that would impact the guidance that Craig and the team communicated to the market back in October.
So I'm looking forward to sharing the outputs from the review with the market with the half-year results and giving an indication of what that shows and where the effort and energies are looking at. The element of the expenses piece of it and the cost of it element, Craig?
Yeah. So what we have at the moment in front of us is a balanced budget which shows a 5% increase. Obviously, as we head into that strategic review, that will be under consideration. But what I would say at this stage is that when you go into this sort of strategic review, it's rarely with an intention to push the cost base up. So right now, we have a balanced budget for 5%. Thanks, Andy.
Sorry, just one final point of clarification. Apologies, guys. One final point was just for the actual review itself, will there be any below-the-line costs for that coming through this year in 2024, or should we think that 2024, kind of between the underlying and net cash generation line, is a cleaner year?
I think it's too early to say because the review hasn't even really gone underway in such a way that you could predict the outcome. So that'll be a judgment we make further down track. I think a key element, Andy, for the review, in addition to looking at the market and various other things, is looking at actually how do we really focus and become even more efficient, and how do we try and recapture some of the operational leverage that our size and scale should offer us.
Super helpful. Thank you very much, guys.
Thank you. Thanks, Andy.
Thank you. The next question today comes from the line of David McCann from Numis. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Yeah. Good morning, everyone. Yeah, four from me, I'm afraid. So I'll pip Andy's debt by one. So first one is, when you're looking at justification of providing a service to justify the fee, I mean, what evidence do you actually need that enough is being done to justify those fees? I mean, is it simply a case of an annual meeting has happened regardless of what was actually said or otherwise in the meeting, or does it need to be more of substance? Clearly, as you're aware, the FCA is looking at this.
So I guess what I'm getting to there is, even with the review you've done, is it possible the FCA could still challenge whether sufficient activities have actually been done, not just a box-ticking exercise that a meeting has been logged as being done? That's question one.
Second question for the backward-looking part more is, I mean, is this purely an evidence issue, i.e., that you just didn't have evidence prior to 2021 to document that you'd actually done meetings and other points of contact, or do you think there's actually something more of a structural issue here that advisors were systematically not providing the service and taking the fees for doing that? Thirdly, why is this review not pre-2018? That'll be useful just to get your sort of records on the record there. And fourthly, more broadly to this, I mean, this is obviously the third incident, I guess, of something we've had like this in short audit. Is there anything else that you're aware of, not related to this specifically, that could have a major adverse impact on the business which you haven't already mentioned to the market? Thank you.
David, hi, Mark. Four very valid questions, and thank you for those. Evidence required, the level of evidence effectively. We've looked at what records that we have and effectively been guided by the standard and the level of evidence that the Skilled Person has effectively thought is appropriate in terms of the review that they conducted. Demonstrating that there was contact, that there was a meeting, and there was some kind of notes relating to the meeting about the engagement and the level of discussion that was had. It can't just be, "Yeah, I logged a call." It needs to be a little bit more than that in terms of the level of evidencing. In terms of the kind of the is it purely an evidential issue?
There are so many kind of regulators across industries that work off a maxim, "If you can't evidence it was done, it wasn't done." So effectively, what we are looking at is an element of when we go in and when we talk to partners and we look at what it is they've done, they say, "Yeah, I remember reaching out to that person, but I don't have a record on file for that component." And if we don't have a record on file, then actually that kind of fails the test, and then we need to refund the client for that particular piece.
I think one of the things I would just make sure everybody just hasn't lost sight of because I'm consciously through a lot of you a lot of you this morning, is that since effectively 2021 with the implementation of Salesforce, that gives us really good oversight, central oversight, of the level of evidence and the degree of evidence that we have. During the course of 2023, when we wrapped up business at the end of December, we noted that actually the size and scale of the issue for 2023 was 2% of our clients had not been serviced or we didn't have evidence of servicing, and that related to about 1% of our fund. We have written out to those affected clients already.
We have made contact with them, and effectively, they will be refunded during the course of this year in terms of the fact that payment would have been withdrawn from their accounts. So they will be made good on that basis. Why not pre-2018? So 2018 is a key year for two reasons. One is 2018 is when MiFID came in and when the requirements and the COBS handbook rule was explicitly set out in terms of what was required. But also 2018 is when the statute of limitation runs in terms of the period with which this type of evidence is required to be retained. Clearly, we have evidence going back a lot longer where there are pension contracts or bond contracts and things like that.
But evidencing ongoing engagement and discussions with clients, that kind of evidential record is not required by law to be kept longer than 2018. So it's for both of those reasons, effectively, that we look at from 2018 onwards. And then the last question, which is, I entirely understand the nature of the question. Third instance, anything else, Mark? Look, I've been in the role 12 weeks. I've been spending a lot of time listening, learning, looking at things. I can't see any other significant potholes ahead of us. There are clearly going to be bumps along the way as there are in any businesses of our size and scale and as regulations change and as the environment changes.
But actually, I'm confident that with this issue being kind of sized now, acknowledged, and that we are dealing with this, we're also dealing with the element of the changes to the fee structures. All of this puts us up in a place where we can look forward with confidence. And I'm very glad we have that central Salesforce. The guys did a great job a number of years putting it in because without that kind of centralized database, it'd be incredibly difficult to be able to give any indication to you or to anybody else in terms of where we are today. And that's also what gives me confidence that this is a historic issue as against a current issue.
Thanks, David.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question today comes from the line of Andrew Baker from Citi. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Yeah, the first one is, I guess, with a greater focus on servicing going forward because of these legacy issues, do you see any impact on new business capacity of the partnership or retention of advisors or anything like that? And I guess, are there any implications for advisors themselves that hadn't evidenced ongoing service levels historically? And then secondly, just on the dividend, I guess I understand, obviously, the underlying cash earnings profile for the next few years makes it difficult for the sort of 70% payout ratio. But I guess there's been a rebasing down to 27% onwards to 50%. So does this mean that you just see greater need for investment in the business than was previously the case?
And then I guess related to this, should we read anything into the mix between the dividend and the buybacks in terms of do you see the buyback component as sort of more discretionary, or should we just look at it as the 50% payout ratio is pretty much fixed? Thank you.
Andrew, thank you. So again, three very good questions. Thank you. Let me start with the servicing one. Craig, if you could pick up the two and three around the dividend and the buyback piece, please. In terms of the servicing going forward, well, to some extent, actually, during 2023, we had a good run at the partners and advisors engaging actively with clients, which is why we ended up with our 2% of clients and 1% fund not serviced or evidenced during the course of last year.
So I think the partnership has got the muscle now of engaging and seeing all their clients on an annual basis, one. Two is the element of with those kind of element of frequency of intervention, especially when the market is moving so much. Actually, that's really encouraging because it means that the advisors and their clients are building their relationship, making sure that the advice they're giving continues to stay relevant and continues candidly to be able to explore if there's any other ways that the advisor is going to be able to support their clients. So in many aspects, I think partners engaging with their clients and greater connectivity is a positive and to be seen as a positive. Retention of advisors, not seeing any shift or any change with that during the course of the year.
If anything, actually, we're seeing really good numbers coming through the academy. To be honest, that was one of real kind of gems, I think, that I hadn't appreciated coming into the role, the strength, the scale of the academy, what it does, how it does it, the scale of people coming through. I was in Bristol a few weeks ago meeting with some of the academy members, just speaking to them about their enthusiasm and excitement. Young cohort, what it means is that the average age of our advisor in SJP is something like 46. The average age across the industry is 58. So we've got over a decade of extra longevity with our advisors, which is fantastic, which is great for clients, gives them longevity.
But also with the younger cohort means that intergenerational transfer, the younger generation has got people who look and seem like that and feel like that same age profile, so it's easier for them to connect. So actually, I think the partners have had a very busy year last year. Talking to a lot of people, markets have been kind of very volatile. That's a time when actually people need advice. And actually, a stat that somebody mentioned to me the other days, if you look at each of our partner businesses, almost as a branch, we have more branches, if you will, than the top five banks in the U.K. across the U.K., So we have phenomenal coverage, which is so important when banks are closing and it's so difficult to find a GP.
Actually, the person you can talk to now is your advisor, and that's becoming a more real, more mainstream piece. Anyway, let me get off my soapbox. Craig, over to you on the dividend piece, please.
Yeah, hi, Andrew. Yeah, you call out the underlying cash profile, and you're absolutely right. The structural change within fees and charges has the impact you describe. But underneath this, it's really important to remember that this is still a growing business. We're growing funds under management. We're growing the number of advisors. That may not be reflected in the pattern of emergence of profit within the business in the short term, but it certainly is in the longer term. And what it means is that we need to continue investing in that capital.
The other thing that is always within the sort of capital activities that the group does annually is a commitment to partner business lending, which is incredibly important for succession planning. And that's something that tends to grow in line with the value of funds under management. So when we look for the long term, we have to make sure that we've got the capacity to be able to keep that important thing going and continue to invest in the future shape of the business. So in short, I think your question was, is there something that we need something for that we haven't put forward? No, it's very much a continuation of the growth that you see. Your second question was around the buyback element and whether that was discretionary. And that's certainly not how I would present it.
The way I think I would present it is that we have a payout ratio that creates a financial envelope, which is equal to 50% of the underlying cash. Within that, there's an element of fix for the dividend. And I would see it more as a balancing figure in the way that we will operate that going forwards.
Great. Thank you, guys.
Thank you. The next question today comes from the line of Ben Bathurst from RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Morning. I've got questions in three areas, if I may. Starting on the complaints provision, could you just provide some more details on what proportion of partner businesses you think this evidence issue is related to? Was it a small minority, or was it a sort of wholesale issue across the partnership? Secondly, related to the complaints matter, could you just confirm the cost recognized within that miscellaneous line in the cash result for 2023 that relates to the complaints received in that year?
Thirdly, on the charge changes announced in October, we're a few months down the line now. I wonder if you could comment on the partner response to the charge overhaul. Has it been received positively, or do you envisage the changes having any impact on partner retention or growth over the short to medium term? Thank you.
Thank you, Ben, for that. I think, Craig, if you could pick up on the second question, please, that'd be helpful.
In terms of this, is there any kind of clustering, etc., from the samples that we have done or the Skilled Person has done and that we have done, there doesn't seem to be any obvious cluster that we would be able to discern at this stage other than that there's a slightly higher kind of situation of where there's lack of evidence where the fund level is lower. So that's probably the closest we have to a and you see that through the situation in 2023 where we said 2% of clients and 1% of fund. So we do see an element of slightly lower fund. The evidencing of ongoing servicing is more patchy. Craig, in terms of the cost requirement?
Yeah. So in our disclosures on provisions, we show additional provisions made, and this is, of course, gross of tax of GBP 61 million. Against that, you always have some offset of provisions. But the cost of complaints and the cost of putting those right does hit the miscellaneous line within the cash results. As I said in the presentation, in a more normal environment, the cost of complaints bear similarity to internal contributions that we seek annually in advance from the partnership. But they sort of revealed themselves in 2023 because of the number of complaints together with the uphold rate.
But if you look at the miscellaneous charge for the year, you could assume that net increase year-on-year, which has caused net of tax, can be entirely attributed to the complaints experience that, as we've said, accelerated in the second half.
Thanks, Craig. And then in terms of the charging changes, the structural changes announced back in October, I know the guys had a lot of reaching out, a lot of engagement with the partnership, and I've spent a lot of time talking to the partnership. Actually, what struck me with our partners and advisors is just how entrepreneurial they are and the speed with which they adjust, they adapt, their focus. So there's a lot of energy and a lot of work being spent by the partners on how they're adjusting their business, how they're preparing for the element of the change. The element of when I look at the KPIs, is there anything that indicates a kind of shift in partner attrition or anything like that? I'm not seeing any kind of major shift.
As I mentioned earlier, I'm still seeing people joining the academy, so there isn't anything on that side that's causing a particular concern. We will be continuing to spend a lot of time working with and supporting the partners as they go through the element of these changes. We have a large field team that spends pretty much every waking moment engaging, talking, supporting the partners. And I talk to a lot of them on a regular basis as well. So I think people are focused on the, "How do I adapt to the change? What changes do I need to make? How can I get myself ready for it? How do I need to retrain, relearn, be supported?" And that's all the work that we are doing to support them on that particular piece. But thank you for those questions, Ben.
Thank you.
The next question today comes from the line of Nasib Ahmed from UBS. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Morning. Thanks for taking my questions. Firstly, on the provision, is that net of any insurance recoverables that you can get? And why isn't a lot of the lack of advice covered by PI insurance? That's question number one. Secondly, on the payout ratio, I mean, you're going from 70%-50%, but you already have a 5% growing cost base within the underlying cash result. So I guess what is the delta? Where are you spending the other 20%? I see IFRS is no longer constrained. So to Craig's point, is that mostly partner loans? And then finally, on the RCF, you've used a little bit of that. Again, what was the use of that cash? I can see GBP 1.7 billion of liquid resources.
Why do you need to draw down on the RCF and have an additional credit facility that you flagged? Thanks.
Nasib, thank you for those questions. Those three questions strike me. The three questions, I'm going to hand over to my CFO. So Craig, over to you, please.
Yeah, it looks like the hat trick for me. So this provision, it's important to note that this is not a product failure, and this is not a mis-selling, a professional mis-selling failure. This is a question of whether a service was provided. And that's not normally the sort of PI cover that is obtainable. So we do, of course, have PI cover in the event that any of those instances occur, but it's not something I would anticipate would apply to this type of challenge within a business.
So therefore, the amount that you see in the provision doesn't include any anticipated recovery on insurance. The second question is around the 5% growth. And you're absolutely right, of course. As we incur expenditure through the cash results, it impacts on the underlying cash, which therefore impacts on the financial envelope that I was describing earlier. But we do have a number of things that don't pass through the cash result but nonetheless are very important within a business like this. Capital is one that I always call out. And I'll go back to what I mentioned earlier, actually. The profile of earnings is impacted by the change in fees and charges structure, but we are still a growing business. Our manufacturing businesses continue to grow, and therefore, they continue to need capital, and we have to anticipate that.
We have a growing partnership, and we have a growing funds under management. The partner business loans, again, it's important to remember that these are critical for our long-term succession planning. Good long-term succession planning results in good long-term retention, both within the partnership and both for clients. But as we look at funds growing, so too will the demands placed on the balance sheet to make sure that that partner lending activity and the BSP activity that Mark referred to earlier is in good shape. Your final question was on the RCF. The RCF is something that we dip into and we dip out of.
One of the reasons it's there is that structurally, we have a business where a significant proportion of our profitability in any given year accumulates in a life company that makes one annual distribution in the February or the March after the close of the financial year. It's very typical for life companies. And therefore, we have a situation where we have a lot of accumulated cash in a regulated business that hasn't yet become shareholder-free cash. And whenever we talk about group liquidity, we tend to think about the latter. So the RCF is there as a facility, always has been, and I do see a long-term role for it to dip into and dip out of as and when required.
Thank you, Nasib.
Craig, if I can come back on the partners, how much on-balance sheet loans do you expect to lend out over the next five years?
We don't have a longer-term projection of that. But obviously, what we do as we look forward is we strike a balance between those facilities that we're able to fund using some of the banks that we work with who will lend directly into the partnership. We have a number of securitizations that Mark's referred to earlier. But whatever the case, and regardless of how much of other people's balance sheet we can use, we do need the flexibility within our own balance sheet, both to lend and also to make periodic acquisitions where, for example, we're warehousing businesses as part of a longer-term succession plan.
Thank you. Thanks.
Thank you.
The next question today comes from the line of Stephen Hayward from HSBC. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Good morning. Thank you very much. Yeah, three questions from me. One is on the actual size of the provision and what it covers. If you can follow me on this math and correct me where I'm wrong, that would be very helpful. On the GBP 426 million provision that is for ongoing advice, which is a roughly 50 basis points charge, that is equal to sort of GBP 85 billion worth of AUM, which you divide by sort of 5 or 4 years over the period since 2018. So you get to roughly GBP 17 billion of AUM where you might have had or there might be a lack of evidence of providing service. And then this is GBP 17 billion of AUM over that 5 periods is an average of over 10% of AUM. That does sound dramatically high.
Please correct me if it is not the right area to go into. But what sort of evidence now do you have that things have dramatically improved? I see the Salesforce obviously helped a lot. But is there now a mistrust issue and lack of goodwill with a lot of clients in your company? Secondly, you mentioned in the webcast that you're developing passive and low-cost range for your clients. I just wanted to understand how this would work and what would or who would be offered it and what products. And then thirdly, you have talked about a national advertising campaign going forward. What was the purpose of doing this, and potentially, what cost is this? Thank you.
Stephen, thank you. I'm going to ask Craig to cover the first. But before he gets into the element of any numbers, and hopefully, we don't lose everybody through that element, one of the elements that were kind of 1B of your question was, is there lack of goodwill? We're not seeing that. We're not seeing that at all, actually, by virtue of the fact that client retention is high, client advocacy is high. By virtue of the fact that nearly 1 million annual wealth reports have landed on people's doorsteps or in their inbox over the course of the last 6-8 weeks that demonstrate the strength of the investment performance from the end of last year, actually, clients are feeling positive about St. James's Place.
Clients and advisors are feeling positive about the relationship because the relationship is intensified where, in some instances, it may not have been as close as it needed to have been in the past. So actually, as we look forward, I'm feeling very confident about what we have. I know speaking to a number of advisors over the last couple of weeks, given the strength of the investment performance, they are really engaging with their clients and very comfortable engaging with their clients because of that strong backdrop. So we're not seeing any kind of servicing or kind of goodwill-related issue with our clients at all on that particular piece. Why don't I just pause now, hand over to Craig to have a chat in terms of element of the size of the provision, and then I'll pick up the other two pieces.
Yeah, hi, Stephen. So very, very difficult to have a full-on mathematical conversation on a call. But a couple of things might help here. So within that provision, there is a substantial allowance for the administrative cost of actually execution.
So as well as striking a provision that includes the cost calculated of refunding for the service, we've also essentially, into this provision, brought forward the future costs of running the program that will result in those repayments. So all of the individual case reviews that we'll need to do obviously come at a cost. Now, that's obviously a different type of cost to project than the cost of refund. But we do have the slight advantage there of having the complaints experienced during the course of 2023. So we have a pretty good idea of how much it costs to get one of these things done. And we also have a good idea of what it costs to get it done at scale. So the breakdown of that, and it also includes some FOS interest as well, which is lower in scale, obviously.
The other thing that you should take into account here is that you have a number of moving parts. So funds under management are growing pretty rapidly over that period. So 2018 was sort of in the region of GBP 117 billion. And we're sort of in the GBP 160s now. So funds under management have grown rapidly. You then have a pattern in the data that says the further back you go, the more likely you are to see gaps. So you see more incidents going backwards but with less effect because funds under management were lower. So there are lots of moving parts.
The other thing I'll just emphasize is that 2023, I know you didn't use it in your math, but it would be tempting to look at the experience that we've quoted for 2023, which is that when we came to our final conclusion of the process, there were 2% of clients which were 1% of funds under management, which is another factor, actually, the scale of investment that you're likely to find. 2023 was using Salesforce operationally throughout. So the Salesforce disciplines were as they should be and as they will be going forwards. So you can't look at the 2023 outcome and expect that that tells you what you're going to find when you look backwards because 2023 has been completely cleansed and operationalized going forwards. So I'm afraid I can't reconcile your numbers.
But hopefully, I've given you enough to show what the various patterns are within the data that we've used. I suppose you can always pick up with Stephen offline if there's some recitations that you want us to work through.
Stephen, if I can move on to your second question. We already have passives in the Polaris range, and I touched upon the Polaris range in the script earlier on. So it's not new. But I think we're looking to expand it further because we're looking to try and offer more choice to clients. And the element of exactly how the guys do it and the way they do it, that's still being worked through. But as I said, there is already some passives in the Polaris range. And the Polaris range has done incredibly well kind of getting into, effectively, GBP 25 billion in the space of a year.
So incredibly good for our clients and incredibly powerful for our partners and advisors to be able to steer clients towards that providers within their attitude to risk. And then the last piece in terms of the advertising campaign, yep, we're very excited by that. We gave a glimmer of some of the aspects at the annual company meeting at the back end of January. The overall size of that, I think, is kind of high single digits millions that we are kind of looking at. The geography of that, I'm going to need help from my CFO on that, showing you the advertising campaign. That's all taken care of. We've got the 5% guidance.
Perfect. Thank you.
Thanks, Stephen.
Thank you very much.
The next question today comes from the line of Andrew Crean from Autonomous Research. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Good morning. Could I ask three questions and make one request? In terms of the questions, what is within the provision of GBP 426 million? What, in pounds million, is the admin cost and the interest payment so we can get to the provision? Secondly, in the period from 2018 to 2023, what was the overall amount received by partners for ongoing advice so we can reckon what level you're providing? And is there any chance of you getting some of this money back from the partners? Thirdly, you've given us the data on 2023 in terms of 2% of customers and 1% of funds under management. You have the data for 2021 and 2022 because you've got Salesforce. Can you give us the data for 2021 and 2022?
And then finally, the request, can you give us for the 12 portfolios the one, three, and five-year performance relative to benchmark so that we can see the whole picture?
Okay. Andrew, hi. So I'm probably going to hand over to Craig for the majority of those, I'm afraid. Craig, do you want to kick off, please?
Well, I think the first question and sorry, the line's a bit rough. But I think the first question is around the construct of the provision and what the various component parts are. We have clearly disclosed what we're required to disclose from an IFRS and auditing standards point of view in the news release, which will be replicated in the annual report and accounts. And I absolutely understand that the more data we can provide to some in the outside world, the more helpful that is.
But it's also helpful to others in the outside world that may trigger thoughts around commercial sensitivity. So what we've done is we've set out the basis of the decision. We've set out the component parts in terms of the descriptors within the provision. But we are not, at this point, giving a full analysis of how that's constructed. But we have. You'll have seen some sensitivity notes in the disclosures. In terms of recoveries from partners, totally understand the question because the way in the current fees and charges model, the way that works is that the 50 basis points is essentially paid through SJP to the partnership. This is clearly a very recent decision. Sorry, I've got some noise on the line. If perhaps somebody could go on mute.
So there will be instances as we go through this review where it's entirely appropriate for us to make a recovery from the partnership. There'll be other cases where that's more of a challenge. And I think that's going to be a complicated path. Now, where that leaves us from an accounting perspective is that we have what you would characterise as a contingent asset. But any estimates that we may make, and I think it's too early to make such an estimate, would be contingent in nature and therefore not the sort of thing that you would book in the provision. So once again, that provision is a gross figure. And so just to say, on the element of 2023, where clients have not there's no evidence of ongoing servicing, effectively, when we wrote I mentioned earlier, we've written out to clients.
Effectively, partners will be making good for the cost of that delta for the 2023 data .
And as Craig said, there will be some instances where recovery of charges from partnership may be sought where there are gaps in service or lack of evidence of service. And then the benchmark data in terms of the investment performance, etc., we can send that out. And we can put that up on the webpage so it's available for everyone.
Sorry, can I come back to you? Because I don't think you've answered the question about what is the overall amount paid to partners for ongoing advice from 2018 to now? And secondly, what was the experience in 2021 and 2022 in terms of lack of advice to compare with the 2% and the 1% which you quoted for 2023?
So the total ongoing advice paid to the partnership is included within the total remuneration payments to partners within the financial statements, Andrew. So that isn't data that we've previously published. But having said that, and I haven't got the math in front of me, if you were to take your view of average funds under management for each of those years and apply 50 basis points, that would give you somewhere very close to the answer. It's just not a number we separately publish because we incorporate it into the temporary partner remuneration cost, which includes new business. And the 2021 and 2022 figures for lack of contact? The 2021, 2022 figures for the Salesforce, it's not that's actually I have to hand here at all. I think what Andrew's asking is what the component part of that is in the provision.
But as I mentioned, Andrew, we haven't broken that provision down. So we haven't changed [crosstalk] it because we view that as information that we, it's looking for the equivalent of reasonable business for 2022 and 2021. Yeah. Yeah. But that's not Andrew, that's not published partly because at this stage, the element of in Salesforce went in in 2021, the level of uptake on it took time to come through. 2023, when, dare I say, the full fat version of Salesforce being used extensively throughout the partnership, usage evolved over 2021 and 2022. But to give you a pure, I don't have it now. I'm not kind of joking. I don't have the stat in front of me. The stat is likely to be misleading because it's not necessarily going to have all of the data up on it.
One of the exercises that we are embarking upon is getting all of the data up onto Salesforce over the coming months so that we can see clearly where the gaps are and which clients we need to write out to and engage with for the element of exploring whether they wish to participate and whether they wish to or believe that they are eligible for a refund.
Thank you.
Thank you.
The next question today comes from the line of Enrico Bolzoni from JP Morgan. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Yeah. Thank you. And thanks for taking my questions. So my first question goes back to the statistic you gave us of about 2% of clients accounting for roughly 1% of assets that were primarily this concern. This lack of advice was more evident. So the read across to that for me is that perhaps it's actually very difficult for an advisor to service well or rather say it's not economical to service well smaller clients. And if I look at the ratio of in the number of clients per advisor, St. James's Place, using some of your latest published figure, the average advisor has roughly 200 clients. Now, this looks like quite a high number. So I'm wondering, should we actually think that we reached saturation in terms of how many clients actually an advisor can serve?
And related to that, do you think this could have implication in terms of raising the bar or the threshold for an advisor to decide to onboard a prospect client going forward just because they realize that, no, there's a lot of scrutiny, and they generally need to serve also these smaller clients?
This is my first question. My second question is just about timing. Can you please give us an idea of how long you think it will take for these claims to eventually unfold and for this matter to be completely resolved? I appreciate that the provision is now booked. This is it. Or at least, this should be it. I would just like to understand for how long this process might continue because also, I suppose, in those instances where you might actually have the partner picking up the bill, so actually refunding clients, that could cause a partial unwind in the provision you booked. The final question, can you just please provide a bit of extra color on the business review you're doing? Clearly, you went through already a meaningful change in pricing structure. Now, we have this provision.
What are the other key elements that you need to review? And what should we expect? And maybe it linked to my original question, do you think there is scope for the business to invest more in new technologies to ensure that partners can service in an economical way also smaller clients without the risk of eventually having to refund some of them because they didn't receive the service they paid for? Thank you.
Enrico, thank you. In terms of looking at question one, effectively, when I think our partners and advisors engage with clients, they're generally looking at clients or prospective clients where there's likely to be a lifetime value and a significant growth of wealth potential within that prospective client.
And therefore, I think in the first couple of years, especially if you look at folk around the city or something like that, the number may not be huge, but it got huge growth potential. So the advisors, when they engage with people, it's not just what you do on day one. It's what might be. And the longevity of relationships that our advisors have with their clients is meaningful, is very, very important. I've met partners and advisors for whom they are second-generation family of partners and advisors in our business whose parents were kind of founding partners. They've retired. Their kids have picked up the mantle, run with the business, and continuing to look after clients and children of the original partners, clients, etc. So the whole element of that scale, if one looked at it purely on a transactional basis, I could understand your thesis.
By and large, I think we are a relationship business. We're a kind of face-to-face financial advice component. Across the industry, the element of the expectation, I think, is clear from the regulator in terms of ongoing advice and what is required. Given the pace, the way things are changing in the market, you'd expect people to want, by and large, to be in contact with their advisor on a regular basis. Candidly, we think contact is good. Engagement is good. Understanding where people are, understanding their anxieties, understanding where they're at with stuff.
As to your second question in terms of the time period, I think based on discussions we have had with folk who have had to go through similar type of exercises, etc., along the way, how long we think it's going to take us to set up the infrastructure to be able to deal with this, to write out to all their respective clients that we think might be affected. So we think we'll be able to wrap this up in a 2-3-year window. I think anything shorter than that, I think, would be kidding ourselves and would be kidding you. As for the element of the business review, as I said, I've carved out the element of fees because we're good with all of that piece. We don't expect that any further changes to charges would impact the guidance that was announced in October.
I am looking and encouraging the guys to look at elements around the market, how we see the marketplace changing, looking at the element of our cost infrastructure, how do we get better cost management leverage. All part and parcel of that as well is consumer client needs are evolving. Our partner needs are evolving. The business we are today is different from the business that Jacob Rothschild and others set up 30-odd years ago. So we need to continually evolve our tech in terms of what we're doing. More and more clients want to be interacted with on a digital element. So we're going to be spending time looking at that, making sure we get the offering right. So it is a broad view. It's deliberately a broad view.
It's deliberately a broad view with the new CEO in town and kind of wanting to look at everything and kicking the tires on lots of things and looking to see how we create a business that can really make the best of the structural opportunity we have ahead of us. We have scale advantage. I want that to come through to the bottom line in terms of operating leverage as well. That's not being a feature of the industry to date. I think that's something we and the industry need to get a little bit smarter. But thank you for those questions, Enrico.
Thank you. That's very helpful. So if I may, just a clarification on this first one. That's very helpful. Thanks for that. But I appreciate your point that advisors look at the future value of a lifetime of advice and not just a single time when they meet the client. But my question is, is it sustainable for a single advisor to service 200 clients? Can they? There's a limited amount of days in a year. We're talking about nearly just one day per client or roughly so, simply go on holiday. So I'm just wondering, do you think actually that's a concern as opposed to such a point?
So candidly, not because so let's take my own I can personalize this for a moment. So I'm a client of St. James's Place. My wife is and my three kids are. So we are classified then as five clients, okay? We're one household, one family. So the conversation with the advisor is with my wife and I.
The kids don't get involved in that. So that's kind of one meeting that deals with effectively five clients. So there is this huge household component, family component that comes through on that element that softens your 200 metric. The other thing to bear in mind is that society has moved on a lot in terms of the element of the type of interactions people want. So being able to interact on Teams or virtually through Zoom or any other media is incredibly valuable, A, for the advisor and the client because they don't both need to try and get physically in the same place at the same time. That has massively increased. And we've seen that not just in this business, but other businesses around the world. The efficiency has improved significantly.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
The next question today comes from the line of Larissa van Deve nter from Barclays. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Thank you very much. A few quick ones, actually, from my side. The first one, we've had a lot of discussion on the provisions that have been raised for the lack of service. But on the fees or the gaps in service, on the fees, how can we get comfort that the fee revisions are now done? If you can give some color about the frequency and the nature of your communication with the FCA, that would be very helpful, please. Second one, you mentioned the releases from the live operations. Is it folks to do further capital restructuring in that regard? Or how can we think about potential restructuring to make the operations more capital efficient overall? Thank you.
Larissa, how's it? Thank you for just two. In terms of the fees and the charging structure, as I mentioned, I've had a good look at it. I know that the team had extensive discussions with the regulator beforehand. So in my review, as I've said, actually, I'm quite confident that we can grow the business without the need for further changes to charges that would impact the guidance that Craig and the team set out in October last year. Candidly, the frequency and the level of detail with the regulator, I think that's between us and the regulator, if you don't mind. But suffice it to say, I've spent a lot of time with the regulator. They're an important stakeholder. It's important we understand their agenda. They understand ours.
Given our scale that we have in the industry, given the element of the advice guidance boundary and other things that FCA and Treasury are looking at, I think there's a very important role that we can play. So we should be working closely with and supporting, I think, the future shape of the industry and working alongside the regulator in terms of how that develops. As for the capital restructuring, Craig?
Yeah. Hi, Larissa. You're referring to the GBP 190 million. And we've tagged that as balance sheet optimization. That was possible on a one-off basis as a result of the Solvency II reforms that were announced at the back end of last year. And what that did is it reduced the level of risk margin that we're required to held. So that's a one-off structural internal benefit that allows some lending out of the life company into group reserves.
And as you indicate, that's been in part used to fund the provision. In terms of will that happen again, nothing on that scale. No. That's a one-off benefit.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Larissa.
The next question today comes from the line of Greg Simpson from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Morning. Yes. I have three on my side. The first one is, of the increase in miscellaneous costs of the year, about GBP 90 million post-tax, can I just confirm that relates to actual complaints, remediation in the year? And if so, can you talk about how many clients and AUM that relates to? That's the first question. The second one is the slide with the future cash results contribution from gestation. I get to a 57 basis point margin if I compare the 272 relative to the assets. Can you just talk through this in the context of the 43-45 basis points previously guided margin on mature firm with a new charging structure? And thirdly, can you comment on what you're seeing around client activity levels and risk appetite to start the year?
I know markets are better, but rates are still elevated. So what kind of gross flow are you kind of budgeting for? Thank you.
Great. Thank you. Why don't I start with three, and then I'll ask Craig to pick up on item one and two. So in terms of client activity level, we're seeing a lot of activity, a lot of activity with the partners and clients, as I mentioned. Annual wealth report, hundreds of thousands of those landed recently, showing a significant uptick. I was with one of our more established partners just last week.
He was telling me, actually, the group are really positive, really engaged, getting out there with partners. They feel that they've given the strength of the performance at the end of the last year. The advisors are confident and having active conversations with clients. At the end of the day, whether that activity is going to morph into elements of significant flows, we need to see. There is still, as you say, a lot of uncertainty out there at the moment. Rates are still high. We know that, I think, from stats I've seen, about 20% of mortgages that actually people took out pre-2022 are going to kind of unwind and have to be repriced later on this year. So that's going to be a drag for folk. My personal suspicion is rates will come down, but probably slower than people were expecting earlier this year.
I think my hope and expectation is the year will get better as confidence builds and as people see a few more green shoots and a few more elements of the essence of potential rate reductions settling down, not just here, but around the world. But I expect the first couple of quarters to continue to be fairly bumpy and tricky. Craig, on the miscellaneous costs and the gestation piece, please.
Yeah. So miscellaneous costs include the cost of settling those complaints. We don't actually publish as part of the annual reports and accounts complaint numbers or average settlements. But obviously, complaint numbers are published to the outside world in due course as time goes on. So those external disclosures will catch up. But all of the cost of complaints hit miscellaneous, as I mentioned a little earlier.
The firm in gestation has been recalibrated in order to take account of various things that have happened in the recent past. So if we start with the fees and charge cap, which affected the bonds and pensions that make up the gestation balance, we've had to take account of the fact that, for instance, by the time the early cohorts mature, some of the later cohorts will be subject to the fee cap. And what we've also done is we've incorporated into that the way we see the new margin guidance affecting the funds as they mature out of gestation. So the number you come up with won't necessarily directly relate to any individual bit of guidance.
You'll find it sort of somewhere in the middle of the guidance because, ultimately, at a point at which you choose to work out what the maturity is, you're going to have different charges applying.
Okay.
All right. Thank you. Great. Thank you for that. Thank you for those questions. And thank you, everyone, for joining us. I think we need to go off. We've been going for just over an hour now. I think we need to go off and see some shareholders who, understandably, are keen to have a chat and catch up directly. I know there's been a lot to digest in this morning's announcement, including the key challenges that we're facing into the change in dividend and also a little bit around some of the priorities that I see for the business in the short term.
While we've got a lot to do, I'd hate to bore everybody, and I can understand that today may not be, but I'd hate everybody to lose sight of the fact that the underlying business is performing well. Clients are happy. Partners are focused and delivering. It's a business with a really exciting future ahead of it given the scale of the market opportunity and the strength of our competitive position. So I look forward to sharing more of this with you later in the year. And I'm quite sure we'll be talking kind of one-to-ones over the course of the coming days and weeks. So thank you for listening. Thank you for your support.