Hang Seng's flexible offers
The bank offered good advice but, like others, its first sales pitch was for an unsuitable insurance instrument
As part of a continuing series to test the quality of financial advice being offered by banks, the put eight banks through their paces.
This week our reporter visits Hang Seng Bank. As in previous rounds, she poses as a 37-year-old expatriate mother of two who wants to invest HK$10,000 a month into a pension.
In the following, we describe the mystery shopper's experiences, and get an assessment of how the bank fared from the perspective of an independent financial adviser.
On entering the bank, the mystery shopper is introduced to an adviser, who asks how long the shopper will live in Hong Kong and how much she wants to save each month.
The shopper answers that she wants to save HK$10,000 a month.
The adviser asks if the shopper can afford this amount, because she is a housewife with no apparent income.