True Potential to host free IFA investment forum

Author: Alasdair Pal
IFAonline | 15 Sep 2011 | 10:00

Categories: Wrap/platforms| Regulation| Regulation| Business tips

Topics: Goldman Sachs| True Potential| 7IM

harrison-daniel-true-potential

Investment platform True Potential is set to host its inaugural Investment Forum for advisers next month.

The event, which will be held at the Birmingham ICC on Wednesday 5 October, is free for up to 500 IFAs.

Workshops will cover specialist investment and pensions topics, plus there will be aadditional sessions from True Potential personnel on compliance and from the Wealth Platform Technical team.

Keynote speakers include Kamakshya Trivedi, executive director at Goldman Sachs, and Tom Sheridan, CEO of Seven Investment Management.

Daniel Harrison (pictured), senior partner at True Potential, said: "One of our core business strategies is to move ever closer to IFA firms, and through hosting our own Investment Forum, we aim to deliver a new and different event that will inform, educate and involve intermediaries."

To register, and for more information, click HERE.

More wrap/platforms news

Recommended reading

Categories

Topics

Comments

There are no comments submitted yet. Do you have an interesting opinion? Then be the first to post a comment

Related articles

Most Read

Audio / Visual

Coffee Lounge

View all the winners here

PPR Structured Product Awards 2011

View all the winners here

This year we have 14 awards designed to mark out the very best products in a highly competitive and innovative market. This includes three new awards for 2011 to reflect the developments in this rapidly growing market: Best Dual/Multi-Index Product, Best Structured (Oeic) Fund and Best Structured Product Provider.

Events

event logo

International Fund & Product Awards 2012

14 Jun 2012 - 14 Jun 2012

London, UK

event logo

British Mortgage Awards 2012

03 Jul 2012 - 03 Jul 2012

London, UK

event logo

Cover Webinars

04 Jul 2012 - 04 Jul 2012

London, UK

Poll

Should there be a cap on hourly fees?

In Focus

Viewpoints