Australia inquiry finds pension funds broke rules


National Australia Bank said on Friday it will take A$755 million ($582.26 million) in restructuring-linked costs.

SYDNEY: Initial findings from a powerful inquiry into Australia's financial sector strongly criticised pension funds run by National Australia Bank and Commonwealth Bank for regulatory breaches including overcharging customers and failing to act in their best interest.

The findings from the Royal Commission, released late Friday, said some banks acted in an "ethically unsound" manner with a disregard for regulators and the law, and also criticised two of the country's financial watchdogs.

CBA declined to comment. NAB responded on Saturday saying it disagreed with some of the inquiry's findings and would address them in a response to the Royal Commission's closing submissions by Aug. 31. It did not provide details on which parts of the findings it disagreed with.

"We take our obligations to uphold the law seriously. Where we get it wrong, we expect to be held accountable," NAB said in an emailed statement.

"We are also focused on earning the trust and respect of or customers every day, and when we do not live up to their expectations we will make it right."

The Royal Commission inquiry into financial services misconduct began earlier this year and this month shone a spotlight on the country's A$2.6 trillion ($1.90 trillion) superannuation or pension funds, many of which are owned by the country's largest banks.

The Royal Commission is expected to submit an initial report to the government by the end of September but the probe has already rattled financial investors and led to senior management shake-up and CEO resignations.

Over the past few weeks, the Royal Commission has revealed examples of major breaches of responsibility by institutions that hold workers' retirement accounts including dishonorable conduct, charging dead customers fees and lax senior management oversight.

On Friday, the counsel assisting the inquiry listed a series of breaches by the National Australia Bank saying senior officials demonstrated "a lack of insight into the problems" and "an unwillingness to acknowledge problems with the behaviour of entities for which they were responsible."

The problems included fees for no service, failure to be open and transparent with the regulator and failure to assess whether it should refund fees, among others.

"Assessed as a whole, it is submitted that this behaviour indicates a disregard on the part of the NAB Group for members of the relevant superannuation funds, for regulators and for the law," the 223-page report noted.

The findings also listed a string of regulatory breaches by the CBA, while AMP and IOOF were not spared either.

Friday's report criticised regulators too.

It said the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority was reluctant to commence court proceedings against erring lenders. The statement also raised questions over the Australian Securities & Investment Commission's (ASIC) competence as an effective conduct regulator.

ASIC has not commenced any civil penalty proceedings against banks for fees for no service, the findings noted.

"It has not yet turned its mind to the question of what profits the banks and AMP have derived from receiving money, without providing service, and having only been required to remediate customers."

Neither APRA nor ASIC were immediately available for comment. - Reuters

Win a prize this Mother's Day by subscribing to our annual plan now! T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Business News

Mr D.I.Y earnings in line with expectations
Annum falls under PN17
Ringgit appreciates against the US dollar at opening on renewed demand
MCE shares jump 15% as Brahmal emerges as substantial shareholder
FBM KLCI higher as Wall Street overnight cues positive
Trading ideas: Scientex, Solarvest, Supermax, Salcon, Pentamaster, Globetronics, Mr DIY, MCE
Salcon unit bags RM9.7mil sewerage deal
Brisk sales for Sunway’s Velocity 3
Scientex to deploy large-scale solar PV system
Velesto poised to see stronger earnings in 2024

Others Also Read