media release (24-199MR)

´óÏóÊÓÆµto target misconduct in banking and superannuation sectors

Published

´óÏóÊÓÆµtoday released its Enforcement and regulatory update (1 January to 30 June 2024), which sets out recent outcomes in enforcement and regulation.

In the first half of the year, ´óÏóÊÓÆµwas successful in 95% of its civil and criminal prosecutions, securing $32.2 million in civil penalties and nine criminal convictions. ´óÏóÊÓÆµalso launched 63 new investigations, commenced 12 new civil proceedings and completed 550 surveillances throughout the period.

The report highlights include ASIC’s review of how 10 large home lenders supported their customers in financial hardship and whether superannuation trustees were doing enough to strengthen their members’ retirement outcomes.

´óÏóÊÓÆµDeputy Chair Sarah Court said, 'We have seen first-hand the impact on lives and livelihoods when lenders fail to appropriately support customers experiencing financial hardship. In the wake of our review, we put the lending industry on notice.

‘We are actively conducting investigations into suspected breaches of hardship obligations. We will not hesitate to take enforcement action to ensure compliance.’

Last month, ´óÏóÊÓÆµcompleted its review of 15 banks outside the four major banks on their scam prevention, detection and response activities. The report is part of ASIC’s ongoing focus on anti-scam practices in the broader financial services landscape and follows on from a review of the scam-related activities of the four major Australian banks (Report 761) released in April 2023.

In the coming months, ´óÏóÊÓÆµwill announce the results of its surveillance into how superannuation funds are handling death benefits claims. ´óÏóÊÓÆµwill also continue its enforcement and intervention activities to address greenwashing.

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Report 794 ´óÏóÊÓÆµenforcement and regulatory update: January to June 2024

Summary of enforcement outcomes

Regulatory developments timetable