The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia vows crackdown on corporate misconduct as bank inquiry claims AMP scalp

-

SYDNEY: An Australian inquiry into financial sector misconduct claimed its first scalp yesterday as the chief executive of the country’s largest wealth manager stepped down over revelation­s of board-level deception and misappropr­iation of funds.

The immediate departure of AMP Ltd CEO Craig Meller came as the government vowed to double prison terms for financial crimes, dramatical­ly raise financial penalties and ramp up the investigat­ive powers of the corporate regulator following shocking admissions of misconduct to the Royal Commission inquiry.

The first month of the yearlong, independen­t inquiry has been a publicity disaster for Australia’s major lenders, which now face the almost certain prospect of greater regulation, stricter oversight, higher penalties and possible criminal charges.

It has also become a political threat for the conservati­ve government, which initially opposed the establishm­ent of a Royal Commission despite years of scandals including rate-rigging and alleged money-laundering.

Faced with daily revelation­s of wrongdoing at the highest levels of corporate Australia, the government is now under mounting pressure to extend the inquiry beyond its February 2019 deadline, meaning it would run concurrent­ly with the next federal election.

Treasurer Scott Morrison, who once dismissed opposition calls for a Royal Commission as “crass populism”, on Friday said the government would raise criminal penalties for corporate crimes to a maximum of 10 years in jail, from 5 years currently.

Offending companies would face fines up to A$210 million, from the current A$10 million. ASIC would get the power to intercept internal communicat­ions of companies if necessary.

“They are not victimless crimes,” Morrison told a press conference.

“We need to set the tone ... so people understand that misleading regulators about serious issues such as this is no victimless offence, and it won’t carry a victimless penalty.”

The changes were the result of years of planning and were not a knee-jerk reaction to the inquiry, he said.

The Liberal Party-led government holds power with a one-seat majority and has trailed the opposition Labor Party in opinion polls for more than two years.

“They will want to be seen to be acting strongly,” said John Warhurst, an emeritus professor of political science at Australian National University.

AMP executives admitted in testimony this week that the company had lied to the corporate watchdog for almost a decade to cover a practice of charging customers for services it did not provide.

Chairman Catherine Brenner issued an unreserved apology for “misconduct and failures in regulatory disclosure­s in our advice business”, as she announced Meller’s exit along with a review of the company’s governance.

Government data prepared for the Royal Commission, which has the power to subpoena documents and compel top executives to testify in public, shows over 80,000 consumers have been given bad advice by financial institutio­ns over the past decade, costing them a total A$5 billion (US$3.9 billion).

This week’s hearings have been particular­ly brutal. A nurse gave tearful testimony on Thursday about losing her home after taking advice from Westpac Banking Corp, while lawyers presented evidence that Commonweal­th Bank of Australia, the country’s biggest bank, knowingly charged dead clients for counsel for years. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia