The Post

Front up with evidence, regulators say

Business

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New Zealand banks have been given until May 18 to hand over internal documents detailing how they have responded to the Australian royal commission of inquiry into banking misconduct.

The inquiry has heard of serious misconduct from the big four banks in Australia. Those banks are the parent companies of New Zealand’s biggest banks.

Reserve Bank governor Adrian Orr and Financial Markets Authority (FMA) chief executive Rob Everett have published an open letter telling banks ‘‘an open invitation from banks to us to come and look at their operations is not sufficient’’.

In their letter, Orr and Everett demand the banks report to them on the actions they, their boards and senior executive teams have taken to identify and address ‘‘conduct risk’’ in the way they have treated their customers. This includes any ‘‘gap analysis’’ work done after February when the FMA published a conduct guide for banks.

The FMA and Reserve Bank met the banks’ chief executives on Monday to discuss the concerns raised about what that meant for New Zealand. Now, they’ve been given a deadline to explain how they are responding to the concerns raised across the ditch.

Everett and Orr said the window for banks to demonstrat­e to consumers, regulators and other stakeholde­rs that they could have full confidence in the financial services industry was narrow.

‘‘We encourage proactive leadership from the retail banking sector.’’

The pair said it was not enough for the banks to invite the regulators in to look at their operations.

‘‘We reserve the right to conduct on-site monitoring as and when we feel it is necessary but the purpose of this exercise is to understand how you as leaders of your businesses have obtained assurance that misconduct Sam Stubbs, Simplicity founder of the type highlighte­d in Australia is not taking place here.’’

They said they wanted a written response from each bank detailing the actions taken to identify and address conduct risk.

They also wanted to know of any specific plans and actions taken or under way to respond to the issues highlighte­d by Australia’s royal commission, any other work to identify and address conduct and culture risk, and work to remediate identified issues that created detrimenta­l outcomes for customers.

Banks were asked to provide that informatio­n by May 18.

The pair also demanded to be informed on the key personnel involved in the work, and the level of board and senior management oversight and reporting.

The FMA and Reserve Bank would then agree the next steps with each bank. ‘‘We will then assess this summary informatio­n and schedule a follow-up meeting with your core team to discuss your response, agree next steps, timetable, further informatio­n requests and ongoing reporting,’’ they said.

‘‘We will also work with you to schedule a meeting with your board of directors to discuss this work.’’

The industry has pointed to a lack of complaints about New Zealand banks as a sign that there are no problems here of the kind that plagued Australia.

Bank of New Zealand said in announcing its half-year results this week that it only had 0.7 complaints per 1000 customers.

Banking Ombudsman Nicola Sladden said more people had sought her office’s assistance this year but the number of escalated disputes had fallen.

‘‘The number of complaints we receive about banks generally correspond­s with share,’’ she said.

But Alex Sims, associate professor in commercial law at the University of Auckland, is a former board member of the Telecommun­ications Disputes Resolution and has researched disputes resolution providers. She said a lack of complaints did not mean no problems.

‘‘Everyone complains about telcos but we had very few complaints. Things can be going wrong but no-one complains.

‘‘Then when someone does, more come to light and you realise there is a real problem.’’

She pointed to Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment research that showed consumer knowledge of dispute resolution schemes was low.

Consumer NZ chief executive Sue Chetwin said a comparison could not be drawn. ‘‘You could probably make the same point in Australia, and look what’s happening [there].’’

Sam Stubbs, founder of non-bank KiwiSaver provider Simplicity, said problems were usually not reported.

‘‘My inbox is full of complaints. If there was a correlatio­n between the number of complaints to the Banking Ombudsman and satisfacti­on with the industry, there wouldn’t be so many calls for an inquiry.’’ their market

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