The Guardian Australia

Frydenberg’s changes to shareholde­r class actions smack of ‘cronyism’, lawyers say

- Ben Butler

A surprise move by treasurer Josh Frydenberg to make shareholde­r class actions harder has been slammed by lawyers as cronyism that gives company directors the green light to hide bad informatio­n from investors.

“If bad directors take advantage of this change to lie to shareholde­rs and people whose savings are in superannua­tion, the treasurer will share responsibi­lity,” Jacob Varghese, the chief executive of law firm Maurice Blackburn, told Guardian Australia.

Ben Phi, the managing director of class action firm Phi Finney McDonald, said the move was “completely to be expected from a government with a strong and improving track record of cronyism”.

“The Morrison government has used a public health crisis to secure emergency powers, which they are now using to serve the interests of their big business mates,” he said.

In a statement released late on Monday afternoon, Frydenberg significan­tly raised the bar that lawyers will have to meet to hold directors liable for misleading their investors.

Frydenberg made the change using regulation­s under emergency powers granted by parliament to deal with the coronaviru­s emergency that will last for six months.

They change the existing requiremen­t that a director needs to act reasonably to avoid liability for misleading the market to a new test where they will have to have acted with “knowledge, recklessne­ss or negligence” to be in breach.

Varghese said the change was not necessary because existing rules already had exemptions for when informatio­n was uncertain.

“The risk is that this change allows companies to hide bad news that has nothing to do with Covid-19,” he said.

“There should be no green light for company directors to hide informatio­n from the people who actually own a company.”

Phi said responsibl­e companies had responded to the coronaviru­s crisis by withdrawin­g their profit guidance – a move that in some cases prompted their share prices to plunge.

“None of those price falls have resulted in class actions,” he said.

“They are the consequenc­e of a company complying with its disclosure obligation­s rather than breaching them.”

Frydenberg’s move, announced in a seven-paragraph press release issued at about 4.45pm on Monday, caught class action lawyers by surprise.

It followed the treasurer’s decision on Friday to force litigation funders to hold financial services licenses – something opposed by the corporate regulator.

The attorney general, Christian Porter, has also announced a parliament­ary inquiry into class actions and litigation funders.

Company directors and industry groups have been campaignin­g fiercely against class actions since late last year.

The business peak body, Ai Group, has raised concerns about both shareholde­r class actions and ones mounted by workers under the Fair Work Act, with chief executive Innes Willox claiming in October that claims in the previous financial year totalled more than $10bn.

In December, the Australian Institute of Company Directors complained that it was too hard for directors to defend their decisions in class action cases because no proof of “intention, recklessne­ss or negligence” was required.

“The heightened level of uncertaint­y around companies’ future prospects as a result of the crisis also exposes companies to the threat of opportunis­tic class actions for allegedly falling foul of their continuous disclosure obligation­s if their forecasts are found to be inaccurate,” Frydenberg said on Monday.

“In response, companies may hold back from making forecasts of future earnings or other forward-looking estimates, limiting the amount of informatio­n available to investors during this period.

“The changes announced today will make it harder to bring such actions against companies and officers’ during the coronaviru­s crisis and while allowing the market to continue to stay informed and function effectivel­y.”

Guardian Australia is not aware of any coronaviru­s-related shareholde­r class actions that have been lodged in Australia since the crisis began.

However, Qantas staff have mulled a class action against the airline for allegedly failing to protect them against Covid-19.

 ?? Photograph: Sam Mooy/Getty Images ?? New changes made to shareholde­r class actions by Josh Frydenberg under the emergency Covid-19 powers could give company directors the ability to hide bad news ‘that has nothing to do with Covid-19’, lawyers say.
Photograph: Sam Mooy/Getty Images New changes made to shareholde­r class actions by Josh Frydenberg under the emergency Covid-19 powers could give company directors the ability to hide bad news ‘that has nothing to do with Covid-19’, lawyers say.

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