Compliance
ANZ Ordered To Lift Wealth Management Business Standards

Under the order, the lender must also show it has bolstered its compliance function.
ANZ Banking
Group will pay A$3 million ($2.3 million) and submit results
of regular independent reviews of its systems and processes after
billing thousands of wealth management clients for services they
didn’t receive.
The order, imposed by the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), also
requires ANZ to provide an audited attestation from senior
management to show “reasonable assurance” that the lender has,
since 2014, provided clients with documented annual reviews.
In addition, the bank must demonstrate that it has improved its
compliance functions, ASIC said.
ASIC deputy chair Peter Kell said: “Our report into fees for no
service in October 2016 identified the major financial
institutions' systemic failures in this area, which required
affected customers to be fairly compensated and to be provided
with the services that they have paid for.
“ASIC considered it critically important that improved systems
and procedures be put in place to ensure this breach of trust
could not re-occur.”
The regulator’s action is on the back of an investigation into
ANZ’s “fees for no services” conduct related to the Prime Access
package offered to financial planning clients from 2003. A key
component of the offering, ASIC said, was a documented annual
review of clients’ financial plans.
The probe found that ANZ had failed to provide reviews to more
than 10,000 Prime Access clients.
From as early as 2008, ANZ was aware of numerous circumstances in
which reviews had not been provided, but continued to bill
clients for the service until 2013 and did not report the breach
until August 2013, ASIC said.