Compliance
Australian Banks Face Harsh Spotlight As Inquiry Starts

A spate of misconduct cases against banks and other financial organisations forms the backdrop of a high-level inquiry tasked with discovering if reforms and new powers are needed.
An Australian government inquiry is due to start scrutinising the
country’s banking sector that has seen a number of scandals and
misconduct cases in recent years.
Media reports said that the Royal Commission, led by former High
Court judge Kenneth Payne, is to examine banks, insurers and
other financial services firms and consider whether regulators
have enough power to enforce rules sufficiently and punish
wrongdoers.
Hearings are due to begin in March.
As reported by this news service, the wealth management
sector was recently rocked by claims that Commonwealth
Bank of Australia[/tag broke anti-money laundering and terrorism
financing laws. The Australian Securities and Investments
Commission, meanwhile, has
carried out a programme to kick crooked advisors out of the
wealth management sector.
The new inquiry will examine bank profitability; a report by
Bloomberg cited a background paper published late last
week, showing that the commission said the country’s largest
banks have posted fatter profit margins and higher
return-on-equity than smaller lenders, and Australian banks are
comparatively more profitable than peers in Canada, Sweden,
Switzerland and the UK.
Under Australian law, which is similar to that of the UK, a Royal
Commission is one of the most powerful independent judicial
inquiries that can be held in Australia. It has the power to
summon witnesses to produce documents or testify under
oath.