Introduction and Background
Duties of the committee
1.1
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services
(the committee) is established by Part 14 of the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission Act 2001 (the ASIC Act). Section 243 of the ASIC
Act sets out the committee's duties as follows:
- to
inquire into, and report to both Houses on:
-
activities of ASIC or the [Takeovers] Panel, or matters connected with
such activities, to which, in the Parliamentary Committee's opinion, the Parliament's
attention should be directed; or
-
the operation of the corporations legislation (other than the excluded
provisions); or
-
the operation of any other law of the Commonwealth, or any law of a
State or Territory, that appears to the Parliamentary Committee to affect
significantly the operation of the corporations legislation (other than the
excluded provisions); or
-
the operation of any foreign business law, or of any other law of a
foreign country, that appears to the Parliamentary Committee to affect
significantly the operation of the corporations legislation (other than the
excluded provisions); and
- to
examine each annual report that is prepared by a body established by this Act
and of which a copy has been laid before a House, and to report to both Houses
on matters that appear in, or arise out of, that annual report and to which, in
the Parliamentary Committee's opinion, the Parliament's attention should be
directed; and
- to
inquire into any question in connection with its duties that is referred to it
by a House, and to report to that House on that question.[1]
Conduct of the inquiry
1.2 The committee advertised this oversight inquiry on its webpage and held
the following public hearings:
-
25 November 2016 in Sydney;
-
16 June 2017 in Canberra;
-
11 August 2017 in Mascot, NSW;
-
27 October 2017 in Sydney;
-
1 December 2017 in Canberra;
-
16 February 2018 in Mascot, NSW;
-
17 August 2018 in Melbourne;
-
18 October 2018 in Canberra; and
-
19 October 2018 in Canberra.
1.3
A list of witnesses who gave evidence at the public hearings is detailed
in Appendix 1. The committee also received a number of private briefings.
Details of the inquiry and associated documents including the Hansard
transcripts of evidence may be accessed through the committee webpage.
1.4 The committee thanks all those who assisted with the inquiry, especially
the witnesses who put in extra time and effort to answer written questions on
notice and provide further valuable feedback to the committee as it gathered
evidence.
1.5
References to the committee Hansard are to the proof Hansard.
Page number may vary relative to the official Hansard.
Background
1.6
The performance of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission
(ASIC) as the regulator for financial conduct and consumer protections,
particularly since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), has been the subject of
much debate and inquiry. While not comprehensive, the committee notes that
reports into ASIC's functions and conduct have been undertaken by this
committee, the Senate Economics References Committee and, most recently, the
Financial Services Royal Commission.
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Corporations and Financial Services
1.7
In previous parliaments, this committee has presented a number of ASIC
oversight reports on various issues, including:
-
audit quality;[2]
-
emergent behaviours, such as high-frequency trading and dark
pools, which have the potential to result in insider trading and market
manipulation;[3]
-
penalties;[4]
and
-
gatekeepers in the financial services system.[5]
Senate Economics References
Committee
1.8
The Senate Economics References Committee released a comprehensive report
in June 2014 on its inquiry into the Performance of the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission. The report contained 61 recommendations,
including Recommendation 52, relating to the committee's oversight role:
The committee notes that the Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Corporations and Financial Services could be well-placed to monitor ASIC's
performance against the government's statement of expectations and ASIC's
statement of intent. The committee recommends that the Parliamentary Joint
Committee consider this as part of its statutory ASIC oversight function.[6]
1.9
The report also queried whether the committee could pivot its oversight
function towards emerging risks with a view to limiting the number of minor
issues that become major scandals.[7]
Royal Commission into Misconduct in
the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry
1.10
The Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and
Financial Services Industry (the Royal Commission) was established on 14 December 2017.
1.11
Its interim report (released on 28 September 2018) documented a range of
misconduct across the financial services sector that affected hundreds of
thousands of customers. The interim report was critical of ASIC's efforts to address
such an extensive range of misconduct under its regulatory regime.[8]
1.12
The final report (released on 4 February 2019) noted that ASIC's remit
is very large and has greatly increased since ASIC was first established.[9]
The final report argued for a change in the enforcement culture within ASIC so
that all forms of regulatory enforcement, including litigation, remain under
active consideration when considering misconduct.[10]
The final report emphasised that 'adequate deterrence of misconduct depends
upon visible public denunciation and punishment'.[11]
It also recommended that enforcement staff be separated, as much as possible,
from non‑enforcement related contact with regulated entities.[12]
1.13
The Royal Commission also noted that the joint committee is the
principal external oversight body of ASIC but that parliamentary oversight has
limitations:
Parliamentary oversight of ASIC and APRA [Australian
Prudential Regulation Authority] is essential. It is essential because although
broadly independent, regulators form part of the executive government and are
therefore accountable to the legislature. But parliamentary oversight
necessarily has some limitations. Those limitations include the amount of time
that can be devoted to a particular entity or topic, the time available to
committee members to prepare for the hearings and the training, skill and experience
of the members of the committee, who will sometimes need to review and assess
complex information on matters of expertise.[13]
1.14
That said, ways to improve the committee's parliamentary scrutiny of
ASIC were discussed:
Mr Shipton [Chairman of ASIC] acknowledged
that the current arrangements for parliamentary scrutiny of ASIC could
be improved. He suggested that ASIC could develop frameworks, metrics and
methodologies for review of its performance. The Joint Committee could then
review ASIC's performance against the agreed benchmarks.[14]
1.15
The insights and recommendations of the reports of the Royal Commission have
implications for ASIC's role and functions, and by extension, for the committee's
oversight of ASIC. The committee intends to explore the issues raised by the
Royal Commission in more detail during the next parliament.
1.16
The committee was informed by ASIC that its workload has increased
significantly due to matters the subject of or arising out of the Royal
Commission. ASIC also noted that it expects there to be an 82 per cent increase
in the amount of work going from ASIC to the Commonwealth Director of Public
Prosecutions.[15]
Focus of this report
1.17
This report fulfils the committee's statutory oversight duties in
respect of paragraph (a) of section 243 of the ASIC Act.
1.18
Extensive attention has been devoted to ASIC's functions and conduct
since the GFC. With the finalisation of the Royal Commission, the committee
considers that its oversight role is more important than ever.
1.19
This report focuses on some of the areas of ASIC's role which the
committee considers have not been given adequate attention throughout recent
investigations—that is, concerns about audit quality and integrity.
1.20
The report also considers whether the Takeovers Panel is working effectively.
Structure of the report
1.21
The report is structured as follows:
-
chapter 1 provides information about the oversight process and outlines
the scope of the report;
-
chapter 2 considers audit quality and ways in which it may be
improved;
-
chapter 3 examines ASIC's integrity measures; and
-
chapter 4 reflects on the conduct of the Takeovers Panel.
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