National Post (National Edition)
Canada lags in investor protection
In the case of AMP, which runs Australia’s largest network of financial advisers, the transgressions go even further: reports prepared by a law firm to be given to the regulator were doctored to include a reference that the CEO “was unaware of the practices or their illegality.”
In addition, according to evidence presented at the inquiry, AMP also admitted it made about 20 false or misleading statements to the regulator, the Australian Securities and Investment Commission. In this way the so-called mistake was not a mistake but appears to have been a deliberate policy.
By week’s end AMP’s chief executive had resigned (no word yet on whether he receives any severance payments.) Institutional investors, meanwhile, are clamouring for more changes, including replacing the chair.
AMP is no slouch, one of the six large financial players in Australia. And (in the past) it was deemed important enough that it is not allowed to merge with another large insurer or any of the country’s four large banks.
According to another newspaper report, another bank, the ANZ, logged 56 events of “improper conduct” in their financial planning and wealth management arm. Those included: forged signatures, impersonation of customers, fraudulent use of power of attorney, false witnessing of documents, and the transfer of customer’s funds to advisers’ personal accounts.
Unlike Canada, Australia has recently banned embedded fees, meaning the cost of advice must be separated from the product being sold. And, also unlike Canada, Australia has set a fiduciary duty objective for its advisers. Because the changes are relatively recent, it’s not known how those changes have affected retail investing.
What’s new about the transgressions is their pervasiveness and the extent to which attempts were made to cover them up. One commentator, when assessing recent developments said they went from awful and dumb to utterly shocking. Just like U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s grilling of the former head of Wells Fargo, the commission’s lead lawyer has shown no sympathy for witnesses from the offending institutions.
Given that Canada lags Australia in those two key areas of investor protection, one has to wonder if there are similar issues, perhaps on a lesser scale, at play here.
What is known is that once transgressions have been proven, Canadian institutions have made it more difficult for clients to receive compensation.
Decisions handed down by the Ombudsman for Banking Services and Investments have been ignored, meaning that the offending adviser or the firm walks away without compensating the investors. The Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada regularly publishes a list of advisers deemed to have done wrong who, instead of paying, leave the industry.
The website of the Mutual Fund Dealers Association of Canada is also full of examples of individuals who have not paid for their offences. In many cases the process drags on for years.
Canadian mutual fund managers, on the other hand, may have their fingers slapped for breaking the rules — but because they want to stay in the investment business they tend to pay up.
This week 1832 Asset Management LP, which is part of Scotia Wealth Management, agreed to an $800,000 settlement with the Ontario Securities Commission because it “failed to meet the minimum standards of conduct expected of industry participants in relation to certain of its sales practices.”
Last week Mackenzie Financial agreed to a $900,000 settlement over the same issue. Over the past year the major mutual fund managers, including the bankowned dealers, have reached settlements with the OSC for overcharging their clients of some closed-end funds. Hundreds of millions of dollars are involved in the compensation.
As well, a class-action lawsuit has recently been filed against TD Asset Management on the matter of discount brokers receiving trailer commissions (the annual service fee.) The suit alleges that because discount brokers are prohibited from providing investment advice to investors, they should not be receiving a fee for providing such advice — the effect of which is to reduce the return to the investor.
When news of the proposed class-action emerged, TDAM was quoted as saying that it wouldn’t comment on the lawsuit, “because the matter is before the courts.”
The irony of what’s been revealed in the Australia Royal Commission is that the Australian government was extremely reluctant to call for an inquiry — “not enough need” in the words of one minister — before it did so last November. (The Opposition called for an inquiry in April 2016.) And the banks and the financial institutions were also opposed, claiming that an inquiry was unnecessary and unwarranted.
Lets give the final word to a whistleblower who brought complaints to the Australian regulator. “The basic philosophy of ‘ripping off the customer’ is still very much alive and well.” AMP Ltd. headquarters in Sydney, Australia. AMP has admitted to about 20 false or misleading statements.