ASIC has comprehensively failed and its role should be split in two, according to long-awaited report (2024)

Australia’s corporate watchdog, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC), should be broken up and replaced by new and more responsive regulatory agencies, a damning report has found.

The Senate Economics References Committee handed down its 200-page report Tuesday evening after a 20-month inquiry into the corporate regulator.

The inquiry involved five days of public hearings and 198 submissions from the Australian Tax Office (ATO) and an array of other financial, accounting and legal interest groups.

The report calls for greater transparency and accountability from ASIC and a fundamental change to how it approaches enforcement.

It highlights three major problems.

1. Impossibly broad responsibility

The scope of ASIC’s responsibility is impossibly broad and it has not shown it can effectively fulfil its mandate.

While ASIC is chronically under-resourced when compared with other corporate regulators like the Securities and Exchange Commission in the United States, ASIC’s repeated governance failures and lack of public accountability mean giving it more money won’t necessarily solve the problem

2. A gun-shy regulator

ASIC is a gun-shy regulator that is constantly reacting to public criticism and fumbling its caseload, rather than getting on with the job of investigating and punishing serious misconduct in our financial markets.

ASIC has taken its eye off the goal of addressing serious misconduct, perhaps because it is too scared to lose when it does take action.

It proudly trumpets its 97% litigation success rate in its annual reports, but this speaks to a regulator not taking on challenging cases and a regulator that is running the same type of matter over and again.

ASIC has comprehensively failed and its role should be split in two, according to long-awaited report (1)

ASIC’s approach to public accountability is to deflect criticism and use a highlights package of sample enforcement actions in its reports to justify its existence. Meanwhile tens of thousands of reports of potential misconduct are ignored.

The report notes that ASIC is simply not using the information it receives about potential misconduct effectively. ASIC takes action in less than 1% of its reports of misconduct from insolvency practitioners alone. When questioned by the Senate committee about enforcement activities, ASIC steadfastly refused to comply with requests for information.

The corporate regulator should be independent from the government, but no-one should be immune from the scrutiny of parliament.

3. A flawed approach

ASIC’s approach to responding to reports of misconduct is fundamentally flawed. It derides reports of misconduct as mere complaints, stating that it is not a complaint handling body.

Many reports of misconduct are dismissed almost immediately. For decades, it has failed to provide accurate and timely information about its enforcement activity, as it changes how it reports enforcement actions and outcomes from year to year.

This makes it impossible to hold it accountable or to identify precisely what actions ASIC is and isn’t bringing. ASIC’s funding and staffing have increased over the past 10 years, but its enforcement activity has seen little change or increase.

Empirical studies show that ASIC only litigates a small number of provisions in the Corporations Act 2001 each year. The number of directors that ASIC bans each year for misconduct has barely changed in the past 20 years.

What the report says should happen next

The report makes 11 recommendations that call for ASIC to be broken up and for major governance changes inside the corporate cop.

ASIC commissioners frequently state they are one of the most active corporate regulators in the world and they are very effective at addressing corporate fraud and misconduct.

But this was rejected by the Hayne Royal Commission into the Banking and Financial Services industries which reported in 2019 that ASIC had consistently failed to take action against large financial institutions.

ASIC has comprehensively failed and its role should be split in two, according to long-awaited report (2)

It also found the commission was too reliant on low level sanctions and agreed enforcement outcomes and it simply did not bring enough court cases to address serious misconduct.

ASIC responded at the time that it would bring a “why not litigate?” approach and then quickly backed away from that stance once the COVID pandemic hit.

Nothing has changed

This latest report shows nothing has changed since the royal commission. ASIC is too slow (often taking years to respond to reports of wrongdoing), too clumsy (failing to respond quickly enough to changes in market behaviour), doesn’t always pick the right cases to run.

Even when it “wins”, it often settles for low-level enforcement measures.

The serious financial and corporate crooks have little to fear from ASIC it appears.

This is a regulator that is stultifying under ineffective governance and a mandate so broad that it can point to almost any action as being relevant to its duties.

The inquiry’s final report shows it is not simply a matter of more enforcement being needed but also ensuring that ASIC is responding in the most appropriate way.

ASIC as an omnibus corporate regulator for everything, is a failed regulatory experiment. It is not simply a watchdog with no bite, but even worse, a watchdog chasing its own tail.

ASIC has comprehensively failed and its role should be split in two, according to long-awaited report (2024)
Top Articles
What to Buy at Trader Joe’s - NerdWallet
Rules | Mile High Flea Market
Katie Nickolaou Leaving
Ron Martin Realty Cam
UPS Paketshop: Filialen & Standorte
Archived Obituaries
Txtvrfy Sheridan Wy
Practical Magic 123Movies
Miss Carramello
Stl Craiglist
Paketshops | PAKET.net
Texas (TX) Powerball - Winning Numbers & Results
Jscc Jweb
Shariraye Update
What Is Njvpdi
Washington, D.C. - Capital, Founding, Monumental
Elizabethtown Mesothelioma Legal Question
This Modern World Daily Kos
Nba Rotogrinders Starting Lineups
8664751911
Nick Pulos Height, Age, Net Worth, Girlfriend, Stunt Actor
bode - Bode frequency response of dynamic system
Accident On 215
Pasco Telestaff
Www Craigslist Madison Wi
Glover Park Community Garden
Talkstreamlive
Shadbase Get Out Of Jail
Asteroid City Showtimes Near Violet Crown Charlottesville
Lexus Credit Card Login
Meridian Owners Forum
Watertown Ford Quick Lane
Star Wars Armada Wikia
The Procurement Acronyms And Abbreviations That You Need To Know Short Forms Used In Procurement
Ff14 Sage Stat Priority
Calculator Souo
Shiftwizard Login Johnston
Goodwill Thrift Store & Donation Center Marietta Photos
Consume Oakbrook Terrace Menu
Ljw Obits
Today's Gas Price At Buc-Ee's
South Bend Tribune Online
Carteret County Busted Paper
Executive Lounge - Alle Informationen zu der Lounge | reisetopia Basics
Gregory (Five Nights at Freddy's)
Bustednewspaper.com Rockbridge County Va
Denise Monello Obituary
Collision Masters Fairbanks
Best Haircut Shop Near Me
Headlining Hip Hopper Crossword Clue
Lagrone Funeral Chapel & Crematory Obituaries
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Trent Wehner

Last Updated:

Views: 6163

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Trent Wehner

Birthday: 1993-03-14

Address: 872 Kevin Squares, New Codyville, AK 01785-0416

Phone: +18698800304764

Job: Senior Farming Developer

Hobby: Paintball, Calligraphy, Hunting, Flying disc, Lapidary, Rafting, Inline skating

Introduction: My name is Trent Wehner, I am a talented, brainy, zealous, light, funny, gleaming, attractive person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.