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Home News

AMP hit with $5.18m penalty for best interests breaches

The Federal Court has ordered AMP to pay a $5.18 million penalty after it found the wealth giant had failed to ensure its advisers complied with the best interests duty by engaging in churning of insurance policies.

by Staff Writer
February 6, 2020
in News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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The court’s ruling on Wednesday said that AMP had betrayed its legal obligations, failing to prevent breaches of the best interests duty as well as making a total of six contraventions of section 961L under the Corporations Act. 

Although the payment of just over $5 million could be seen as significant, the penalty was determined under a previous regime, where the maximum fine for each contravention was $1 million. 

X

Since then, civil penalties have substantially increased, now to be capped at $525 million, following legislation introduced in March last year – but it applies to breaches that occurred after then.

ASIC lodged the case against AMP, alleging that a number of the group’s planners engaged in “rewriting conduct” – providing advice that results in the cancellation of the client’s existing insurance policies and places them under new, similar schemes by way of new application rather than a standard transfer.

By cancelling insurance policies and advising clients to submit new applications, clients were exposed to a number of significant risks and the planners received higher commissions than they would have by merely transferring the policies. 

The misconduct was said to occur between 2013 and 2015 in the AMP Financial Planning Network.

‘Things had gone wrong within the organisation’

In its decision, the court singled out the rewriting conduct by one of AMP’s financial planners, Rommel Panganiban, as “morally indefensible”. 

Mr Panganiban was banned from providing financial services in 2016, after an ASIC surveillance found that he had failed to act in his clients’ best interests or had a reasonable basis for advice, also ruling he had prioritised his own interests over his clients’. 

Between 2011 and 2014, he had advised 49 clients who held risk insurance through their AMP superannuation fund to cease their existing insurance policies with the group and replace them with new AMP insurance policies. 

By doing this, the full rate of commission became payable to AMP Financial Planning and Mr Panganiban’s remuneration was positively influenced by the upfront commissions he generated. 

But his clients were found to be exposed to consequences such as gaps in cover, changes in definitions and policy terms and they risked policy exclusions and loadings. It also restarted the non-disclosure period that allows insurers to void policies within the first three years of inception for inadvertent non-disclosure.

The Administrative Appeals Tribunal later affirmed ASIC’s decision that Mr Panganiban was not of good character. 

His banning had been part of ASIC’s Wealth Management Project, its effort to lift advice standards across the largest financial services players: the big four banks, AMP and Macquarie.  

In the newest AMP case, the court sided with ASIC against the bank, saying that having become aware Mr Panganiban’s conduct, it was necessary for the company to ascertain the extent of breaches by other planners to meet its legal obligations.

AMP failed to do so, with the court finding “the lack of an effective response is an illustration of how badly things had gone wrong within the organisation”. 

“This penalty proceeding reflects a lamentable failure of corporate will to take the necessary steps to prevent greedy and unlawful conduct taking place, and a further failure to adopt a swift and proper remedial response,” Justice Michael Lee stated.

He also accepted ASIC’s submission that during the relevant period, AMP did not have an adequate “culture of compliance”.

AMP to be used as an example: ASIC

The court indicated it will be making orders requiring the company to undertake a review and remediation program for the affected financial planning clients. 

It will also be demanding a forward-looking compliance plan from AMP that seeks to prohibit rewriting conduct through improved communication, training and supervision of the group’s financial planners.

AMP had admitted ASIC’s case against it in May. A spokesperson for the company said AMP had admitted to the breaches and “apologised unreservedly for the conduct”.

“While insurance rewriting was not a common practice by financial advisers at AMP Financial Planning, the conduct identified in the case was clearly unacceptable and customers were let down,” the spokesperson said.

“AMP has improved monitoring and supervision processes within our advice network and introduced stronger measures to protect clients.”

ASIC deputy chair Daniel Crennan commented the regulator’s case against AMP had been “strong”. 

“ASIC believes the penalty applied by the court today will act as a deterrent to AMP and to other financial institutions to engage in such misconduct,” Mr Crennan said.

“AMP and other financial institutions must act in their clients’ best interests.”

The case against AMP is one of a number of best interests duty cases that ASIC has brought to the courts, including action against Westpac and the poor financial advice provided by one of its former planners, Sudhir Sinha, as well as its case against RI Advice and former Melbourne adviser, John Doyle.

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Comments 33

  1. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    This is an FPA member via their professional partner program, “helping to shape the direction of advice in Australia” according to FPA marketing. I guess AMP are shaping compliance regimes now for all advisers. Yet, there are still advisers who wonder why Treasury don’t listen to bodies like the FPA that claim to represent advice in Australia. You wonder why we have FASEA, over regulation, red tape and over bearing compliance regimes. Who are you going to listen to if you’re Treasury/ ASIC? Here’s you choice, Industry Super Funds, Choice Magazine, AMP, the FPA. Two of those work together closely and you just fined them $5 Million.

    Reply
  2. Bob says:
    6 years ago

    Does this mean i dont have to pay my Asic adviser levies this year???

    Reply
  3. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    This must hurt for AMP… just imagine a planner does this in your network, they got him out of the network when they found out, they then had to compensate the client for bad advice. AMP would have made 9% in a dealer cut of whatever the revenue was of these premiums which would have been nothing, not saying what the adviser did was wrong but 5 million as a fine wow…

    Hostplus lied to customers saying they were independent advisers but the advisers where owned by Hostplus, what fine 12k https://www.ifa.com.au/news/26764-industry-fund-pays-infringement-notice-for-misleading-independent-advice-message wonder how many clients they pulled in at the time..

    Reply
  4. Chris says:
    6 years ago

    Please accurately define “clients’ best interests ” does this include a client request to research cheaper premiums for the same existing cover?

    Reply
    • Anon says:
      6 years ago

      Oh my… If you don’t understand this basic concept that’s not going to end well for you.

      Reply
      • Anonymous says:
        6 years ago

        Please explain it then Anon

        Reply
        • Anonymous says:
          6 years ago

          The silly thing about Best Interests Duty is that no matter what your advice is it can (at the same time ) comply with the BID and break it. It is a law which is almost impossible to adhere to as advisers are not able to know every potential strategy and cannot know every product. Any lawyer will find a way that BID has been breached in any case they are trying.

          The problem is that companies like I-Select or Real Insurance and worse still, BT Financial Planning are allowed to re write policies for upfront adviser commissions without having to adhere to the BID as they only provide “General Advice”. The fact that they are allowed to sell sell sell without any regard for the clients’ situation is an absolute joke.

          Only Financial Advisers can get punished for the advice which Mr Panganiban gave. Had he been working for I-select ASIC would have had no problem with his actions.

          Why would anyone want to be an adviser, when everyone else can sell the exact same products, just woithut any ongoing training, any qualifications, any compiance and any need to adhere to the Best Interests Duty.

          Reply
  5. Wow says:
    6 years ago

    LOL what a deterrent. AMP laughing all the way. This is akin to parking fines of $2

    Reply
  6. Mr. Sarcastic says:
    6 years ago

    Geez the board of directors and management responsible must be devastated to have to pay this massive fine. Or have they all fled the industry already like everyone else that caused this mess.

    Reply
    • Capt.America says:
      6 years ago

      They all left mate!

      Reply
    • Gav says:
      6 years ago

      No, they just pass on the cost of the fine to the Superannuation members who hold AMP shares…

      Reply
      • Dude says:
        6 years ago

        Who in their right mind would own AMP shares? Aside from Allan Gray of course.

        Reply
  7. Frank says:
    6 years ago

    Given my 32 years in this industry, I can guarantee that this practice has occurred across every licensee – not just AMP!

    Reply
    • White ant says:
      6 years ago

      Just what we need a everyone does it type comment, This white anting is what got us here in the first place. Did you dob on your mates at achool too?

      Reply
      • Anonymous says:
        6 years ago

        … Frank does make a good point? That this is a cultural issue withing FP and there should be a level of leniency for past indescretions… IF you can prove that you are complying with current laws.
        Don’t be a grub and put down valid comments because you’re a “highschool bully”

        Reply
    • Just saying says:
      6 years ago

      Including Don Trapnells Synchron

      Reply
      • Walt Disney Jnr says:
        6 years ago

        Seriously…you need to “let it go, let it go…”

        Reply
  8. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    AMP advisers were encouraged to do this by AMP management. How does AMP get to keep its licence compared to say 400 advisers losing theirs at Dover due to a management breach?

    Reply
    • Anonymous says:
      6 years ago

      Agree!

      Reply
  9. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    AMP treat their “compliance” regime as a control measure of their long-suffering advisers. It has nothing to do with actual compliance with the laws. This adviser was obviously an AMP favorite who was getting waved through his compliance audits instead of being held the account.
    In answer to the judge’s remarks “what does one have to do to get an E audit?” The answer is: Upset any one of the managers at AMP and they will use compliance as a weapon against you.

    Reply
    • Anon says:
      6 years ago

      Which is why the new “compulsory reference checking” regulations are so silly. If an adviser comes from a vertically integrated business then references and compliance audit results are completely worthless as an indicator of compliant behaviour. They may be a good indicator of sales ability however.

      Reply
    • Anon says:
      6 years ago

      Dead right. I made it clear that management was incompetent and got slugged with 3 audits in one year. It cost me $20,000 in legal costs to finally escape these maniacs.

      Reply
      • Anonymous says:
        6 years ago

        How did you get out? Pretty sure most of their adviser network would want to know.

        Reply
  10. A Money Pit says:
    6 years ago

    The cozy arrangement between AMP and the regulators continues.

    Reply
  11. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    What do AMP have to do to lose their licence. Imagine if a small AFSL holder did half of what they did. ASIC absolutely disgust me with their double standards!

    Reply
    • Anonymous says:
      6 years ago

      Well they didn’t have ! I’ve heard from one of these small afsl holders .. review their insurance policies and rewrite it’s like shooting fish in a barrell

      Reply
  12. Anonymously annoyed says:
    6 years ago

    The world would be a better place if AMP would just shut down….

    Reply
  13. Anonymous says:
    6 years ago

    So…..
    Mr Panganiban does what his management want him to do and he gets banned for 6 years.
    AMP get a paltry $5m fee and yet are allowed to keep their licence.
    ASIC believes the penalty applied by the court today will act as a deterrent to AMP and to other financial institutions to engage in such misconduct.

    Wrong, wrong, wrong!

    Reply
    • Anonymous says:
      6 years ago

      If it was management directed it would have been more widespread. He appears to be of the few in the industry. I hardly think the licensee or any licensee would want advisers to open them up to more risk by rewriting policies with exclusions and loadings for only the sole benefit of increased revenue via upfront commission to the adviser.

      Reply
      • Catanooga cats says:
        6 years ago

        Sadly, you are quite mistaken in this analysis

        Reply
      • Anonymous says:
        6 years ago

        Given AMP were happy to charge people and give them no service in return, I don’t think they were too worried about risky behaviour. To think this is a one off is laughable.

        Reply
      • Reality says:
        6 years ago

        AMP were the only provider that would pay commission on rewriting one (older, more comprehensive) AMP policy with another AMP (newer, lower quality) policy at the time.

        It was as good as company directed.

        Reply
    • Tim says:
      6 years ago

      AMP couldn’t care less. It’s only shareholders’ money. Executive management still get their performance bonuses

      Reply

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