Australia's CBA hit with lawsuit over pension
investments
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[October 10, 2018]
By Paulina Duran
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Law firm Slater & Gordon
Ltd has filed a class-action suit against Commonwealth Bank of Australia
seeking damages of more than A$100 million ($71 million) after the bank
allegedly invested the retirement savings of thousands of customers into
low, uncompetitive interest-returning products.
The lawsuit is the seventh against a major financial firm stemming from
the Royal Commission misconduct inquiry, that released a scathing
interim report into its findings last month.
Slater & Gordon lawyers filed the action in the Federal Court on Tuesday
night, the company said in an emailed statement.
The firm had previously flagged it would launch a series of class
actions against the country's largest banks and wealth manager AMP Ltd
for giving customers "ludicrously low" or negative returns without
justification.
The Commonwealth Bank (CBA) said in a statement that it will vigorously
defend the proceedings.
The suit will allege CBA's pension arm, Colonial First State, invested
the retirement savings of its members with CBA where it received
uncompetitive bank interest rates.
Slater and Gordon head of class actions Ben Hardwick said Colonial was
obligated to act in the best interests of its members, not its parent
company, by finding the best products for them.
"This class action will allege Colonial First State placed the interests
of its members beneath the interests of the Commonwealth Bank."
Australia's financial institutions are being forced to put aside
substantial sums of money to fight lawsuits, settle customer complaints,
and prepare for regulatory changes expected to flow out of the Royal
Commission, which will deliver its final report in February.
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A man walks past a branch of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia in
central Sydney, Australia, February 7, 2018. REUTERS/Daniel Munoz
/File Photo
Australia's top financial firms have had nearly A$40 billion wiped off their
collective market value this year, as the inquiry unearthed systemic malpractice
including alleged fraud, bribery, regulator deception, fee gouging and illegal
telephone marketing.
During public hearings, CBA admitted it sold insurance to tens of thousands of
customers who were not eligible to claim against it, charged customers for
services-not-rendered, took fees out of dead client accounts and double-charged
interest to thousands of customers due to a coding error.[KCN1MI2A4]
Revelations out of the inquiry earlier this year triggered five shareholder
class actions against the country's largest listed wealth manager, AMP Ltd, for
allegedly failing to disclose governance problems.
Lawyers have also sued National Australia Bank and its pension unit on behalf of
customers who were allegedly sold worthless insurance policies for their credit
cards.
(Reporting by Paulina Duran in SYDNEY; Editing by Jonathan Barrett and Richard
Pullin)
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