Australian regulator loses landmark pension fund court battle
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[September 20, 2019] By
Paulina Duran and Byron Kaye
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's banking
watchdog lost a landmark case on Friday after a court ruled it had not
proved its case alleging wealth manager IOOF Holdings had breached
pension laws.
The dismissal of the case, which sent IOOF's shares soaring by 8%, was
the second setback in as many months for regulators looking to clamp
down on misconduct in the financial sector.
Federal Court judge Jayne Jagot said the Australian Prudential
Regulation Authority (APRA) had failed to demonstrate its allegation
that top IOOF Holdings officials breached pension laws by using reserve
funds to make up for investment losses.
"I have found APRA's approach unpersuasive," Jagot said. "The underlying
facts have not been proved."
APRA said it was "disappointed" by the decision. IOOF said it welcomed
the ruling, adding it would review the 307-page judgment in detail
before commenting further.
The ruling is the first in a case that originated directly from last
year's powerful Royal Commission inquiry into the financial sector,
which uncovered widespread misconduct at the expense of consumers.
It also underscores a disconnect between intense political pressure for
regulators to ramp up their financial sector enforcement and a legal
system still bound by rules of evidence.
"This case examined a range of legal questions relating to
superannuation law and regulation that had not previously been tested in
court," APRA Deputy Chair Helen Rowell said.
"Litigation outcomes are inherently unpredictable, however, APRA remains
prepared to launch court action – where appropriate – when entities
breach the law or fail to act in an open and cooperative manner."
Just last month, the Federal Court rejected a case by the securities
regulator, the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC),
against Westpac Banking Corp alleging the No. 2 bank approved mortgages
without adequate credit checks.
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Since the retired judge presiding over the Royal Commission lashed regulators
earlier this year for being too soft on the sector, both watchdogs have given
public statements promising to take a more hardline approach to enforcement.
UNPRECEDENTED CASE
APRA had sought to use the Federal Court action to disqualify five IOOF
executives for failing to act in their customers' interests, an unprecedented
move in Australia.
The regulator accused IOOF of using money belonging to pension fund customers to
compensate them for losses caused by the company and said it had been working
with the company to resolve concerns about unaddressed conflicts of interest
since 2015.
Both IOOF's managing director Christopher Kelaher and chairman George Venardos
stepped aside to fight the court case.
Although Jagot dismissed the regulator's claims of wrongdoing, she put off
making a formal decision about whether to disqualify the IOOF directors to a
later date. She ordered APRA pay the wealth manager's legal costs.
"The inescapable fact is that APRA's case fails at each step on the question of
proof. It is not possible to conclude that in acting as he did Mr Kelaher
contravened any of his director's covenants," Jagot said.
IOOF's shares jumped as much as 8.1% to A$6 ($4.07) following the news, their
highest since early May.
"It's been a costly exercise for APRA," said Andrew Grant, a senior lecturer at
The University of Sydney Business School. "(Regulators) are taking a few shots
and the punches aren't really landing."
($1 = 1.4728 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Paulina Duran, Byron Kaye and Nikhil Kurian Nainan; Editing by
Muralikumar Anantharaman, Himani Sarkar and Jane Wardell)
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